The Indian board has ruled out a resumption of bilateral  matches with Pakistan in the near future and will take a call on the issue only  late next year, a senior BCCI official said on Monday. The development, which is  on expected lines, follows an informal discussion on the issue between Shashank Manohar, the  BCCI president, and Ijaz  Butt, the PCB chairman, in Mohali, the venue of the fourth ODI between India  and Australia. 
BCCI officials have consistently maintained that a bilateral  series between India and Pakistan - plans for which were shelved after last  November's terrorist attacks in Mumbai - can resume only after governmental  clearance. Manohar also told Butt it would not be possible to schedule a series  in the next seven to eight months in any case because of India's packed  schedule, according to Rajiv Shukla, a BCCI vice-president. 
India's seven-match ODI series against Australia is followed  by a full series against Sri Lanka, ODIs against South Africa and the Twenty20  World Cup in the West Indies. 
"There is simply no space (for a bilateral series)," Shukla  said. "Conditions also have to be conducive between the two countries in terms  of diplomatic relations." 
Asked if they discussed the possibility of having bilateral  series in neutral venues -- an idea mooted by India's deputy foreign minister  Shashi Tharoor -- Shukla said, "Right now, the team is too busy for playing  against any team. Playing at home, abroad or at neutral venues are issues that  are premature to discuss right now."

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