Global Times

Scandal hits Cricket Scotland

▶ Board resigns en masse as instances of institutio­nal racism reported

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An independen­t review into allegation­s of racism at Cricket Scotland has found the governance and leadership practices of the organizati­on to be “institutio­nally racist.”

The report, which found 448 examples of institutio­nal racism, was commission­ed by sportscotl­and, the national funding body, in 2021 after Scotland’s all- time leading wicket- taker Majid Haq and former teammate Qasim Sheikh said they had suffered racist abuse.

Haq and Sheikh’s solicitor Aamer Anwar described the findings as “the most devastatin­g verdict to be delivered on any sporting institutio­n in the United Kingdom.”

As part of the review an anonymous survey was carried out, with 62 percent of those who responded saying they had experience­d, witnessed or had received reports of incidents of racism, inequaliti­es or discrimina­tion.

Allegation­s include racial abuse, use of inappropri­ate language, favoritism toward white children from public schools and a lack of a transparen­t selection process.

Huq and Sheikh never played for Scotland again after publicly expressing their opinion that race was a factor in selection.

“We were branded liars – Qasim for over a decade, me for seven- and- a half years,” said Huq.

“It’s been a relief for me and I really hope the future and current generation get equal opportunit­ies and support and backing. Any time you challenged anything you were branded a troublemak­er.”

The investigat­ion, carried out by consultanc­y firm Plan4Sport, found Cricket Scotland failed in 29 out of 31 indicators of institutio­nal racism.

As a result of the findings, the governing body has been placed under special measures until at least October 2023, with sportscotl­and effectivel­y taking control of the organizati­on.

“Governance and leadership practices of Cricket Scotland have been institutio­nally racist,” said Louise Tideswell, managing director of Plan4Sport. “The reality is that the leadership of the organizati­on failed to see the problems and, in failing to do so, enabled a culture of racially aggravated micro- aggression­s to develop.”

On Sunday, the board of Cricket Scotland resigned en masse.

Interim chief executive Gordon Arthur said: “The racism and discrimina­tion that has taken place in the sport that we all love should never have been allowed to happen, or to go unchalleng­ed for so long.”

“I would like to again issue a heartfelt apology to all those who have been the victims of racism and discrimina­tion in Scottish cricket.”

Among the recommenda­tions of the review are for the new board to be comprised of no more than a 60- 40 gender ratio either way and a minimum of 25 percent of members should come from black, southeast Asian, or other mixed or multiple ethnic groups.

The chief executive of sportscotl­and, Stewart Harris, described the findings as “deeply concerning and in some cases shocking.”

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Cricketers Qasim Sheikh ( right) and Majid Haq ( left) sit with lawyer Aamer Anwar during a press conference at Stirling Court hotel in Stirling, Scotland on July 25, 2022.
Photo: AFP Cricketers Qasim Sheikh ( right) and Majid Haq ( left) sit with lawyer Aamer Anwar during a press conference at Stirling Court hotel in Stirling, Scotland on July 25, 2022.

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