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ICC asks players to take note of Harbhajan row

Reuters

Posted online: Thursday , January 31, 2008 at 1132 hrs IST
      

New Delhi, January 31:: The International Cricket Council (ICC) has urged players to learn from the row over Harbhajan Singh and improve their on-field behaviour.

Harbhajan was fined half his match fee for verbal abuse of Australian all-rounder Andrew Symonds during this month's Sydney test after the ICC appeals commissioner dismissed charges of racial abuse and revoked a three-test ban by match referee Mike Procter.

"One thing that has come out of this is the need for players to review their on-field behaviour," ICC chief executive Malcolm Speed said in a statement on Wednesday.

"In this case, it is clear that Harbhajan verbally abused an opponent having been provoked to do so by that opponent. This is not acceptable behaviour on the cricket field.

"I expect all players to use this was a wake-up call that on-field behaviour must improve."

The BCCI threatened to pull out of the tour if the racial abuse charge was upheld. Australian media have attacked the BCCI for flexing their power and criticised the ICC for giving in to pressure.

ICC appeals commissioner, New Zealand High Court judge John Hansen, blamed administrative error for the spinner escaping a possible ban.

Hansen said the ICC informed him of one prior offence of the spinner but discovered after handing down his verdict that Harbhajan had been penalised on four previous occasions.

"At the end of the day Mr Singh can feel himself fortunate that he has reaped the benefit of these database and human errors," he wrote in his judgment.

Speed said: "It is very unfortunate that human error led to Justice Hansen not having the full history of Harbhajan's previous Code of Conduct breaches and the ICC accepts responsibility for this mistake."

He defended Procter's initial verdict, which outraged the Indian camp.

"The fact the charge was downgraded from a level 3.3 to Level 2.8 is not a reflection on the process or Mr Procter's original finding," Speed said.

Speed said the issues which arose from the controversy would be taken up with the Indian and Australian boards and a paper placed before the ICC board for action.

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congratulation
by md saif on 2008-01-31 13:57:41.591194+05:30
i am very proud for harbajan singh he is good fighter
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Harbhajan eposode
by Steve Butler on 2008-01-31 10:53:00.411822+05:30
Harbhajan may have been let off by Hansen but he knows and all know that he has indulged in racial abuse on field.Commercial considerations may have weighed in favour of the behind the scene compromise formula but Singh is a tainted cricketer and will remain so till the end of his career.
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Singh is killing cricket
by Mark on 2008-01-31 13:15:14.246015+05:30
I agree completely. This would not have come about if Singh kept his racist mouth shut as agreed by both teams. History will always remember now as the racist spinner who caused more trouble in world cricket than the body line episode. Sachin on the other hand will be remembered as a LIAR.
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ICC should learn themselves
by sujit on 2008-01-31 10:31:30.568341+05:30
Malcolm Speed now concentrate to handover chage to new CEO and plan his retirement life with the money he earned as CEO. He was the total failure as ICC CEO and being a racistman himself always protected the whitemen in general and Aussies in particular. He should lear lesson from this episode and should not try to punish a Indian player wrongly.
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Reply to sujit.
by Paul D on 2008-01-31 10:44:45.570563+05:30
What a load of rubbish. Speed has always been scrupulously impartial, as was Judge Hansen.Don't get me wrong, I am not supporting the Australian team. This entire incident was Symons' fault and he is very lucky to escape punishment, but that is not down to Speed - rather to Mike Proctor.
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No surprise here...
by withheld on 2008-01-31 10:06:39.148771+05:30
There is something called 'natural' justice too, which is perhaps 'mother of all justice systems' in teh world. The benefit of database and human error was 'natural' when such errors were responsible in the first place for such high number of 'violations' against the Indians. In Austrlia there was a 'Royal Commission' to look into the high incidence of aboriginals in custody. The same way, will ICC look into the high incidence of violations agaist non-white players ? Or was it an invitation to the whites to play it safe ?
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