<p>"To control the spot-fixing, especially prior to its happening, is almost impossible not only for the PCB but for the ICC as well," said Butt in an interview to News One channel on yesterday.<br /><br />"It has to be an all out effort from all concerned to ensure that such wrongdoing does not occur in the future," the PCB chairman added.<br /><br />On the measures taken by the PCB to eradicate corruption from the game, butt, without elaborating, vowed to come down even harder on the culprits in the future.<br /><br />"PCB and ICC have taken a lot of steps, future plans have been drafted to pursues a policy of zero tolerance to corruption," Butt maintained.</p>.<p>The spot-fixing scandal had rocked world cricket after a British tabloid revealed that a bookmaker Mazhar Majeed had bribed three Pakistani players -- Test skipper Salman Butt, pace duo Muhammad Aamer and Mohammad Asif -- to deliberately bowl no-balls during the fourth Test against England at Lord's.<br /><br />The ICC quickly sprang into action and provisionally suspended the trio in early September. <br /><br />Their hearing is due next month in Doha.</p>
<p>"To control the spot-fixing, especially prior to its happening, is almost impossible not only for the PCB but for the ICC as well," said Butt in an interview to News One channel on yesterday.<br /><br />"It has to be an all out effort from all concerned to ensure that such wrongdoing does not occur in the future," the PCB chairman added.<br /><br />On the measures taken by the PCB to eradicate corruption from the game, butt, without elaborating, vowed to come down even harder on the culprits in the future.<br /><br />"PCB and ICC have taken a lot of steps, future plans have been drafted to pursues a policy of zero tolerance to corruption," Butt maintained.</p>.<p>The spot-fixing scandal had rocked world cricket after a British tabloid revealed that a bookmaker Mazhar Majeed had bribed three Pakistani players -- Test skipper Salman Butt, pace duo Muhammad Aamer and Mohammad Asif -- to deliberately bowl no-balls during the fourth Test against England at Lord's.<br /><br />The ICC quickly sprang into action and provisionally suspended the trio in early September. <br /><br />Their hearing is due next month in Doha.</p>