The Korea Times

Just not cricket: Indian politician­s bat for power

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— Cricket is more than just a game in India: critics accuse ruling-party politician­s and the sport’s closely linked mega-rich board of exploiting its huge popularity for electoral advantage.

India began voting in six-weeklong general elections on last Friday, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu-nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) widely expected to sweep to a third term in power.

Modi’s BJP is intricatel­y tied to the powerful Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), with commentato­rs saying the ruling party has sought to co-opt the sport as a tool to bowl out political opponents.

Veteran cricket journalist Sharda Ugra said the sport is “used as a vehicle for a muscular nationalis­m.”

“Control is exercised not just through its presence of senior officials connected to the ruling party, but through the use of Indian cricket to further their political messaging,” she told AFP.

Modi’s government is far from the first to use cricket for political gain in India, but his populist BJP has tightened those links further than any before, added Ugra.

BCCI chief Jay Shah is the son of home affairs minister Amit Shah, Modi’s right-hand man and himself a former president of the Gujarat state cricket board.

Arun Dhumal, chairman of the money-spinning Indian Premier League, is the brother of sports minister Anurag Thakur, who is also an ex-BCCI head.

“The current BCCI is the first Indian cricketing administra­tion which is under the control of a single political party, and not a general clutch of politician­s,” said Ugra.

Gideon Haigh, cricket writer for The Australian newspaper, has called the BJP “shameless in its self-interest” for co-opting the sport.

“Cricket is just one of many institutio­ns it has captured, although it is the one most meaningful to the most people,” Haigh told AFP.

Cricket is just one of many institutio­ns it(the BJP) has captured, although it is one most meaningful to

most people

Stadiums renamed

The BJP won state elections in Rajasthan in December, and last month a minister’s son took charge of the cricket board.

In New Delhi, the capital’s stadium was renamed in 2019 after a BJP stalwart, the late finance minister Arun Jaitley, whose son Rohan Jaitley heads the state cricket board.

For the previous 137 years, it had been called the Feroz Shah Kotla stadium, after a 14th-century Muslim sultan.

And when India hosted the ODI World Cup last year, Modi attended the final at the world’s biggest cricket stadium — which is named after him — in Ahmedabad.

A home victory would undoubtedl­y have further boosted national pride ahead of the election, but India lost in the decider.

 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? Former U.S. President Donald Trum, left, and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrive to attend the “Namaste Trump” rally at Sardar Patel Stadium in Motera on the outskirts of Ahmedabad, Feb. 24, 2020.
AFP-Yonhap Former U.S. President Donald Trum, left, and India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrive to attend the “Namaste Trump” rally at Sardar Patel Stadium in Motera on the outskirts of Ahmedabad, Feb. 24, 2020.

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