According to its detailed judgement the Lahore High Court set aside the punishment and fine imposed by the PCB and declared it to be without lawful authority and of no legal effect.
Justice Shams Mehmood Mirza issued the detailed order on May 6 in which he ruled that the case of Akhtar was not governed by any validly promulgated rules and regulations by the PCB and therefore the remedy of writ cannot be denied to him.
The writ petition stated that Akhtar was not governed by any central contract or laws of the PCB as his contract with them expired on Dec 31, 2007 and was never renewed.
Initially the disciplinary committee of the PCB had imposed a ban of five years on the pacer in April, 2008 but this was later reduced to 18 months by an appellate tribunal. The PCB deducted the seven million rupees fine from his dues with the board.
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His counsel further said that Akhtar's contract had lapsed by efflux of time when the show-cause notice was served to him.
Akhtar, who ended up with 178 Test and 247 ODI wickets in a controversial career, had several run-ins with the authorities including breach of code of conduct on tours, throwing bottles into the crowd in Zimbabwe, ball tampering, use of offensive language, use of banned substances, leaving a training camp without permission and hitting teammate Mohammad Asif with a bat in South Africa.