hehe
Seriously though, putting up with people you don't like and don't trust is part of the job. It's not up to Hafeez and Azhar to challenge the decisions made by the courtrooms and the cricketing bodies. Sure they may not agree with it, and they might not be the only ones in the side who don't trust Amir, but they are professional cricketers whose job it is is to play alongside whomever the selectors pick. Amir has done his time and has been cleared to return.
I think everyone here agrees that it is unacceptable to refuse to play alongside someone simply because you think they're a bit of a ****, or because you suspect them of not having the team's best interest at heart. If players had walked off and refused to play alongside men like Haddin and Boycott simply because they didn't like them then we'd be giving them **** for it and rightly so. Even a refusal to play alongside a team-mate who simply has accusations with no evidence of fixing around him would be deemed inappropriate.
But then why do we feel Azhar and Hafeez's actions here are justifiable? Amir, legally speaking, is completely cleared to return to International cricket. Qualified lawyers and judges -people with an actual education in the law and how to apply it- looked over all the available evidence, studied the situation, and decided on a punishment that they felt was fair, which Amir then followed.
On top of that, since his return he has been bowling well.
There are no reasons -legally or cricketing wise- for him to not be in the team.
The only issue is a Moral one. A moral stance. "I believe fixers should never play cricket again." And Amir is making a comeback, and this goes against the moral stance of Azhar and Hafeez, and so they walked out.
Should it also then be acceptable for a cricketer with the moral stance "I believe ex-criminals should not be allowed in professional cricket" to walk out when Mark Vermulean is picked in the same team as him?
What if his moral stance is "Players who opted out of a series in order to play in a T20 league should never be picked for the country again" Or "Players who are born in raised in one country should not be allowed to jump ship and play Tests for another" Or "Bowlers with dodgy actions should not be selected for professional cricket" Is it justifiable for a player who holds those moral stances to walk out on their side when a player who goes against them is picked?