Pakistan cricketer Umar Akmal’s three-year ban from all forms of cricket for failing to report a match-fixing approach was on Wednesday reduced to 18 months on appeal, meaning he can return playing in August next year.
Earlier, Pakistan supreme court judge and independent adjudicator Faqir Mohammad Khokhar proclaimed the appeal result, which had been reserved two weeks ago, after a short hearing in Lahore attended by Akmal and his lawyer.
Akmal pleaded guilty in April to a charge of failing to report two match-fixing approaches and received a three-year ban for each offense, to run concurrently from February 20.
The anti-corruption code of Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) declares that players must report all the corrupt approaches to the related authorities. Despite the reduction, Akmal complained he had been unfairly treated.
“I am still not satisfied because other players got less punishment on the same charge,” Umar told media, referring to a one-year ban (six months suspended) handed to fast bowler Mohammad Irfan in 2017.
Irfan had not contested the charge of failing to report and was given an “agreed sanction”.
“I will consult my lawyers and then try to get it reduced further,” Akmal stated.
Following a brilliant Test debut in 2009 when he scored a century in New Zealand, the talented Akmal was touted as a future great but his career has been punctuated by controversy before this year’s ban.
Akmal was arrested in 2014 after a scuffle with a traffic warden in Lahore.
And he was banned for three matches and fined over a spat with Pakistan head coach Mickey Arthur in 2017.