Sohag Gazi, the Bangladesh offspinner, has been reported for a suspect bowling action following the second ODI against West Indies in St George's.
The match officials' report, according to an ICC release, "cited concerns regarding Gazi's bowling action for all deliveries". He will need to undergo testing within 21 days, as per ICC regulations.
The BCB is currently looking at options for ICC-accredited testing facilities as the team is in the West Indies, which doesn't have one. The board is trying to manage his appearances in the current series, which has an ODI, a T20 and two Tests remaining.
Gazi, who has played ten Test matches, 19 ODIs and nine T20s since his international debut in 2012, was reported once, two years ago, by an umpire in a tournament in Bangalore where he was playing for Bangladesh A.
Gazi is the fifth bowler–and the fifth offspinner–to have been reported for a suspect action over the past few months. Zimbabwe's Prosper Utseya, Sri Lanka's Sachithra Senanayake, New Zealand's Kane Williamson and Pakistan's Saeed Ajmal are the others.
Recent drive against faulty actions
August 2014 - Prosper Utseya reported, to undergo testing
August 2014 - Saeed Ajmal reported, to be tested in Brisbane
July 2014 - Kane Williamson banned after tests find his action illegal
July 2014 - Sachithra Senanayake banned, undergoes remedial work
December 2013 - Shane Shillingford suspended from bowling, cleared in March 2014; Marlon Samuels prohibited from bowling quicker deliveries
October 2013 - Johan Botha cleared by Cricket Australia after being reported during a domestic match
May 2013 - ECB suspends Glenn Querl, Jack Taylor from bowling
April 2013 - CA bars seamer Cameron Gannon