|
NEW DELHI (India):
Abhijit Kale, the Indian cricketer at the centre of a
cash-to-play scandal, has gone to court to challenge his
suspension from the game, officials said on Tuesday.
Kale filed a suit in a civil court in the western city of Pune
late on Monday against the Board of Control for Cricket in
India (BCCI) and the Maharashtra Cricket Association (MCA),
seeking a stay on his suspension.
“We have come to know of Kale having filed the case. We are
consulting our lawyers to take appropriate action,” said MCA
chief Balasahab Thorve.
The case is expected to come up for hearing this week.
The BCCI last week banned Kale from first-class cricket until
it had probed allegations from two national selectors, former
internationals Kiran More and Pronob Roy, that the cricketer
offered them bribes to be picked for the ongoing tour of
Australia.
The selectors alleged in writing to BCCI president Jagmohan
Dalmiya that Kale, a 30-year-old batsman from Maharashtra,
offered them a million rupees (21,700 dollars) each for his
selection.
The offers were rejected, they said.
Probe commissioner D.V. Subba Rao, who is chairman of the Bar
Council of India, is set to question Kale and the two
selectors in the southern city of Visakhapatnam on Saturday.
The scandal is the biggest to hit Indian cricket since the
match-fixing saga three years ago which led to life bans on
former captain Mohammad Azharuddin and Ajay Sharma and
five-year suspensions on fellow internationals Ajay Jadeja and
Manoj Prabhakar.
The Maharashtra Cricket Association (MCA) had on Monday given
Kale a clean chit after its own investigation and demanded the
two selectors undergo lie-detector tests.
Kale, however, named MCA in his petition in court since the
BCCI notice to suspend him was routed through the state body,
his lawyer said.
“The MCA support to Kale in the media is not enough, we expect
it to support the player in court also,” lawyer Manish Wadekar
said.
The BCCI’s decision to suspend Kale has been criticised by
former great Kapil Dev and the Indian Cricket Players
Association.
“If he is not proven guilty, I wonder how the BCCI will
compensate him,” Kapil said.
“Would the BCCI have acted against any of its officials in the
same vein had a finger been raised on any issue?”
Kale has scored 6,806 runs in 84 first-class games at an
average of 58.67, including 24 centuries.
He made 10 in his only international appearance in a limited-overs
tournament in Bangladesh in April and was not considered for
the recent home series against New Zealand and Australia.
The BCCI is meeting in an emergency session here on Sunday to
discuss the scandal.
|