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Pakistan will
be cleared of tampering charges - Inzamam
Pakistan captain Inzamam-ul-Haq is confident his team will be cleared of
ball tampering charges he described as concocted and unjustified.
"Different stories are circulating after the Oval test fiasco but I have
no doubt we will be cleared and the truth will come out soon," he wrote
in his Urdu language column in "Daily Jang" on Friday.
Inzamam is due to attend a International Cricket Council (ICC)
disciplinary hearing later this month to face charges of ball tampering
and bringing the game into disrepute.
The ICC slapped the charges on Inzamam after his team refused to
continue play on the fourth day of the final test against England last
month They were incensed at the decision of umpires Darrell Hair and
Billy Doctrove to change the ball and penalise them five runs for
ball-tampering.
Australian Hair, at the centre of the row, is also under scrutiny after
asking for $500,000 from the ICC to quit the elite panel of umpires soon
after the incident.
"Hair laid out a web to involve the Pakistan team in controversy and
ball tampering but now it appears he himself is in deep trouble,"
Inzamam said in the column.
"The situation is getting bad for him and his problems are increasing.
It looks like he is going to get caught in serious difficulties," he
said.
Inzamam said he was confident the truth would prevail in the end.
"From the first day I have been insisting that Hair did injustice with
us and the whole world is supporting our contention," he said.
"In time everyone will know who is telling the truth and who did
injustice with who," he added.
"To do so well in the Twenty20 and the first one-day international
against England in such circmstances shows the character of our team."
He said he was happy that all his players had put the Oval fiasco behind
them.
"I am confident we can win the one-day series and put the loss of the
tests behind us now," he said.
Inzamam credited the return of fast bowlers Shoaib Akhtar and Rana Naved
for the improved performances.
"I have no doubt if these two had been available in the tests the
results could have been different," he said.—Agencies |