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UK governments hypocritical stance over World Cup cricket
match in Zimbabwe
By David Rowan and Julie Hyland
25 February 2003
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The start of the World Cup cricket tournament in Africa was
overshadowed by a dispute involving the International Cricket
Council (ICC), the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) and the
England cricket team.
At the centre of the dispute were statements made by the Blair
Labour government in the weeks preceding the tournament. In December
2002 senior government ministers began a moral outcry against
the England cricket players, condemning them for agreeing to play
matches in Zimbabwe. They called for Englands February 13
match against Zimbabwescheduled to be played in the capital
Harareto be boycotted by the England team.
Labours International Development Secretary Clare Short
kicked off the campaign, calling for the match to be scrapped.
It would be shocking and deplorable for the England
team to visit Zimbabwe, Short said, given the oppressive character
of the Mugabe regime. President Robert Mugabe had stolen
recent elections, Short continued, and was now starving his people
because they dared to vote freely. Zimbabwe, like
much of southern Africa, is in the grip of famine.
Prime Minister Tony Blair added to the pressure. Government
officials let it be known that Blair was of the opinion that the
team should not go to Zimbabwe and asked the England cricket players
to reflect on the humanitarian and political
crisis in Zimbabwe. Whilst stating that the final decision
on whether to play in the country was up to the cricketing authorities,
the government made clear that its advice was that the team should
not go. Foreign Secretary Jack Straw stated explicitly that he
was against the fixture being played.
Coming just six weeks before the start of the tournament, the
governments intervention caused consternation amongst the
cricket authorities, who were faced with heavy financial fines
should they pull out of the tournament at the last moment. ECB
Chief Executive Tim Lamb accused the government of double
standards and told reporters that cricket was being treated
differently to the 300 other [British] businesses which continue
to trade in Zimbabwe, which ministers arent discouraging.
The governments objections were all the more unexpected
because it had been known for four years that the World Cup was
scheduled to be played in Zimbabwe, yet it had left its complaint
until the last moment. In October 2001 the England cricket team
played five one-day matches in Zimbabwe without condemnation.
According to the Conservative supporting Daily Telegraph,
Lamb had participated in a meeting at the British Foreign Office
in July 2002 where he was told that there was no absolute
impediment to the England team playing in Zimbabwe. Former
sports minister Kate Hoey said that she was absolutely certain
that there was no instruction stating otherwise.
Such was the atmosphere created that the England team and officials
begun receiving death threats, causing the ECB to request that
the ICC reschedule Englands matches. During the England
tour of Australia, for example, threatening notes signed by the
Organised Resistance were pushed under the players
hotel room doors. Lamb received a letter from another unknown
organisation named the Sons and Daughters of Zimbabwe,
which threatened the lives of the England cricket team if they
played in Harare and also threatened their families back in the
UK.
The ICC denied both requests, stating that the death threats
were not substantial and that some of the material
provided by the ECB was unclear and of uncertain reliability.
Andre Pruis, deputy National Commissioner of the South African
Police, who is in charge of World Cup security, concluded that
the letter from the Sons and Daughters of Zimbabwe
was propaganda and not a direct threat. He said it
was nonsense. Despite assurances, the England team
refused to play in Harare and the game was cancelled and the four
winning points rewarded to Zimbabwe.
The World Cup is part of a $500 million deal between the ICC
and its commercial partners. The ECB will now have to pay a £1
million fine and compensate the Global Cricket Corporation for
the loss of the broadcast. When the ECB asked the UK government
to compensate it for this financial loss as a result of carrying
out its political directive the government responded that it would
be extremely odd for the taxpayer to foot the bill for an
independent sporting organisation.
Mugabe is unquestionably a brutal dictator whose bourgeois
nationalist ZANU-PF regime serves the interests of a tiny wealthy
elite at the expense of the Zimbabwean masses. He responded predictably
to the furoreannouncing a security crackdown in advance
of the games, and threatening anyone seeking to display their
defiance before the worlds cameras. Measures were being
taken to weed out would-be troublemakers and other social
misfits, Zimbabwes head of security Albert Mandizha
told reporters, and any one seen wearing black armbandsas
advocated by Cricket Supporters for Democracy would have
to be attended to.
Following the games, the pro-government Herald newspaper
called on the ICC to take action against two Zimbabwe cricketers
for bringing the game into disrepute. Both players
wore black armbands in Zimbabwes opening game against Namibia
in protest against the Mugabe regimes attack on democratic
rights.
But the absence of democratic rights in Zimbabwe is not the
real reason for the Blair governments intervention into
cricketing schedules. Dictatorship and human rights abuses do
not usually prevent English cricketers playing abroad. For example,
the England team has played numerous games over the past few years
in Pakistan, which is governed by a military dictatorship led
by General Pervaiz Musaharraf. It also plays regularly in Sri
Lanka where a civil war has raged for 19 years, accompanied by
the brutal repression of the Tamil minority. Both these regimes
are considered allies of the UK, however, and so their own violation
of human rights is conveniently ignored.
Rather, the cricket row is just the latest cynical episode
in the Blair governments efforts to re-establish British
imperialisms presence in a number of its former colonies.
Mugabe joins a growing list of those rulers, such as Saddam
Hussein and Slobodan Milosevic, who having previously been promoted
and propped up by western governments, have subsequently fallen
out of favour and are to be subject to regime change.
The Zimbabwean president is considered not to have implemented
with sufficient vigour International Monetary Fund and World Bank
demands for the countrys economy to be opened up fully to
international capital, due to his fear that such measures will
ultimately jeopardise his own rule and privileges.
Consequently, the British government has led a campaign to
destabilise Mugabe and replace his regime with one more responsive
to western demands, discovering and highlighting human
rights abuses and financing opposition tendencies.
Its real attitude towards the plight of Zimbabwes masses
is revealed in its response to the severe food shortage gripping
the country. In Zimbabwe alone, more than 8 million people face
starvation as part of the famine stalking southern Africaa
catastrophe due in no small part to IMF insistence on the economic
restructuring of agriculture. Despite Shorts pronouncements
over the crisis, however, Zimbabwe is being denied sufficient
food aid, as Britain and the West use the famine as a means of
tightening their control over the country.
See Also:
Zimbabwe: Britain and South
Africa in Mugabe retirement plot
[22 January 2003]
Zimbabwe: A letter
from the MDC and a reply
[20 November 2002]
Are Britain and the
United States moving against Zimbabwe?
[18 November 2002]
Zimbabwe, Fiji and
the hypocrisy of British Commonwealth leaders
[13 March 2002]
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