Baffling Pakistan cricket crisis deepens

Pakistan cricket's baffling administration crisis has deepened with a court restoring the board chief only a day after his ousting by the government.

Pakistan's Supreme Court restored Najam Sethi as the country's cricket chief Friday, a day after he was deposed by the government, in a fresh twist to a long-running administrative crisis.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, patron of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), ousted veteran journalist Sethi and appointed a former high court judge as interim chief, directing him to hold elections for the chairmanship within 30 days.

But the Supreme Court set aside Sharif's orders, a court statement said - the latest round in a bruising 15-month battle to lead the PCB.

In a series of court cases and government decrees, the PCB chairmanship has changed hands between Sethi and Zaka Ashraf five times since May last year.

Ashraf, who first took the job in October 2011, was suspended by the Islamabad High Court in May last year after he tried to extend his tenure by getting himself elected in a process termed "dubious" by the court.

Since then, Ashraf was restored twice by an appeal bench of the Islamabad court - in January and May this year.

His second restoration was challenged by Sethi in the Supreme Court which, on May 21, reinstated Sethi.

The Supreme Court was unhappy about Sharif's decision to include Sethi in a 12-member governing board, widely seen as an attempt by the government to get him elected in the next 30 days.

The latest twist adds to an at times baffling saga in Pakistan's cricket administration which critics say have made it a laughing stock.

The PCB chief was traditionally appointed by the ruling party of the day, a practice widely criticised over the years and frowned on by the International Cricket Council.


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