Presumption of innocence is the order of the day as national cricket boards
around the world stand by those players who have been implicated in the
Indian Central Bureau of Investigation's match fixing report which was made
public on Wednesday.
The cricket boards of Australia, England, Sri Lanka and the West Indies are
all permitting Mark Waugh, Alec Stewart, Aravinda de Silva, Arjuna Ranatunga
and Brian Lara to continue playing international and/or domestic cricket
until the varying allegations of wrong-doing reported in testimony compiled
by the CBI can be proven.
Other non-Indian players implicated in the report, namely Hansie Cronje and
Saleem Malik, are already serving life bans imposed by their respective
national governing bodies. Cronje's lawyers repeated yesterday their
intention to take legal action against the United Cricket Board of South
Africa for setting the ban.
Although ECB chairman Lord MacLaurin was reported on October 16 to have said
that any player suspected of wrong-doing should be suspended till proven
innocent, he has subsequently said that he was misquoted.
What MacLaurin says were his actual words, and he repeated them yesterday,
was that if any player was suspected of wrong-doing and refused to co-operate
in investigations, that person should be suspended till inquiries were
complete.
MacLaurin said this yesterday in defending the ECB's decision not to suspend
Alec Stewart from England's tour of Pakistan.
The Australian Cricket Board called on Thursday for the ICC Anti-Corruption
Unit to investigate the allegations while also referring the matter to their
own special investigator, Greg Mellick.
The head of the Board of Control for Cricket in Sri Lanka (BCCSL), Thilanga
Sumathipala, has written to his Indian counterpart, AC Muttiah, asking for a
copy of the full report compiled by the CBI, along with authenticated
transcripts of evidence.
Arjuna Ranatunga, who retired from international cricket in July, and
Aravinda de Silva are both playing for their clubs in Sri Lanka's Premier
Limited-Over Tournament today, Ranatunga for the Sinhalese Sports Club
against Singha, and de Silva for Nondescripts against Galle.
The West Indian team flew into Perth today at the start of their Australian
tour. Brian Lara has made no further comment after being instructed by his
lawyers.
West Indian team manager Ricky Skerritt said at a press conference at Perth
airport that Lara was "in good spirits but he's obviously a little bit
distressed. It's difficult for any player to have mud slung around him when
they have categorically said they were not involved."
West Indian captain Jimmy Adams and coach Roger Harper also spoke at the
press conference in support of Lara. The WICB has decided not to instigate
its own inquiry, but instead have left it to the ICC's Anti-Corruption Unit.