Cricket

Barmy Army eager to be here

Barmy Army. File Photo: AFP

Even as The Telegraph’s report about England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) security advisor Reg Dickason being wary of travel within the cities of Bangladesh cast further gloom over England’s scheduled tour of Bangladesh, famous England fan group Barmy Army seem eager to see some action. 

Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) media committee chairman Jalal Yunus revealed on Tuesday that the Barmy Army had contacted him about coming to the country to egg on their team during the scheduled tour in October.  

“They contacted us asking about where they can stay during the tour and we told them about hotels where they will get adequate security,” Yunus told The Daily Star. 

Earlier however, on Monday night a report on British newspaper The Telegraph’s website cast further doubts over England’s scheduled tour of Bangladesh in October. The security concerns, according to the report published on The Telegraph’s website late on Monday, was with travel within the cities of Dhaka and Chittagong rather than the hotels where the team will stay or the grounds where they will play. 

The report also revealed that the fate of the tour is ‘expected to be decided this week and to hinge on the England and Wales Cricket Board security advisor Reg Dickason’.  

A three-man security delegation -- security advisor Reg Dickason, Professional Cricketers Association chief executive David Leatherdale and ECB's director of cricket operations John Carr -- from the ECB left Bangladesh last Saturday after a four-day inspection of the relevant areas, and the buzz regarding the tour in Bangladeshi cricket circles was a positive one at the time of their departure. 

Security doubts were first cast over the tour in the aftermath of the July 1 terrorist attack on the Holey Artisan Bakery in Gulshan which claimed the lives of 20 civilians and two police officers. 

Although not quoting any member of the security delegation directly, the report did say that “It is understood that Dickason’s chief concern is not so much the hotels where England will be staying in Dhaka and Chittagong, or the grounds in those two cities, as they can be cordoned off by the police and military.

“The most potentially dangerous parts of a cricket tour are the journeys from the airport to the team hotel, and from the team hotel to the ground, especially in crowded Asian cities where it is humanly impossible to secure all the buildings overlooking the roads.”

The security team were given every assurance of safety by the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) and concerned government agencies. It has also been learnt that those within the Bangladesh cricket establishment draw confidence in security provisions from the safety arrangements that have been offered to teams in the past -- during the numerous bilateral series hosted here and also multi-national events like the Asia Cups (2012, 2014 and 2016), the 2014 World Twenty20, the 2011 World Cup, etc. 

“The ECB has not told us anything officially, so we cannot make any comments,” said BCB CEO Nizamuddin Chowdhury when asked about the report in The Telegraph.

 

Comments

Barmy Army eager to be here

Barmy Army. File Photo: AFP

Even as The Telegraph’s report about England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) security advisor Reg Dickason being wary of travel within the cities of Bangladesh cast further gloom over England’s scheduled tour of Bangladesh, famous England fan group Barmy Army seem eager to see some action. 

Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) media committee chairman Jalal Yunus revealed on Tuesday that the Barmy Army had contacted him about coming to the country to egg on their team during the scheduled tour in October.  

“They contacted us asking about where they can stay during the tour and we told them about hotels where they will get adequate security,” Yunus told The Daily Star. 

Earlier however, on Monday night a report on British newspaper The Telegraph’s website cast further doubts over England’s scheduled tour of Bangladesh in October. The security concerns, according to the report published on The Telegraph’s website late on Monday, was with travel within the cities of Dhaka and Chittagong rather than the hotels where the team will stay or the grounds where they will play. 

The report also revealed that the fate of the tour is ‘expected to be decided this week and to hinge on the England and Wales Cricket Board security advisor Reg Dickason’.  

A three-man security delegation -- security advisor Reg Dickason, Professional Cricketers Association chief executive David Leatherdale and ECB's director of cricket operations John Carr -- from the ECB left Bangladesh last Saturday after a four-day inspection of the relevant areas, and the buzz regarding the tour in Bangladeshi cricket circles was a positive one at the time of their departure. 

Security doubts were first cast over the tour in the aftermath of the July 1 terrorist attack on the Holey Artisan Bakery in Gulshan which claimed the lives of 20 civilians and two police officers. 

Although not quoting any member of the security delegation directly, the report did say that “It is understood that Dickason’s chief concern is not so much the hotels where England will be staying in Dhaka and Chittagong, or the grounds in those two cities, as they can be cordoned off by the police and military.

“The most potentially dangerous parts of a cricket tour are the journeys from the airport to the team hotel, and from the team hotel to the ground, especially in crowded Asian cities where it is humanly impossible to secure all the buildings overlooking the roads.”

The security team were given every assurance of safety by the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) and concerned government agencies. It has also been learnt that those within the Bangladesh cricket establishment draw confidence in security provisions from the safety arrangements that have been offered to teams in the past -- during the numerous bilateral series hosted here and also multi-national events like the Asia Cups (2012, 2014 and 2016), the 2014 World Twenty20, the 2011 World Cup, etc. 

“The ECB has not told us anything officially, so we cannot make any comments,” said BCB CEO Nizamuddin Chowdhury when asked about the report in The Telegraph.

 

Comments

কেজি ২ টাকা, বাজারের শোভা বাড়ালেও ক্রেতা মিলছে না ফুলকপির

মৌসুমের শেষের দিকে এসে চাহিদার তুলনায় সরবরাহ বেড়ে যাওয়ায় বাঙালির রসনাতৃপ্তির পাশাপাশি বাজার ও খেতের শোভা বাড়ানো শীতের এই ‘সিগনেচার আইটেমটির’ দাম পড়ে গেছে বলে ভাষ্য স্থানীয় চাষিদের।

৭ মিনিট আগে