Umar Akmal released on bail

February 02, 2014 09:57 am | Updated May 18, 2016 05:21 am IST - Lahore

Pakistan batsman Umar Akmal was released from jail after spending an entire day in lock-up for allegedly thrashing a traffic warden and tearing his uniform after being stopped for violating a signal here.

Akmal was locked up at the Gulberg police station in whose jurisdiction the incident occurred in the afternoon as the police registered three cases against him.

“He has just been released on personal surety by the station house officer of the Gulberg PS but will have to appear before the magistrate on Monday to get his bail confirmed until the cases are heard against him,” SSP Zahid Aziz told reporters.

Akmal, who was whisked away in a waiting car to his residence, spent the entire day at the police station prompting a large number of his supporters to gather outside and raise slogans against his arrest.

“I have burnt my entire cricket kit today in front of the station because if this is the way our national cricket heroes are treated for a minor traffic offence I don’t want to play cricket again,” irate fan and club player Reza Bhatti said.

Akmal’s elder brother, Kamran, who was allowed to take his sibling home earlier, told reporters that he was very upset with the way a national team player had been treated.

“We are not terrorists and we know and respect the law of the land but this is not the way to treat a Pakistan player like an ordinary criminal for a incident which has been blown out of proportion,” Kamran said.

Earlier in the day, efforts by the Akmal family to secure bail for Umar failed as by the time the police produced him in a judicial magistrate court it had closed for the week and the judges had gone home.

“They purposefully delayed taking him to the court so that he couldn’t get bail and now he has to spend time in lock up. We are trying to find a solution but this is a unfortunate incident,” his father, Muhammad Akmal told reporters.

Senior superintendent police, Zahid Aziz told the media that three charges were registered against Umar but all were bailable offences.

“They carry a prison term of three months to two years and fine but he can be bailed out. We filed the case because he committed a serious offence,” Aziz said.

Aziz said Umar violated a signal and when the traffic warden tried to challan him, he turned violent and caught him by the neck and also tore his uniform.

“It is a very serious offence to assault an officer on duty and tear his uniform and obstruct him from doing his duty,” he added.

Umar, 23, the youngest of the Akmal brothers who has played 16 Tests, 89 ODIs and 52 T20 internationals for his country alleged the warden had abused and than slapped him.

“The language used by the police officer was not appropriate and he had no right to talk to me like that and he also slapped me. The place where the incident took place has CCTV cameras all around and I would ask the authorities to just look at the footage and than decide whether I have done any wrong,” Umar said.

“I went to the police station to get a case registered but instead they arrested me,” he said.

This is not the first time the young batsman has been embroiled in a controversy. He had undergone counselling in the past on directions of the Pakistan Cricket Board for behaviour problems.

Last year, Umar was censured by the board when he was called back from the Caribbean Premier League after reports he had suffered a seizure and on returning home contradicted the board’s version.

The Pakistan Cricket Board preferred to remain quiet on the incident.

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