FILE PHOTO: Britain Cricket – NatWest T20 Blast Finals Day – Edgbaston – 20/8/16 Yorkshire’s Azeem Rafiq celebrates the wicket of Durham’s Ben Stokes Action Images via Reuters / Paul Childs Livepic EDITORIAL USE ONLY./File Photo

November 4, 2021

(Adds dropped word in par 5)

(Reuters) -Former Yorkshire player Azeem Rafiq said on Thursday that the issue of institutional racism lay at the heart of his problems with the English county club, not “the words of certain individuals.”

Rafiq’s statement on Twitter comes a day after Yorkshire batsman Gary Ballance said he regretted using racist language towards his former team mate.

Several sponsors have ended their partnerships with Yorkshire following an independent report into allegations of racism made by Rafiq.

Yorkshire said last month that they would not take action against employees, players or executives following the report, which found Rafiq had been a victim of racial harassment and bullying in his first spell at the county from 2008-14.

Rafiq and senior Yorkshire executives have been called to give evidence before a parliamentary Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) panel on Nov. 16.

“I’m not intending to say very much until the select committee hearing later this month. However, I wanted to stress this is not really about the words of certain individuals,” Rafiq said on Twitter.

“This is about institutional racism and abject failures to act by numerous leaders at Yorkshire County Cricket Club and in the wider game. The sport I love and my club desperately need reform and cultural change.”

Rafiq, a player of Pakistani descent and a former captain of the England Under-19s, said last year he was made to feel like an outsider at Yorkshire and contemplated taking his own life.

Ballance, who played 23 tests for England, had described Rafiq as his “best mate in cricket” in a statement on Wednesday and said that on the pitch they “supported each other greatly”.

“It has been reported that I used a racial slur and, as I told the independent enquiry, I accept that I did so and I regret doing so,” Ballance added.

“To be clear – I deeply regret some of the language I used in my younger years.”

(Reporting by Simon Jennings in BengaluruEditing by Christian Radnedge)


Source: One America News Network

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments