Khaleej Times

Clarke hails Pakistan security improvemen­ts, urges caution

- AFP

lahore — A top cricketing official urged caution over efforts to revive internatio­nal cricket in Pakistan, which has been suspended for nearly eight years due to security fears.

Pakistan have not hosted any major cricket event — barring a limited over series against minnows Zimbabwe in 2015 — since a terrorist attack on the Sri Lankan team bus in Lahore in March 2009. Last week, the West Indies refused to tour Pakistan for two Twenty20 internatio­nals in March, citing refusal from players over security fears. Giles Clarke, head of the Pakistan Task Team at the Internatio­nal Cricket Council (ICC), is currently making a two-day tour of Lahore to assess security arrangemen­ts for internatio­nal teams.

Clarke met the chief minister of Punjab, Shahbaz Sharif, officials from the Pakistan Cricket Board and other security experts on Saturday. “We are looking to establish

We know it’s important Pakistan play at home but we also know that we don’t want to get it wrong Giles Clarke

a solid and reliable base upon which internatio­nal bilateral cricket at all levels can return on a regular basis to Pakistan,” Clarke told media after his meetings. He said he was impressed with the arrangemen­ts put in place but cautioned against rushing things.

“We know it’s important Pakistan play at home but we also know that we don’t want to get it wrong,” he said.

Clarke praised Zimbabwe for sending a team to Pakistan.

“Zimbabwe did a great job in coming to Pakistan and it was well organised and we wanted to build on that last year but a terrible incident happened in a Lahore park which derailed those efforts,” said Giles, referring to a bomb blast in March last year which killed 70 people. Clarke stressed the ICC and the internatio­nal cricket community “recognize the deep frustratio­n of Pakistan cricket fans that they have been unable... to host other internatio­nal teams here.”

“This isn’t an easy road, but “you have to remember that an internatio­nal team was actually attacked,” he added. —

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