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Ponting happy with team security arrangements
Australia's cricket team is "totally confident" in security measures
taken in response to reports of a terror threat against the squad during
last year's Ashes series, according to the captain Ricky Ponting. The
Sunday Times reported Al-Qaeda plotted to murder the entire Australian
team in their changing rooms during the Edgbaston Test in Birmingham,
using sarin nerve gas sprayed by the men who bombed the London
Underground.
"We are totally confident in the security precautions Cricket Australia
and the Australian Cricketers' Association take on our behalf," Ponting
said in a statement released in India, where the team is about to play
in the Champions Trophy tournament.
"With regards to this report, we were very comfortable with the security
arrangements that were in place during the recent Ashes tour and we
continue to trust the security information provided to us by Cricket
Australia and the ACA."
However, Ponting had raised the players' concerns over security in the
immediate aftermath of the London bombings. "I know quite a few players
feel there is an element of inconsistency about our decision to continue
with the tour and I agree with that," Ponting wrote in his Ashes Tour
diary. "If we were in, say, Pakistan or Sri Lanka and something like
this had happened, I am sure we would have been on the first plane out.
"Countries like that have lost revenue as a result of tours being called
off because of terrorist threats yet here we are, staying put in the
United Kingdom after terrorists just didn't threaten to do something,
but in fact detonated explosives in the city where we are due to play
our next two matches.
"I bet the officials of those countries are wondering where the
consistency is in the current situation. The players want guarantees the
level of security at playing venues will be stepped up because we have
not been happy with what we have seen so far."
James Sutherland, the Cricket Australia chief executive, said the board
had no knowledge of the terrorist threat during the Ashes tour. "At no
stage then or since was there any specific issue relating to the
Australian or England teams raised with us," he said. "We work with the
Australian Cricketers' Association to take expert security advice from
as many sources as we can before we make decisions about whether tours
should go ahead or not."
Peter Young, a Cricket Australia spokesman, said the London Metropolitan
Police, who the board worked with to ensure proper security of the
players, had not mentioned a threat as part of their security advice.
"We have had a heightened concern for security for a number of years and
that's been evident by our actions on a number of occasions when we have
cancelled tours where we have not been 100 percent convinced that safety
and security was as appropriate as it could be," Young told The Courier
Mail.
"Unfortunately it is part and parcel of modern life when you are
travelling the globe. We didn't go to Sri Lanka or Pakistan because we
were not 100 percent sure. Being 99 percent sure isn't good enough." —Agencies |