Pak doping case verdict due within 4 months Friday, January 05, 2007 04:07 [IST]
Karachi (Pakistan): The Court of Arbitration
for Sport said it will likely rule on the World Anti-Doping Agency's appeal
against the lifting of bans on Pakistani bowlers Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad
Asif within four months.
"In accordance with the code of sports-related
arbitration, the Arbitral Panel to be appointed will issue directions regarding
the arbitration procedure in due course," the court said in a statement.
"As a general rule, the CAS delivers its decisions
within four months from the filing of the appeal," the statement issued
from Lausanne, Switzerland.
The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) last month filed an
appeal with the court against a decision by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB)
Anti-Doping Appeals Committee.
"In the decision against which the appeal has been
filed, the PCB Anti-Doping Appeals Committee set aside a previous decision ...
in which one-year and two-year periods of ineligibility were imposed on Mr. Mohammad
Asif and Mr. Shoaib Akhtar respectively," the court's statement said.
"The periods of ineligibility were imposed for
anti-doping rule infractions, following the detection of a metabolite of
nandrolone in the urine samples of both cricketers," the statement added.
If the court sticks to the four-month timeframe then both
Akhtar and Asif could play in the World Cup to be held in the West
Indies in March-April this year, providing bans are not reimposed.
Akhtar and Asif tested positive for the banned steroid
nandrolone in tests conducted in September and were pulled out of Pakistan's team touring India in October.
The PCB tribunal conducted an inquiry and found both players
guilty of using banned substances.
The players accepted the results of the tests and turned
down an offer to have their B samples tested.
Subsequently the tribunal banned the two players, a decision
hailed by WADA and the International Cricket Council (ICC).
However, both players appealed against the ban. An appellate
committee headed by a retired judge last month overturned the bans on the
grounds that both players did not take the substances knowingly.
WADA has challenged that decision in the Court of
Arbitration for Sport.
The 24-year-old Asif is with Pakistan's
team currently touring South
Africa while Akhtar was not selected for the
tour.
WADA said it cannot stop the players from featuring in the
international events, as playing rights are with the ICC.
The PCB had played down WADA's appeal, saying any reservations
by the WADA or the ICC would not affect the players.
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