|
|
Indian PM pledges to save Pakistan cricket tour
AFP
15 January 1999
NEW DELHI, Jan 15 (AFP) - Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee
vowed Friday to prevent Hindu militants disrupting the planned
Pakistani cricket tour of India later this month.
``We won't allow them to disrupt the games,'' Vajpayee told a delegation
of top sportsmen seeking his guarantee the tour would go ahead.
The tour has come under threat from the militant Shiv Sena party,
which has vowed to disrupt the games in protest at Pakistan's support
for Moslem rebels in the disputed region of Kashmir.
Shiv Sena activists have already caused the venue of the first Test
due to begin January 28 to be changed, after they dug up the pitch at
the original venue in New Delhi.
Vajpayee made a personal appeal to the militants to halt their
campaign.
``I say to them that you have protested. Now your purpose is solved and
you should do no further harm. If you really want to fight, you should
go and fight on the border instead of digging up pitches at night,'' he
said.
While pledging government action to save the Pakistan tour, the prime
minister also urged the cricket-mad Indian public to put pressure on
the Shiv Sena.
``The public has to urge these people that matches, be they of cricket,
hockey or any other sport, should be played in their true spirit and
should not be disrupted.''
Pakistan cricket officials said Thursday they were confident of
victory on the Indian tour, though the final decision on whether to go
ahead with the sensitive trip was down to the government.
It would be the first Pakistan tour on Indian soil since 1987.
Copyright 1998-2001 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed on
this page (dispatches, photographs, logos), with the exception of CricInfo
logos and trademarks, are protected by intellectual property rights owned
by Agence France Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce,
modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any
of the contents of this section without prior written consent of
Agence-France-Presse.
|
|
|