LAHORE Former Pakistan captain Muhammad Yousuf is likely to be quizzed by the parliamentary committee on sports and asked to respond to the reports that he forced some national team members to take oath against the then skipper Younus Khan. Well informed sources said that the National Assembly standing committee was keen to call Yousuf for a hearing on May 21 after the PCBs inquiry committee report said that Yousuf last year called six to seven players to his hotel room to take oath that they would not cooperate with Younus. Yousuf, who has slipped into the background after announcing his retirement from international cricket after being banned by the PCB in march, is likely to be forced to face a tough grilling at the hands of the parliamentarians, one report said. Another former captain Shoaib Malik, who was replaced by Younus last year in February, has said that the oath was taken to ensure that Younus didnt do any injustice with the players. But a source said that the parliamentary committee was seething that such incidents had taken place in the Pakistan cricket and set the tone for intrigues and politics. The committee also wants to know if Yawar Saeed, who has now gone to the West Indies as manager of the Pakistan team, was involved in the whole incident as Younus had accused him of encouraging groupings in the team, the report stated. Yousuf, who announced his retirement after the ban was imposed on him, is the only player out of seven not to have appealed against the penalties handed out by the PCB on the basis of the inquiry report into the Australian tour. Reports coming from close quarters of Yousuf said that he was still angry and upset over the ban and didnt want to have anything to do with cricket. I dont think he is in any mood to make himself available for the forthcoming Test tour to England despite the batting being exposed in the T20 World Cup in the absence of Yousuf, Younus and Shoaib Malik, the report said. It said that Yousuf had also been advised his close friend Inzamam-ul-Haq to now stay away from the team. He is now spending most of his time in religious activities and preaching. But he still practices and has regular nets to keep in touch with cricket as he is not barred from playing domestic cricket or in foreign leagues, the report said. He said there was an offer for Yousuf to go and play in Canada which he has not yet accepted. He seems more interested in playing some county cricket in England.