BRIDGETOWN— Cricket’s world governing body, the ICC, has condemned the Guyana government’s takeover of cricket in that country and has re-emphasised its stance against political interference in the running of the sport. Coming out of its two-day Board meeting in Dubai which ended Wednesday, the ICC also said it was “concerned” by the current impasse and threw its support behind the West Indies Cricket Board, which has continued to back the Guyana Cricket Board.
Guyana’s government assumed control of cricket administration there through an Interim Management Committee last year, after the GCB had its legitimacy challenged in the High Court and was declared a legal non-entity.

“The ICC Board reiterates the principle of non-interference in the sport by Governments and were concerned to learn of the developments in Guyana where the Government has dissolved the Guyana Cricket Board and replaced it with an Interim Management Committee,” an ICC statement said Wednesday. “In condemning this government intervention in the strongest possible terms, the ICC Board reaffirmed the principle of non-interference and that the only legitimate cricketing authority is that recognised by the West Indies Cricket Board.” Only last year, the ICC mandated that its member associations should be free from government interference in elections and other administrative affairs. The latest ICC statement is a big fillip for the WICB which has come under fire from regional players’ union WIPA for their stance.

Following a meeting of its own last weekend, the WICB said it supported the IMC as an “advisory body” but would not “recognise or approve any entity other than the GCB” to govern cricket affairs in Guyana. It subsequently pulled Guyana’s first four matches of the Regional Four-Day Championship from the government-owned National Stadium at Providence and said it would also make an announcement shortly on the third Test between West Indies and Australia which was scheduled for the same venue. WIPA criticised the WICB earlier this week over its support for the GCB, querying why it would continue to support a body that was unincorporated. (CMC)

Source:www.guardian.co.tt