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Sri Lanka wicketkeeper Kusal Perera cleared as ICC lifts ban

Sri Lankan cricketer Kusal Perera runs between the wickets during the fifth and final day of the third and final Test match between Sri Lanka and India
Image: Kusal Perera can play again after samples were deemed "not sustainable"

Sri Lanka wicketkeeper Kusal Perera is free to return to cricket after the ICC lifted his provisional ban for an anti-doping violation.

Perera's suspension came in December 2015, after an out-of-competition urine sample tested positive for the anabolic steroid 19-Norandrostenedione, while his B sample too was found to contain the substance.

However, according to an ICC statement, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) accredited laboratory in Qatar on Wednesday withdrew its "adverse analytical finding" after an independent review by the ICC said the results from Perera's samples were "not sustainable".

It added that this was for "various scientific and technical reasons" and that it could not be ruled out that the 19= Norandrostenedione was "produced naturally in the player's body and/or formed in the samples after the player provided them".

At the time of his initial suspension, Perera was recalled from the then-upcoming tour of New Zealand, while the 25 year-old is not part of the Sri Lanka touring party to England this month.

ICC chief executive David Richardson said: "Had it not been for the diligence of Mr Perera's legal team and the ICC's own desire to uncover the explanation for the reported findings, the consequences could well have been different, and that should be of concern to all involved in the fight against doping.

"We regret what Mr Perera has had to endure, and would like to commend him for the manner in which he has conducted himself throughout this period.

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"We wish to make it clear that there is no evidence that Mr Perera has ever used performance-enhancing substances and we wish him well in his future cricketing endeavours."

Perera, who made his Sri Lanka debut in 2013 and has three Tests and 51 one-day internationals under his belt, could have faced a lengthy ban if the anti-doping violation had been proven. He also missed the ICC World Twenty20.

While the ICC has cleared the wicketkeeper-batsman to return to cricket "with immediate effect", Richardson was left with questions over the process.

Perera defended
Perera defended

Kusal Perera backed by Sri Lanka's sports minister

The South African said in the statement: "Cricket is proud of its compliance with the structures and systems required by WADA and takes comfort from the fact that samples are tested in accordance with WADA-approved standards and at WADA-accredited laboratories.

"However, the ICC is troubled in this case by the fact that the Qatar laboratory has issued an adverse analytical finding that has then had to be withdrawn and replaced with an atypical finding.

"Whilst I am confident that this is an isolated incident in respect of tests commissioned by the ICC, we are seeking an urgent explanation from WADA and the laboratory in an attempt to understand what has transpired and what will be done to ensure it does not happen again.

"We will also immediately review our own internal processes to see whether there might be additional steps over and above those required by WADA that the ICC could put in place in order to give international cricketers further comfort."

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