After being sacked as captain Afridi pulled out of the series against Ireland, telling the board he wanted to stay with his ailing father, who is under treatment in the United States. But he reached England from the US, and announced his retirement there.
He also defended his statement, saying he only spoke the truth and nothing else.
"I didn't speak against anyone nor did I criticise anyone by name. What I said was for the betterment of the team. But if they don't want me to speak the truth, then I can't accept working with such people," he said.
"I didn't want any problem. What I said was keeping in mind the benefits of the team. I can't continue to play under a board that does not respect senior players," he added.
Afridi retired from Test cricket last year after Pakistan lost the first Test to Australia at Lord's.
In the 325 ODIs he played, Afridi scored 6695 runs, at an average of 23.49, but a staggering strike rate of 113.82. He also bagged 315 wickets, at an average of 34.22.
He holds the record of the fastest ODI century, off 37 balls.
In 43 T20s, he aggregated 683 runs and claimed 53 scalps.
He played 27 Tests, scoring 1716 runs (avg 36.51) and garnered 48 wickets (avg 35.50).
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