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Interim order in Jadeja`s favour to continue
New Delhi, Aug 01: The cricket board today objected to the Delhi high court order allowing all-rounder Ajay Jadeja to play all domestic cricket matches, saying it amounted to `virtually` lifting the ban imposed on the cricketer in the wake of allegation of match-fixing against him.
New Delhi, Aug 01: The cricket board today objected to the Delhi high court order allowing all-rounder Ajay Jadeja to play all domestic cricket matches, saying it amounted to "virtually" lifting the ban imposed on the cricketer in the wake of allegation of match-fixing against him.
"It amounts to virtually lifting the ban on Ajay Jadeja," BCCI counsel Kapil Sibal told a division bench of Justice B A Khan and Justice O P Dwivedi, which had on May 28 last passed an ex-parte interim order in favour of Jadeja.
He pointed out that the Justice J K Mehra award setting aside the five-year ban imposed on Jadeja has been challenged and the same was pending before a single judge bench of the high court.
However, the court refused to pass any orders and said the May 28 order would continue. Expressing the hope that the challenge to the award would be decided within a month, the court posted the matter for September 3.
The court allowed Jadeja to play in domestic cricket as the objections to the award might take undue time to be decided rendering him unfit for any form of national and international cricket.
The BCCI challenged Justice J K Mehra award on April 25, just two days before it was to become binding. The January 27 award would have become final on April 27 at the expiry of the 90-day statutory period, had it gone unchallenged.
BCCI's objections to the award are being heard by Justice Manmohan Sarin who would further hear the case on August 7.
Bureau Report
He pointed out that the Justice J K Mehra award setting aside the five-year ban imposed on Jadeja has been challenged and the same was pending before a single judge bench of the high court.
However, the court refused to pass any orders and said the May 28 order would continue. Expressing the hope that the challenge to the award would be decided within a month, the court posted the matter for September 3.
The court allowed Jadeja to play in domestic cricket as the objections to the award might take undue time to be decided rendering him unfit for any form of national and international cricket.
The BCCI challenged Justice J K Mehra award on April 25, just two days before it was to become binding. The January 27 award would have become final on April 27 at the expiry of the 90-day statutory period, had it gone unchallenged.
BCCI's objections to the award are being heard by Justice Manmohan Sarin who would further hear the case on August 7.
Bureau Report