'I didn't want to sell my country. I did what I thought was better'
The Pakistan wicketkeeper Zulqarnain Haider plans to seek political asylum in Britain after fleeing the team amid alleged threats for defying a match-fixing conspiracy.
Haider arrived in London yesterday and in an interview broadcast by Pakistan's Geo television network today said he had discussed his status with immigration officials and "according to their rules, I will have to follow this procedure". He added: "I understand there is a rule in Britain that if you are on right and if you are not a criminal, then they always protect you."
Haider would not identify who threatened him or the nature of the threats that prompted him to flee the team hotel in Dubai and fly out to England without telling anyone. "I was approached by one person who asked me to fix the fourth and fifth match and there would be problem for me if I did not do it. I do not want to say who is involved and who is not involved in the match fixing," Haider said.
The alleged threats came after he scored the winning run in the fourth one-day international against South Africa on Friday to clinch a one-wicket victory for Pakistan. "The country is like a mother and any one who sells it cannot get anything in life," Haider said. "I did not want to sell my mother, I did not want to sell my country and I did what I thought was better."
Following the game, Haider asked a Pakistan Cricket Board official for his passport, pretending that he needed it to buy a mobile phone connection, and then left the hotel to fly to London. "I did not do what I was asked to do in the fourth one-dayer and I also did not let it happen what was being asked to do, so this is the reason that I left it and came here and I did what I felt [was] better," he said.
Haider would not detail the threats made to him, but Pakistan police had beefed up security at his house in Lahore, according to the senior police official Sahahzada Salim, "to avoid any untoward incident."
"I cannot say what kind of threats I have received as my family is still in Pakistan," Haider said, adding his reluctance to provide details was in the interests of family safety, adding that he was new in Pakistan cricket and did not have enough money to hire a lawyer to represent him in the immigration case or any future legal disputes. He said he would approach some of his friends in London as he seeks a place to stay.
The alleged threats and match fixing are the latest setbacks for a Pakistan team that has been troubled by matters off the pitch for some time. In August, Salman Butt, Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif were accused of involvement in an alleged betting scandal during a game in England. The International Cricket Council (ICC) described the allegations against the trio as the sport's biggest fixing scandal in decades. It charged the trio with corruption in September and suspended them after a British tabloid sting alleged money was paid for bowling no-balls at prearranged times against England.
Zulqarnain Haider seeks British asylum after match-fixing threats | Sport | The Guardian
The Pakistan wicketkeeper Zulqarnain Haider plans to seek political asylum in Britain after fleeing the team amid alleged threats for defying a match-fixing conspiracy.
Haider arrived in London yesterday and in an interview broadcast by Pakistan's Geo television network today said he had discussed his status with immigration officials and "according to their rules, I will have to follow this procedure". He added: "I understand there is a rule in Britain that if you are on right and if you are not a criminal, then they always protect you."
Haider would not identify who threatened him or the nature of the threats that prompted him to flee the team hotel in Dubai and fly out to England without telling anyone. "I was approached by one person who asked me to fix the fourth and fifth match and there would be problem for me if I did not do it. I do not want to say who is involved and who is not involved in the match fixing," Haider said.
The alleged threats came after he scored the winning run in the fourth one-day international against South Africa on Friday to clinch a one-wicket victory for Pakistan. "The country is like a mother and any one who sells it cannot get anything in life," Haider said. "I did not want to sell my mother, I did not want to sell my country and I did what I thought was better."
Following the game, Haider asked a Pakistan Cricket Board official for his passport, pretending that he needed it to buy a mobile phone connection, and then left the hotel to fly to London. "I did not do what I was asked to do in the fourth one-dayer and I also did not let it happen what was being asked to do, so this is the reason that I left it and came here and I did what I felt [was] better," he said.
Haider would not detail the threats made to him, but Pakistan police had beefed up security at his house in Lahore, according to the senior police official Sahahzada Salim, "to avoid any untoward incident."
"I cannot say what kind of threats I have received as my family is still in Pakistan," Haider said, adding his reluctance to provide details was in the interests of family safety, adding that he was new in Pakistan cricket and did not have enough money to hire a lawyer to represent him in the immigration case or any future legal disputes. He said he would approach some of his friends in London as he seeks a place to stay.
The alleged threats and match fixing are the latest setbacks for a Pakistan team that has been troubled by matters off the pitch for some time. In August, Salman Butt, Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif were accused of involvement in an alleged betting scandal during a game in England. The International Cricket Council (ICC) described the allegations against the trio as the sport's biggest fixing scandal in decades. It charged the trio with corruption in September and suspended them after a British tabloid sting alleged money was paid for bowling no-balls at prearranged times against England.
Zulqarnain Haider seeks British asylum after match-fixing threats | Sport | The Guardian