Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Cricket team narrowly avoids shooting

- STEVE MCMORRAN

Members of the Bangladesh cricket team had just arrived by bus at Masjid Al Noor mosque for Friday afternoon prayers when they heard gunshots.

Had they arrived a few minutes earlier, they would have been inside the mosque, where at least 30 people were killed by a gunman with an automatic rifle. Another nearby mosque in Christchur­ch was also attacked, and in total at least 49 people were killed and more than 20 seriously injured.

Police charged one person, detained three others, and defused explosive devices in what appeared to be a carefully planned and racist attack. When the bus carrying some players and coaching staff arrived at the mosque, they heard but did not see the shootings, Mohammad Isam, a journalist travelling with the Bangladesh team, told The Associated Press.

The players were kept on the bus by police, then later allowed to leave and to walk to nearby Hagley Oval, where they had been scheduled to begin the third cricket test against New Zealand on Saturday.

The players eventually returned to their hotel shaken, distressed, and in no mental state to consider playing cricket, Isam said.

The test match was cancelled, and the Bangladesh squad was preparing to fly home on Saturday.

Team manager Khaled Mashud told espncricin­fo.com the players had a lucky escape.

“We must have been about 50 yards from the mosque. I would say we were really lucky,” Mashud said.

“Had we reached even three or four minutes earlier, we probably would have been inside the mosque.”

Players and team staff had earlier taken to social media to recount their narrow escape.

Opening batsman Tamim Iqbal tweeted: “entire team got saved from active shooters. Frightenin­g experience and please keep us in your prayers.”

Performanc­e analyst Shrinivas Chandrasek­aran posted: “Just escaped active shooters. Heartbeats pumping badly and panic everywhere.”

Mushfiqur Rahim posted “Alhamdulil­lah Allah save us today while shooting in Christchur­ch in the mosque ... we r extremely lucky ... never want to see this things happen again ... pray for us”

Bangladesh Cricket Board president Nazmul Hassan Papon said nobody expected such an event to occur in New Zealand, but the shootings highlighte­d the fact that teams from South Asia deserved the same high level of security when they travelled as their home countries provided to visiting teams.

“It is not only, say, Bangladesh or India or Pakistan at the high risk,” he said. “That is why we feel that the security that countries like Bangladesh gives to other teams when they come to play in Bangladesh, we should also get the similar type of security arrangemen­t or support from the host country.”

Former Bangladesh internatio­nal cricketer Sajol Ahmed Chowdhury gave thanks that all the players were safe.

“The Bangladesh cricket team is our national asset,” he said.

“There is a World Cup coming (in May in England), which is a big concern. We hope that this sort of incident never happens again.”

 ??  ?? Tamim Iqbal
Tamim Iqbal

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