PCB wants T20 World Cup shifted to UAE in case India don’t assure visa

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Ehsan Mani said the ICC had initially told the Pakistan Cricket Board that it would get the visa clearance from India by December. — Twitter
Ehsan Mani said the ICC had initially told the Pakistan Cricket Board that it would get the visa clearance from India by December. — Twitter

Lahore - Australia were due to host the T20 World Cup but had to postpone it because of the Covid-19 pandemi

By AP

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Published: Sun 21 Feb 2021, 8:00 PM

Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Ehsan Mani says he will demand the International Cricket Council shift the Twenty20 World Cup out of India unless the host country gives assurances regarding visa and safety arrangements for players by next month.

“Our government has never told us that we can’t play (in India),” the Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Ehsan Mani said. “We have agreed with the ICC that we are going to participate and we can’t contravene that.


“At the ICC level, I have clearly said we need a written assurance from the India government over not only our squad’s visas, we also need visas for fans, journalists and the board officials.”

Australia were due to host the T20 World Cup but had to postpone it because of the Covid-19 pandemic. The schedule now has India hosting the 2021 edition and Australia staging the tournament next year.


Mani said the ICC had initially told the Pakistan Cricket Board that it would get the visa clearance from India by December.

“ICC has also been a bit loose on it as they told us that it will be done by Dec 31, 2020, but it didn’t happen,” Mani said.

Since then, Mani has twice raised the issue with the ICC and told them that he needed the clear decision by end of March, otherwise he will demand the event be shifted to the UAE.

“It’s already been decided that if India can’t hold the event it will be shifted to UAE,” Mani said. “Legally and constitutionally it’s our right to participate in the tournament and nobody can remove us from the tournament.”

Mani said on personal level he has no problems with Sourav Ganguly, who is the president of Board of Control for Cricket in India.

“If he wants to organise the tournament in India, I have no problems with it too if he can convince every stakeholder. But ICC has backup plans and if they (India) can’t do it, it will be held at an alternative venue.”

The strained political relations between the two neighbors have prevented the countries playing in any full bilateral cricketing series since 2007 when Pakistan last toured India. However, both countries have regularly faced each other in the ICC tournaments.


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