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Cronje killed in plane crash
Cronje’s death will not affect a criminal case against the former skipper and his teammates in a match-fixing scandal, Indian police said. “Hansie is dead but the match-fixing case is alive,” said a top official from the Delhi police department. “The judicial process will be on and once the case goes to court, Cronje’s name will be mentioned in coloumn two of the (police) charge sheet,” the official said of a section in the official papers for names of deceased suspects. Former vice-captain and long serving opening batsman Gary Kirsten said: “Hansie was a friend and a great leader. “He was an inspiration to me when I first came into the national team and he gave me confidence. It was impossible not to respect him.” Shaun Pollock left the field of an English county match in shock, his wife Trish told SAPA by telephone. She said her husband was so devastated that he could not finish the game. “He needs a few hours to recover,” she said. Kepler Wessels said: “I saw Hansie last week and he had clearly reached a point where he wanted to build a new life for himself. He was intent on putting everything that happened behind him and he wanted to find a niche outside cricket.” Former South African President Nelson Mandela was magnanimous in his tribute, saying Cronje was to become a model of how someone can rebuild their life after hitting rock bottom. “Here was a young man courageously and with dignity rebuilding his life after the setback he suffered a while ago. The manner in which he was doing that, rebuilding his life and public career, promised to make him once more a role model of how one deals with adversity,” Mandela said in a statement.—Reuters/AFP
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