The BCCI has banned Pakistani umpire Asad Rauf for a long time on charges of debasement and offense. The restriction keeps Rauf from umpiring or playing or speaking to cricket in any structure or being connected with exercises of the BCCI and its subsidiaries.
Rauf was named as a "needed blamed" in the Mumbai Police's chargesheet for the wagering outrage in IPL 2013 after he had left India amid the IPL even as the Mumbai Police needed to question him in individual.
The BCCI's disciplinary panel, in a meeting on Friday, discovered Rauf blameworthy of debasement and unfortunate behavior under articles 2.2.2, 2.3.2, 2.3.3 and 2.4.1 of the board's Anti-defilement Code. Rauf did not show up before the panel but rather sent his preparatory accommodation on January 15 and a composed articulation reacting to the assertions on February 8. These announcements, alongside a report by the Commissioner of Enquiry, were considered before the choice to boycott him was taken.
Rauf over and again precluded claims from securing debasement made against him in the chargesheet and requested evidence. In the wake of leaving India in May 2013, where he was administering in the IPL, Rauf held a public interview and focused on that he had not occupied with any degenerate exercises. At the point when news had developed that Rauf was needed for addressing by police, the ICC issued a discharge saying that the umpire had been remained down from his obligations in the Champions Trophy in England. Rauf was later dropped from the Elite Panel of Umpires, yet the ICC cleared up that the circumstance was not a variable in his rejection.
Rauf showed up as an umpire in 2000, directing in an ODI in the middle of Pakistan and Sri Lanka. He was incorporated into the Elite Panel in 2006 and has directed in 49 Tests, 98 ODIs and 23 T20 internationals.
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