Business Day

Behind CSA’s decision to drop Teeger as captain

• Protests by at least one pro-Palestinia­n group are planned for the opening World Cup match on Friday

- Stuart Hess

Although Cricket SA (CSA) has no fears over the direct safety of David Teeger during the ICC Under-19 World Cup, it is understood the prospect of planned protests turning violent motivated the organisati­on to remove him as captain of the SA U19 team.

The CSA has refused to make any further comment after the statement it released on Friday. However, it is believed officials, based on security assessment­s the organisati­on had received, felt it would be “irresponsi­ble” to keep Teeger in the spotlight as a captain.

Teeger has been at the centre of a controvers­y after comments he made — in support of the Israeli Defence Forces when he received the “Rising Star Award” at the Jewish Achiever Awards last October — were made public. The CSA subsequent­ly appointed advocate Wim Trengove to conduct an inquiry into whether Teeger had breached its code of conduct, which Trengove found was not the case.

Protests by at least one proPalesti­nian group are planned for the SA team’s opening World Cup match in Potchefstr­oom on Friday, when they face the West Indies. The CSA’s hope that the decision to strip Teeger of the captaincy would temper some of the intensity around the issue seemed optimistic, with plenty of fury directed at it on social media since Friday.

However, some CSA officials believe the organisati­on will just have to ride out the storm.

On Saturday, the SA Zionist Foundation condemned the CSA’s decision, calling it “a blatant act of discrimina­tion and anti-Semitism against a Jewish player”. In its statement on Friday, the CSA said it had “a primary duty to safeguard the interests and safety of all those involved in the World Cup and must accordingl­y respect the expert advice of those responsibl­e for the safety of participan­ts and spectators”.

While Teeger’s safety hasn’t been threatened, concerns that protests could turn violent were central to the CSA’s decision.

The organisati­on faced a “nowin” situation, said one official. “Imagine if, because of protests, someone gets hurt or worse because a rubber bullet is fired ... we don’t want that happening at a cricket match,” said the official, who asked not to be named.

A small group of pro-Palestinia­n protesters gathered outside Newlands on the first morning of the second Test between India and SA recently, but there was no hint of violence. Some of the protesters who had tickets were permitted to enter the ground with Palestinia­n flags.

The CSA approached Trengove in December after a complaint lodged by the Palestinia­n Solidarity Alliance about Teeger’s comments. In his defence before Trengove, Teeger said his comments were a personal opinion.

“Having considered the matter further, I appreciate I may have been naive in thinking that this personal reflection would be received as such,” he told Trengove.

“I regret not giving more considerat­ion to whether my impromptu comments would be scrutinise­d, given my growing prominence in sport, or that these comments may be repeated in the media — although I maintain that my comments cannot reasonably be interprete­d to be representa­tive of the position of CSA, [his provincial team, the Central Gauteng] Lions or any of the teams in which I participat­e. And, at the time, I did not intend or foresee that anyone would interpret the comments in this way.”

Trengove found that Teeger’s comments could “not be understood to imply his approval or even condonatio­n of genocide or any other crime. Others might find his statements offensive,” Trengove wrote in his findings. “But they would understand that the constituti­onal right to freedom of expression requires of us to be tolerant even of views that we find offensive.”

 ?? ?? David Teeger
David Teeger

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