A former Pakistani international cricketer went on trial Tuesday in the Netherlands for allegedly attempting to incite the murder of MP Geert Wilders
Latif and batsman Sharjeel Khan were both found guilty by a three-member anti-corruption tribunal for spot-fixing and other breaches of the anti-corruption code.
Pakistan batsman Khalid Latif has been handed a five-year ban and fined one million rupees by the anti-corruption tribunal after finding him guilty of six breaches of the Pakistan Cricket Board's anti-corruption code.
Pakistan cricket's anti-corruption tribunal on Wednesday banned opener Khalid Latif for five years and fined him one million rupees ($9,489) over a spot-fixing case
Khalid Latif boycotted the proceedings of a spot fixing hearing after a tribunal refused to give him a copy of his recorded interview.
Pakistan's interior minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan said that they had received a request from the FIA to put the cricketers on the ECL and the ministry had issued orders for this action.
The special investigation team has issued notices to four Pakistani players -Nasir Jamshed, Khalid Latif, Sharjeel Khan and Mohammad Irfan.
Shahryar Khan, the chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), said former Lahore high court judge Asghar Haider would head the inquiry
Sharjeel Khan and Khalid Latif have denied all the charges levelled against them through their lawyers
The Pakistan Cricket Board charge-sheeted both the accused players, Sharjeel Khan and Khalid Latif, and gave them 14 days to respond to allegations of spot-fixing.