A former Chairman of the PCB Najam Sethi, who now heads the powerful executive committee, and Chief Operating Officer Subhan Ahmed will attend the meeting in Cape Town since chairman Shaharyar Khan is recovering from a heart surgery in London.
Before leaving for Cape Town, Sethi said that he would give a tough answer to Indian cricket officials this time but insisted that he would stick to PCB's policy of keeping apart cricket and politics.
"Pakistan's stance is simple...First Anurag Thakur must clarify at the ICC meeting whether he gives statements as a politician of the ruling party in India or as President of the BCCI since the ICC constitution discourages politics in cricket," the source said.
The source added that the Pakistan delegation will also be talking about India's refusal to play with them since 2007 in bilateral series but yet take home the lions share of profits made from Indo-Pak matches in ICC events.
He said Pakistan will be presenting a paper at the ICC meeting, which will be discussing the 'Big Three' issue, which shows that while Pakistan only stands to make around USD 100 million from its share from corporate costs, India will make around USD 350 million despite not being willing to play Pakistan in bilateral series.
The PCB delegation will also be taking up the statement of Thakur, in which he had said that BCCI will ask ICC to not keep Pakistan and India in same group in ICC events including in next year's Champions Trophy although the draws have already been announced.
The source claimed that it was a wrong impression that ICC chief Shashank Manohar, who resigned as BCCI president to take up his new assignment, wanted the Big Three governance system to be scrapped.
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