Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Azeem ‘should never have been put through this’

LORD PATEL SAYS SEISMIC CHANGE IS NEEDED AT YORKSHIRE

- CRICKET

YORKSHIRE have reached a financial settlement with Azeem Rafiq over his employment tribunal against the club.

Now new chairman Lord Kamlesh Patel has vowed to oversee ‘urgent and seismic change’ at the club in response to the racism scandal.

Patel was appointed on Friday following the resignatio­n of Roger Hutton and has already implemente­d a series of actions, ramping up the county’s reaction to Rafiq’s allegation­s of institutio­nal racism after a year of slow progress.

As well as reaching a compensati­on agreement with their former player, Yorkshire have issued a fresh apology for past mistakes and made clear that the deal did not include a non-disclosure agreement (NDA) - a request Rafiq had previously rejected.

“I thank Azeem Rafiq for his bravery in speaking out. Azeem is a whistleblo­wer, should be praised as such and should never have been put through this,” said Patel, who said he spent over six hours in conversati­on with the former player since his appointmen­t.

“I would like to apologise. We are sorry for what you and your family experience­d and the way we have handled this. What happened to you must never be repeated.

“There’s a clear need for urgent and seismic change, starting from within, and I’m determined to lead this club to a better and more positive future. Trust and transparen­cy will be the key words for my tenure.

“We have settled the employment tribunal case - the legal proceeding­s - with Azeem Rafiq.

“Absolutely no restrictio­ns have been placed on Azeem and what he can or cannot say about his experience­s. The club was wrong to have asked Azeem to agree to an NDA in the past and he rightly refused. Our offer means Azeem will be free to speak about his experience­s publicly.”

Patel also announced the imminent introducti­on of an independen­t hotline to collect experience­s of others who may have experience­d discrimina­tion - including those who might previously have ‘felt silenced or intimidate­d’ - and a review of Yorkshire’s diversity and inclusion procedures.

Additional­ly, the full and unredacted independen­t report into Rafiq’s claims has now been shared with a number of parties including the latter’s own legal team, the Equality and Human Rights Commission and Julian Knight, chair of the parliament­ary Digital, Culture, Media and Sport committee.

Rafiq, who saw claims of racial harassment and bullying upheld by an independen­t report, welcomed the developmen­ts but used the moment to repeat his call for the removal of Yorkshire’s chief executive Mark Arthur and director of cricket Martyn Moxon.

“As Lord Patel said, this is just the start if we are to make cricket open to everyone, no matter their background,” he said in a statement.

“I urge others who have suffered to come forward. There is strength in numbers and I will be right behind you. Mark Arthur, Martyn Moxon and many of those in the coaching staff have been part of the problem. They have consistent­ly failed to take responsibi­lity for what happened on their watch and must go. I urge them to do the right thing and resign to make way for those who will do what is needed for the club’s future.”

As well as those mentioned by Rafiq, former club captain and one time England internatio­nal Gary Ballance will have questions to answer after his admission that he used a “racial slur” against his former team-mate.

“This will be a zero-tolerance club. I will fail miserably if it is not,” Patel said when asked about dealing with individual­s.

 ?? ?? New Yorkshire chairman Lord Kamlesh Patel
New Yorkshire chairman Lord Kamlesh Patel

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