Former Pakistan skipper Wasim Akram has sought unconditional apology from controversial ex-Test pacer Sarfraz Nawaz on match-fixing charges, Akram's lawyer said Friday.
In a letter, copy of which is exclusively acquired by SADA News, Akram
has given Sarfraz one week to apologize or face defamation suit to the
tune of Rs. 10,000,000. "Our client is one of the most outstanding
cricketers in the world and has been conferred the 'Life Time
Achievement Award' by the President of Pakistan and 'Pride of
Performance' award by the Prime Minister.
Apart from such a distinguished record, our client is a conscientious
public-spirited citizen," Akram's lawyer Zahid Ebrahim said in the
letter.
Sarfraz, during his testimony before a World Cup match-fixing probe,
alleged that Pakistan threw two matches - against Bangladesh and India
- in the 1999 World Cup and further alleged Akram has assets of over
three billions rupees. "Akram has actively participated in public
service campaigns and associated himself with a school for special
children and even organized exhibition matches for charity.
"In the face of such record, our client was shocked and dismayed to
learn that you have levelled false and defamatory allegations against
the Pakistan cricket and our client while recording a statement before
the inquiry commission of Justice Karamat Bhandari of the Lahore High
Court on 2-9-2001."
The Bhandari Commission was constituted in May this year after
Pakistan Cricket Board asked President Pervez Musharraf, also a patron
of the PCB, to initiate an inquiry into World Cup match-fixing
allegations. Pakistan's surprise loss against Bangladesh and India
raised doubts of it being fixed.
South African official Dr Ali Bacher last year alleged Pakistan played
two fixed games in World Cup 1999 and that the information was passed
to him by former PCB chief executive Majid Khan. "You have falsely
alleged before the inquiry commission that certain matches of the
Pakistan cricket team led by our client during the 1999 World Cup were
'fixed'. Equally false and preposterous is your malevolent claim that
our client is a 'major player in the match-fixing saga' and has assets
of over three billion rupees," the letter said. Akram's lawyer said
the allegations are exceptional and false.
"The above defamatory statements are not only false, but exceptional
for their unrestrained malice. With vicious single mindedness you have
sought to incite hatred against our client and ruin his career and
life," the letter said.
"There is no factual basis or other justification for such a
defamatory attack on our client. It is either professional rivalry or
the eagerness for cheap publicity which has motivated you to steep to
disappointingly desperate levels of malice. You have exposed yourself
to a serious claim for damages, which are conservatively estimated at
Rs. 10,000,000," it said.
"Your aforesaid defamatory statements have caused severe pain, agony
and distress to our client, his family, and friends. Therefore, you
are hereby called upon to tender an unconditional apology to our
client within seven days of the receipt of this letter. Failure to
issue such an unconditional apology will leave our client with no
alternative, but to initiate legal action against you for damages in
an appropriate court of law," it added. Akram was fined Rs. 300,000 on
charges of non-cooperation with Justice Malik Mohammad Qayyum's
inquiry on match-fixing last year.