Imran Khan says England right to refuse Karachi Test
Imran Khan says England right to refuse Karachi Test
Agence France-Presse, Islamabad
Pakistan cricket legend Imran Khan said on Wednesday that England's refusal to play a Test in Karachi this winter was justified.
England said on Tuesday they would not play a Test in the violence-prone city, but agreed to play a one-day international there and will decide in 10 days' time whether to play a second game as well.
"Until and unless the law and order situation was restored such things will happen," Khan, a former Pakistan captain who is now a politician in his homeland, told AFP.
"When England's security team was in Karachi the city mayor was quoted in a newspaper as saying that local elections next months will see bloodshed and everyone took notice of it," said Khan.
"You can't blame the Pakistan Cricket Board because in such a situation if they press for a Test in Karachi the whole tour might get jeopardized."
However, cricket officials in Karachi vowed to protest the decision and hit out at the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) for failing to argue the case for the country's largest city.
"England's refusal to play a Test in Karachi is disappointing and we would protest over it," Karachi City Cricket Association secretary Sirajul Islam Bukhari told AFP.
"The PCB has failed to plead the case of Karachi," Bukhari added.
"Karachi is a safe place and in a population of 15 million one or two incidents are common. Colombo in Sri Lanka staged international matches when there was unrest, so why not Karachi?"
Bukhari said Karachi staged the 1996 World Cup successfully even though there was a curfew in some parts of the city.
The three Tests proposed for the tour are now likely to take place in Lahore, Faisalabad and Multan while Lahore will also stage two one-day internationals.
If England plays only one limited overs match in Karachi, then Rawalpindi will stage two.
Two British security experts spent last week assessing security at various grounds in Pakistan, and two senior English cricket officials visited this week.
Karachi has been rocked by a series of deadly shootings as well as a suicide bombing at a mosque and the burning down of a KFC restaurant earlier this year.
In the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks, foreign cricket teams like Australia and the West Indies have refused to play in Pakistan because of security fears.
Karachi has been rejected as a Test venue by South Africa and India since a bomb blast outside the New Zealand's team hotel in May 2002 killed 14 people, including 11 French naval engineers.