The  Sindh High Court (SHC) has suspended the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB)  disciplinary hearing against retired captain Shahid Afridi.
The hearing was scheduled for Wednesday.
Afridi’s lawyer Syed Ali Zafar told The Associated Press that SHC has also summoned officials of the PCB on Thursday.
“We respect court’s decision,” the PCB said in a short statement.
Afridi  filed a petition at SHC on Tuesday against the PCB’s decision to  suspend his central contract and revoke his No Objection Certificates  which stopped him from playing abroad.
Speaking to AFP earlier he  said, “I have taken a plea that the show-cause notice served on me is  illegal and the ban on me playing abroad should be lifted and I hope  justice will be done.”
“We have filed a petition in the Sindh High  Court against the sanctions on our client Afridi and have appealed for a  stay order against the punishments against him,” his lawyer Mahmood  Mandviwala said.
Court officials said proceedings on Afridi’s case  began immediately under a two-member bench of chief justice Musheer  Alam and Aqeel Ahmed Abbasi.
Afridi went to court after announcing  his retirement from international cricket to protest against being  replaced as one-day captain last month.
The PCB said Afridi  breached the players’ code of conduct by announcing his retirement and  levelling allegations against the Board.
The PCB suspended his  central contract, revoked all his no-objection certificates which would  have allowed him to play in England and Sri Lanka and served him with a  show-cause notice last week.
They also formed a three-man  disciplinary committee and ordered Afridi to appear before it on  Wednesday. His lawyer has said he will not attend and Afridi has  challenged the disciplinary process.
The 31-year-old former  one-day captain is the latest in a series of Pakistani cricketers to  launch legal battles against the cricket authorities.
The last was  paceman Shoaib Akhtar, whose appeal against sanctions imposed in 2008  for publicly criticising the PCB is still pending in court in the  eastern city of Lahore.
Afridi’s petition was filed after Pakistan  coach Waqar Younis and manager Intikhab Alam described him as “immature  and unwilling to listen” in tour reports leaked to the media and  published in the Dawn on Tuesday.
“As captain I feel he is still  very immature, has poor discipline, lacks game plan and is unwilling to  listen to others’ opinion or advice,” wrote Waqar of the West Indies  tour where Afridi led the team to a 3-2 win in May.
It was  Afridi’s public criticism of Waqar last month over “undue meddling”in  team selection, which forced the PCB to serve him with a show-cause  notice and then dump him as captain.
In his report, Waqar said  coaching staff had failed to improve Afridi’s behaviour, saying that  “sometimes his volatile and immature nature have proved detrimental and  led to unfortunate outcome of the game losses”.
Waqar said Afridi created a fuss during the fourth and fifth one-day match on the West Indies tour.
“Afridi  came into the meetings with a decisive mindset and was refusing to  discuss the playing 11 options for the team and behaved very  inappropriately and walked out of the meeting,” wrote Waqar in his  report.
“Afridi’s attitude and unwillingness to sort out matters  led to a very uncomfortable dressing room environment which affected the  players’ performance, resulting in the last two losses of the series.”
Alam  said he tried his “best to defuse the situation”, but blamed Waqar for  being a “little harsh and arrogant which creates problems” and accused  Afridi of lacking temperament and being “highly hyperactive”.
“I  told him not to speak to the press on his return home and if he had any  serious issues with Waqar or anybody else he should speak to the PCB  chairman (Ijaz Butt) directly,” wrote Alam.
Afridi’s lawyer Mandviwala blamed the PCB for maligning his client by leaking the reports.





