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Call for ICC action against racial abuse
LONDON—Richard Caborn, the UK sports minister, has called on ICC
to stamp out racial taunts from spectators. He was reacting after Monty
Panesar and Kevin Pietersen claimed they were subjected to abuse from
the boundary while fielding during England’s warm-up matches in
Australia.
“No part of sport can accept racism,” Caborn, who is in India leading a
British sport business delegation, told Associated Press. “The sport’s
governing body has to get involved and take appropriate action.
Authorities have to be at war on this. I’m going to be talking to my
counterpart in Australia, we’ve got a little difficulty down there.”
However, James Sutherland, the Cricket Australia chief executive, said
on Friday that he did not think Panesar being called a “stupid Indian”
was racist. Panesar was allegedly taunted by a spectator during the
three-day match against New South Wales at the SCG. “I don’t think
there’s too much racist about that,” Sutherland said while launching a
tourism initiative at the MCG.
Caborn believes the impetus to eradicate racism should come from within
cricket and that the authorities should learn from football’s example.
“It’s an issue for the ICC to deal with, just like FIFA’s done in
football,” he added. “In football we’ve been reasonably successful.
We’ve tackled it in the United Kingdom through a big campaign that
implores people to show a red card to racism.”
ICC have toughened their anti-racism code over the past year after South
African and Sri Lanka players complained at being targeted during tours
to Australia. The England team have not made an official complaint but
the ECB acknowledged the incidents.
Under the toughened ICC anti-racism code, adopted two months ago,
spectators who abuse players risk life bans from matches, while stadiums
risk losing their international status. Caborn added winning the
anti-racism campaign would depend on “self-policing”.
—Agencies |