Indian communists offer to host India-Pakistan cricket match
AFP
22 November 1998
NEW DELHI, Nov 22 (AFP) - Indian communists have offered to host an
India-Pakistan cricket tie if Hindu militants try to disrupt it
elsewhere in the country, newspapers said Sunday.
The communist government in the eastern Indian state of West Bengal
said late Saturday the match could be played in the leftwing bastion
of Calcutta, The Hindustan Times reported.
``We are ready to play hosts for the match and will offer all possible
security to the members of the visiting (Pakistan) team,'' West Bengal
Home Minister Buddhadev Bhattacharya was reported as saying in
Calcutta.
Calcutta, also the mecca of Indian soccer, is the capital of West
Bengal.
Firebrand Hindu militant leader Bal Thackeray has threatened to
sabotage cricket matches between India and Pakistan if they are played
in Bombay, which is ruled by his Shiv Sena party.
On Saturday, however, Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee publicly
pledged to protect Pakistani cricketers and said he would not allow
their matches to be disrupted by anyone.
``No organisation or individuals would be allowed to obstruct the
Pakistani cricket team,'' Vajpayee told reporters after an election
rally in the northern city of Jaipur.
The Shiv Sena is an ally of Vajpayee's Hindu nationalists.
Pakistan are scheduled to play early next year their first Test series
on Indian soil in 11 years.
They will play three Tests and as many one-day internationals during a
seven-week tour that starts January 21, the Indian cricket board
announced this month.
Pakistan last played Test cricket in India in 1986-87.
Twice cancelled scheduled tours in 1993 and 1994, citing security
fears, but played in India during the limited-overs World Cup in 1996
and last year's Independence Cup tournament.
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