The three players, who are already under suspension, will face the ban until January 2016 nationals.
Additionally, the Table Tennis Federation of India (TTFI) will also be writing to their employers to take appropriate action besides the national federation stripping them of all their national and international titles.
This, along with other decisions, was taken at the Executive Board meeting held here today. The crucial meeting was attended by 10 of the 12 members. A day earlier, the disciplinary committee met here to suggest the quantum of punishment to the errant players.
Addressing media persons at the end of the EB meeting, TTFI president Prabhat C. Chaturvedi, said the case a fourth paddler from Bengal, Ayhika Mukherjee, was also probed by the Sports Integrity Cell but it found the player not deriving any benefit unlike the other three.
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"Ayhika, too, had two dates of birth certificate but she was competing in the right age-group events and was not found to have taken any advantage by the probe panel. Accordingly, we let her off with this season's ban (one-year) and no fine was imposed on her."
Chaturvedi also said the TTFI clean-up drive has yielded good results with 24 North Bengal, 20 West Bengal and a few Assam paddlers coming forward and voluntarily disclosing their correct dates of birth.
He, however, warned that with the deadline for voluntary disclosure having come to end on November 25, 2014, any player found to be having more than one date of birth certificate will face two-year ban and withdrawal of all titles.
In order to tighten the screw on such future age-fraud cases, the TTFI will impose a two-year ban with a fine of Rs. 50,000, said Chaturvedi.