Karachi: Pakistan coach Waqar Younis has questioned the timing of cricket authorities’ crackdown against chucking just months away from the World Cup, and suggested that rules on bowling actions be relaxed for spinners.

In an interview, the former pace great said key all-rounder Mohammad Hafeez’s confidence was left shattered after he was reported for a suspect action in an Indian domestic tournament, a fresh blow to Pakistan following the loss of Saeed Ajmal to a chucking ban.

Ajmal, the world’s leading one-day bowler, faces a race against time to complete remedial work by the World Cup, to be held from February to March in Australia and New Zealand.

He was suspended earlier this month after he was found to straighten his elbow up to 43 degrees — well beyond the 15 degree limit prescribed under the rules, the point where a kink becomes noticeable to the naked eye.

Since then, Hafeez and Sunil Narine have been among four players reported during an Indian tournament.

Though the action has no direct bearing on international cricket, Waqar said the bowlers would now be under intense scrutiny.

“Is this the right time to enforce the protocols and the technology?” he said.

“I am asking this because every team plans ahead of the World Cup, and the suspensions will badly hit the teams whose bowlers got suspended or questioned.

“I mean the protocols and the technology should have been enforced after the World Cup,” he added.

Meanwhile, disgruntled batsman Younis Khan will not be penalised by the Pakistan Cricket Board for criticising the selectors after being dropped from the one-day international series against Australia.

“For the moment, we will not take any disciplinary action against him, and hope he will settle down now,” PCB chairman Shaharyar Khan said in a statement on Tuesday.

“I will definitely meet him in the near future and hear out his grievances, but as of now the selectors have finalised the team for the one-day series against Australia.”