Pakistan trio charged with taking bribes

LONDON, (Reuters) – Pakistan’s former test captain  Salman Butt and his two opening bowlers Mohammad Asif and  Mohammad Amir were charged with taking bribes by British  prosecutors yesterday.

Salman Butt

News of the decision comes a day before they learn in Qatar  whether an independent tribunal set up by cricket’s governing  body has found them guilty of corruption. Possible punishment  include life bans.
Britain’s Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said the trio,  along with sports agent Mazhar Majeed from Croydon, England, had  been charged with conspiracy to obtain and accept corrupt  payments and with conspiracy to cheat.

“These charges relate to allegations that Mr Majeed accepted  money from a third party to arrange for the players to bowl `no  balls’ on 26 and 27 August 2010, during Pakistan’s fourth test  at Lord’s Cricket Ground in London,” said Simon Clements, head  of the CPS Special Crime Division.

Today, an International Cricket Council (ICC)  independent tribunal in Doha will announce the conclusions of  its investigation into the Lord’s test.

Butt, Asif and Amir were suspended under the ICC’s  anti-corruption code after a report in the British newspaper The  News of the World alleged they had arranged for no balls, or  illegal deliveries, to be deliberately bowled in the fourth  test.

The trio have denied spot-fixing, the offence of  pre-arranging individual events within a match which may not  affect the result.

Clements said Majeed had been ordered to appear at London’s  City of Westminster Magistrates Court on March 17. “Summonses for the same court date have been issued for the  three players and they have been asked to return to this country  voluntarily, as they agreed to do in September last year,”  Clements said. “Their extradition will be sought should they fail to  return.”

The CPS said obtaining and accepting corrupt payments  carried a maximum sentence of seven years’ imprisonment while  cheating incurred a maximum two years.

Amir, who left yesterday for Doha, told the television  channel Ary he had just learned about the decision.

“I don’t know the details. It has come as a surprise and I  will now be consulting my lawyer for further course of action,”  he said.

The ICC and the Pakistan Cricket Board declined to comment.