Afghan cricketer gets six-year ban for fixing

Shafiqullah Shafaq (far right) and Samiullah Shinwari celebrating a Bangladesh wicket in the 2010 Asian Games final, as Afghanistan took the silver after losing by five wickets. PHOTO: REUTERS
Shafiqullah Shafaq (right) and Samiullah Shinwari celebrating a Bangladesh wicket in the 2010 Asian Games final, as Afghanistan took the silver after losing by five wickets. PHOTO: REUTERS

KABUL • Afghanistan wicket-keeper-batsman Shafiqullah Shafaq was banned from all forms of cricket for six years on Sunday after accepting charges relating to match-fixing.

The Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) said the 30-year-old had fixed or tried to fix matches in the inaugural Afghanistan Premier League T20 in 2018 and last year's Bangladesh Premier League (BPL).

"Shafaq has been charged for breaches of the anti-corruption code which relates to fixing or contriving in any way or otherwise influencing improperly, or being a party to any agreement," the ACB announced in a statement.

"Shafaq was also charged for seeking, accepting, offering or agreeing to accept any bribe or other reward to fix or to contrive in any way or otherwise to influence improperly the result, progress, conduct or any other aspect of any domestic match."

Match-fixing has rocked international cricket in the last two decades with life bans for the late South African skipper Hansie Cronje, Indian captain Mohammad Azharuddin and Pakistan's Salim Malik.

But this is the first case involving an Afghan player, with the country enjoying a fairy-tale rise in international cricket since 2009, culminating in the award of full Test status in 2017.

ACB's senior anti-corruption manager Sayed Anwar Shah Quraishi said: "This is a very serious offence where a senior national player is involved in the corruption of a high-profile domestic game.

"The player had also attempted, but failed to get one of his teammates to engage in corruption in another high-profile game during the BPL 2019."

The ACB added that Shafaq was willing to contribute to future integrity education programmes to help younger players learn from his mistakes.

He played the last of his 46 Twenty20 internationals for Afghanistan last September and has also played 24 one-day internationals for his country.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on May 12, 2020, with the headline Afghan cricketer gets six-year ban for fixing. Subscribe