Jayalalithaa has her way, no Sri Lankan players in Chennai IPL matches
Jayalalithaa has her way, no Sri Lankan players in Chennai IPL matches
Chennai:
Sri Lankan cricketers will not play Indian Premier League
matches in Chennai. The IPL governing council decided this at a hurried
tele-conference with team owners after Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J
Jayalalithaa wrote a letter to the Prime Minister today saying that no
IPL matches would be allowed in the state capital if they involved Sri
Lankan players, umpires or officials. The tournament begins next week
and at least 10 matches are scheduled in Chennai.
- Ms Jayalalithaa said in her letter to the PM that emotions in
her state are running high over the Sri Lanka Tamils issue. "In such a
hostile and tense environment, we apprehend that the participation of
Sri Lankan players in the IPL tournament, with many games to be played
in Chennai, will aggravate an already surcharged atmosphere and further
offend the sentiments of the people," she said.
- She also
said that her government would allow matches in Chennai only if the
organiser, Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), gave an
undertaking that no Sri Lankan will be involved in them.
- IPL
Chairman Rajiv Shukla said, "Since the local administration has advised
something, we have to keep that in mind. The security of Sri Lankan
players is paramount."
- Mr Shukla also said that IPL team
owners had expressed concern about security and that "we cannot take a
tough stand." However, he denied that this amounted to buckling under
pressure from the Tamil Nadu government.
- The IPL chairman
made it clear that the 13 Sri Lankan cricketers in the tournament would
play matches at other locations in the country. "The problem is only in
Chennai", he said.
- The chief of the Lankan board, Ajith
Jayasekara, said the players and his country's government had been
informed. "We won't tell them don't go for the IPL, but we did inform
them about the situation right now and it is for them to take a
decision," he said.
- There have been protests all over
Tamil Nadu for days now, with political parties and students demanding
that the Centre take a strong stand against what they call Sri Lanka's
"genocide" of its ethnic Tamils in the final months of the civil war
that ended when defence forces crushed the separatist Tamil Tigers in
May 2009.
- Last week the DMK pulled out of the UPA
coalition at the Centre, accusing India of watering down a UN resolution
against Sri Lanka that was adopted last week. India voted against Sri
Lanka, but the Tamil Nadu parties say it let down Sri Lankan Tamils by
failing to persuade the UN to use stronger language against the island
nation and by not pushing for an independent rather than an internal
inquiry into the alleged war crimes.
- The sixth edition of
the IPL is scheduled to be held from April 3 and will be played in
different locations in the country over 45 days.
- Ten
matches are to be played in Chennai, which also has a home team in the
Chennai Super Kings, with two Sri Lankan players in it, who will now be
benched for all home matches. Eight of the nine IPL teams have Lankan
players.
No comments:
Post a Comment