Deccan Chronicle

Smith, Boucher, De Villiers racist

- Johannesbu­rg,

16: South African cricket legends Graeme Smith, Mark Boucher and AB de Villiers were all found to have engaged in racially prejudiced conduct in a report by an independen­t ombudsman released on Wednesday.

Cricket South Africa made public a 235-page interim report by Advocate Dumisa Ntsebeza, who headed a Social Justice and Nation Building Commission to investigat­e allegation­s of racial discrimina­tion in South African cricket.

CSA chairman Lawson Naidoo said the Board will study the report and would “engage with it and its recommenda­tions”.

Ntsebeza found that former Test captain Smith’s appointmen­t as CSA’s director of cricket was irregular, although he did not attribute this to racial discrimina­tion.

But he was critical of Smith’s decision to appoint Boucher as head coach of the national team ahead of Enoch Nkwe, a black coach who served briefly as national team director, which he found was not in accordance with the organisati­on’s human resources policy.

“Mr Smith and CSA failed to rebut the presumptio­n of unfair discrimina­tion in the appointmen­t of Mr Boucher ahead of Mr Nkwe,” according to the report.

Smith was also accused of racial discrimina­tion, along with other CSA and team officials, when he was captain of the Test team in England in 2012.

Following an injury to Boucher, leading batsman De Villiers was selected as wicketkeep­er ahead of Thami Tsolekile, a specialist wicketkeep­er. “The (ombudsman) is persuaded by the argument that

CSA, its coaches and selectors unfairly disadvanta­ged against Mr Tsolekile on the basis of his race.”

De Villiers was also found to have resisted the selection of Khaya Zondo, a black batsman, when he was South Africa’s oneday internatio­nal captain ahead of a series-deciding match in India in 2015.

Dean Elgar, a late replacemen­t for the oneday games, was picked ahead of Zondo, who was part of the original squad for the series. “The only reasonable conclusion is that Mr De Villiers discrimina­ted against Mr Zondo on racial grounds.”

De Villiers, who announced his retirement from cricket last month, responded on social media. “However, throughout my career, I expressed honest cricketing opinions only ever based on what I believed was best for the team, never based on anyone’s race,” he wrote on Instagram and Twitter.

Boucher was accused by former teammate Paul Adams of leading a song in after-match fines meetings in which Adams was referred to as a “brown sh**”. The ombudsman found that Boucher revealed a “lack of sensitivit­y and understand­ing of the racist undertones,” and that Boucher attempted to excuse racism because it was done in a team setting. —

The three top South African cricketers engaged in racially prejudiced conduct, according to a report by an independen­t ombudsman.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India