I really wanted to talk about going to see Northants in the Twenty20 Cup last Sunday, soaking up the sun with the large crowd, while watching the cricket. Andrew Hall’s 5-for or Herschelle Gibbs 98 in a losing cause, but Zimbabwe is a more interesting subject to cover.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown took decisive action yesterday, by instructing the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) to sever involvement with Zimbabwe Cricket, during Prime Minister’s Question Time.
The Prime Minister was asked by Kalid Mahmood, the Labour MP for Birmingham, how the Government was to influence African nations to resolve the current political situation in Zimbabwe. The PM roundly condemned the actions of President Robert Mugabe and vowed to stand by those African countries opposed to Mugabe’s regime. He then went on to add:
“We want to ensure that Zimbabwe do not tour England next year and we will call for other countries to join us in banning Zimbabwe from the Twenty20 international tournament.”
It came as no surprise when later that day, the ECB announced that it was to cut all cricketing ties with their colleagues in Zimbabwe following dialogue with the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) and the example of Cricket South Africa on Monday. The Secretary of State for the DCMS, Andy Burnham, wrote a letter to the Chairman of the ECB, Giles Clarke instructing the ECB that the Government would prevent the Zimbabwe Cricket team from touring England in the early part of summer 2009.
This is something that should have happened some years ago. From an England point of view the World Cup in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Kenya in 2003 shows a case in point of establishment dithering when decisive action was required. In England’s first match of the tournament against Zimbabwe in Harare the results show that Zimbabwe “won” by a walkover. There was much heartache at that time while the International Cricket Council and the ECB hesitated, effectively leaving it instead to the individual players to decide whether or not to play.
There are some who argue that sport has no links with politics which is one I find hard to swallow. Politicians have always aligned themselves with figures of profile and popularity which includes sportsmen and women. Mugabe is no different; what better way to show the world that others approve of your country and by proxy your government, than playing sports with those countries at an international level?
Zimbabwe needs to be frozen out of international sport until fair and free democratic elections return. At their meeting next week the ICC needs to suspend Zimbabwe from its membership totally, not just demote them to Associate level, until the situation in the country improves.