The International Cricket Council has "seen no confirmation" to substantiate asserts that a later vote on the sythesis of its cricket panel was settled, yet is recognizing pointing the matter to its morals officer.
The Federation of International Cricketers' Associations guaranteed on Tuesday that the vote to choose player agents to the board had been unduly affected by anonymous full part sheets, bringing about their head official Tim May being supplanted by previous India spinner Laxman Sivaramakrishnan.
Commanders from the 10 Test playing countries voted every namelessly for two of the three bidders -May, Sivaramakrishnan and Sri Lanka batsman Kumar Sangakkara.
Fica feel May was voted down from the council as an aftereffect of a few commanders being leant on from above, cases the Icc have yet to substantiate however have likewise yet to formally explore.
The Icc did affirm that the vote must be re-taken after disarray over the mechanics of the beginning technique.
"The Icc can affirm that it has gained a composed ask for from the Federation of International Cricketers' Associations (Fica) to point the matter to the Ethics Officer," read a proclamation.
"This solicitation is being recognized, however in perspective of the claims as of recently showing up in the media, the Icc wishes to state for the record that the re-vote occurred consistent with the dead set system and that the Icc has seen no confirmation that underpins charges now being made that chiefs were put under force by their Member Boards to vote for a specific single person."
Fica had prior conveyed an emphatically worded articulation of their own on the subject. Their universal lawful counselor Ian Smith said: "Fica's official stance is that these claims must warrant cautious and free investigation; particularly since we grasp Icc in particular taught the sheets not to meddle in the voting methodology.
"The activities are an opportune and stark indication of the exact genuine weaknesses in influence at Icc highlighted more than a year prior by the Woolf report and about which Icc has done nothing in the mediating period.
"It is further clear from proclamations made by anonymous Icc board sources overnight that they are attempting to position the included sheets' activities as 'lobbying', however there ought to be an extremely clear refinement made between an appointee campaigning for a vote and a business debilitating a representative to change their vote."
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