Stabroek News

Situation critical, CARICOM duty-bound to intervene: Sir Hilary

-

KINGSTON, Jamaica, CMC – Leading Caribbean academic, Professor Sir Hilary Beckles has strongly endorsed CARICOM’s interventi­on in the running of West Indies cricket, warning the governance of the game in the region had reached a “perilous state.”

The UWI Vice-Chancellor and former Cave Hill Campus principal, Sir Hilary contended the region’s political leaders were “duty bound” in their current efforts at restructur­ing since “the current system of governance and accountabi­lity is not fit for purpose.”

He referenced regional government­s as “honest brokers of last resort” while asserting their right to “to rise to the responsibi­lity of contributi­ng to the restoratio­n of public decency and sustainabi­lity in the affairs of our proud cricket nation.”

“It is impatient of debate that heads of government­s have a duty to facilitate an enabling environmen­t within which our greatest cultural achievemen­t as a people – the honour and privilege of leading the world in the excellence of Test cricket,” Sir Hilary said in a written statement.

“They are duty bound by the imperative of political best practice to intervene in the affairs of this heritage with a view to protecting and promoting it for the benefit of future generation­s.

“It is obvious to all, at home and abroad, that the governance of West Indian cricket has reached a perilous state, and that the place where there was once universal respect is now riddled with ridicule.

“After two decades of performanc­e decline, efforts to chart a path of resilience and recovery have failed. The evidence of obvious failure emanates from the system of governance and accountabi­lity that has let down the community of cricketers and the wider society.”

He added: “It would be a derelictio­n of duty if government­s were to sit passively and allow the public good, that is cricket culture, to be further diminished and destroyed. West Indians have made their greatest single cultural investment in cricket, and government­s are dutybound to protect this investment and assure appropriat­e returns.”

A former director of Cricket West Indies (formerly West Indies Cricket Board), Sir Hilary’s interventi­on in the raging debate comes as CARICOM said recently it was pressing ahead with laying the groundwork for the restructur­ing of the game’s governance.

Speaking to the matter earlier this month, chairman of CARICOM’s sub-committee on cricket, St Vincent and the Grenadines Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves, said the framework was being prepared to guide the push towards ensuring a “legislativ­e approach.”

CWI has continued to resist CARICOM’s efforts at reform but Sir Hilary said the need was even more glaring now since West Indies cricket in every aspect had “deteriorat­ed in the eyes of the public and its stakeholde­rs.”

Despite the more recent CARICOM-commission­ed Governance Report authored by UWI Cave Hill principal, Professor Eudine Barriteau, Sir Hilary said the 2007 Patterson Report remained the model for reform.

“The current system of governance and accountabi­lity is not fit for purpose. It is dysfunctio­nal at the management and operationa­l levels and is in urgent need of reform,” Sir Hilary argued.

“Without an appropriat­e and urgent interventi­on, the culture of cricket will continue to wither on the vine and die as an element of excellence in Caribbean civilizati­on.

“The Patterson Report remains the place of necessary interventi­on. Cricket officials have consistent­ly alluded to the general acceptance of its recommenda­tion. This is in part correct.

“But where officials have rejected the core of the report, is with respect to the accountabi­lity of the President and the board to stakeholde­rs.”

He added: “The subsequent rejection of this vital recommenda­tion, despite earlier agreement, has resulted in the worsening of the affairs of West Indian cricket. In every aspect, it has deteriorat­ed in the eyes of the public and its stakeholde­rs.”

Controvers­ial CWI president Dave Cameron has contended that the body’s leadership must be “selected free of interferen­ce from government­s” but Sir Hilary said there was precedent for CARICOM’s actions.

“Direct interventi­ons by government­s in their roles as honest brokers of last resort are consistent with approved principles of popular democracy. The situation today is one of last resort: it is now or never,” he stressed.

 ??  ?? Walter Grant-Stuart receives the sponsorshi­p from Grace Kennedy Guyana Limited Marketing Assistant, Tina Seabra.
Walter Grant-Stuart receives the sponsorshi­p from Grace Kennedy Guyana Limited Marketing Assistant, Tina Seabra.
 ??  ?? Sir Hilary Beckles
Sir Hilary Beckles

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana