PCB turmoil continues as Zaka Ashraf reinstated

Published May 18, 2014
ZAKA Ashraf.—AP
ZAKA Ashraf.—AP

ISLAMABAD: The uncertainty in the affairs of Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) deepened on Saturday as Zaka Ashraf got a second life after Justice Noorul Haq N. Qureshi of the Islamabad High Court (IHC) set aside the Statutory Regulatory Order (SRO) issued by the PML-N government which brought Najam Sethi in the PCB as chairman.

Earlier, on Jan 15, the IHC division bench sent Sethi home by reinstating Zaka as PCB chairman with Justice Qureshi being one of the two members of the said bench.

Zaka was suspended in July last year by the IHC during the hearing of identical petitions filed against his appointment.

Following the reinstatement of Zaka in January, the PML-N government on Feb 10, 2014 constituted an Interim Management Committee (IMC) through the SRO and appointed Sethi as its chairman. The IMC under the said SRO superseded the PCB governing board and removed Zaka as PCB chairman.

Justice Qureshi having heard petitions of 38 dismissed PCB employees who were seeking their reinstatement and had challenged the SRO of Feb 10, reserved the judgment on May 15.

Legal counsel for an IMC member Dr Babar Awan said during the hearing on Thursday that there were two issues related to this matter: one is about the SRO/notification and the other is about termination of service of PCB employees.

Advocate Awan said that the court should take up the employees’ matter first, and sought adjournment in this matter from the court. The court then put off hearing for two and half hours.

Also, PCB counsel Tafazzul Rizvi argued before the court that termination of 38 PCB employees was in accordance with the law as PCB terms of service were non-statutory. He said that the PCB was established under an SRO constitution and had its own internal rules that were non-statutory and no writ petition was admissible.

While referring to high court judgments, he said that the court held in its judgment that PCB rules were non-statutory.

He produced before the court a copy of PCB service rules and said that according to these rules, ‘either party can terminate contract of the service with one month notice.’

Advocate Rizvi also argued regarding territorial jurisdiction and said that these petitioners had been serving in Lahore and their contracts of service were terminated there. So, they should have filed their petitions before the Lahore High Court instead of the IHC.

Referring to the matter of Test leg-spinner Danish Keneria, advocate Rizvi said that the spin bowler had filed a writ petition before the Sindh High Court when he was removed from the national team. But the Sindh High Court then directed him to file the case before the Lahore High Court as per territorial jurisdiction.

He further said that these petitioners attacked the Feb 10, 2014 SRO/notification just when they were terminated, adding that they did not challenge it earlier.

Afnan Karim Kundi Advocate, who is counsel for petitioner Syed Tanvir Naqvi, adopted before the court that some of the petitioners were aggrieved due to order of PCB’s IMC that is not a competent authority as their appointment was illegal and they are alien to the PCB.

Advocate Kundi said that the PCB was functioning under the Sports Development & Control Ordinance (SDCO) 1962, adding that there were two boards under the SDCO: the Pakistan Sports Board and PCB. As per this ordinance, the board had perpetual succession while it was said that the name, constitution and powers of the board will be defined by the federal government, he added.

Advocate Kundi further said that if a statutory body would form the rules, how come these rules be non-statutory. He said that PCB rules were statutory and the IMC doesn’t have the power to remove PCB employees.

He also argued that the IMC was constituted for 120 days and the task given to it was to hold PCB elections and form a new board.

Published in Dawn, May 18th, 2014

Opinion

Editorial

Mixed signals
Updated 28 Dec, 2024

Mixed signals

If Imran wants talks to yield results, he should authorise PTI’s committee to fully engage with the other side without setting deadlines.
Opaque trials
Updated 28 Dec, 2024

Opaque trials

Secretive trials, shielded from scrutiny, fail to provide the answers that citizens deserve.
A friendly neighbour
28 Dec, 2024

A friendly neighbour

FORMER Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh who passed away on Thursday at 92 was a renowned economist who pulled ...
Desperate measures
Updated 27 Dec, 2024

Desperate measures

Sadly in Pakistan, street protests and sit-ins have become the only resort to catch the attention of a callous power elite.
Economic outlook
27 Dec, 2024

Economic outlook

THE post-pandemic years, marked by extreme volatility in the global oil and commodity markets as well as slowing...
Cricket and visas
27 Dec, 2024

Cricket and visas

PAKISTAN has asserted that delay in the announcement of the schedule of next year’s Champions Trophy will not...