Take Indian threats seriously, don't play in Dharamsala: Mani to PCB
Former ICC chief said PCB also needed to be very vocal and clear about not playing at Dharamsala since it was an ICC event.
Karachi: Former ICC chief Ehsan Mani has advised the Pakistan Cricket Board not to play its World T20 match against India in Dharamsala on March 19.
Mani said on the Dawn News channel on Tuesday that the PCB needs to seriously consider the threats by state authorities to not allow Pakistan to play at Dharamsala.
I would advise the PCB to take these threats seriously. Because it involves the security of our players, officials, people and media who will go to India for the event," Mani said.
The President of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) Shashank Manohar called up his Pakistani counterpart and assured him the best possible security for the Pakistan team during the World T20 in India. His call came after the PCB apparently wrote to the ICC drawing their attention to the uncertainty surrounding the match at Dharamsala.
If this match had involved the Australian team I am sure by now they would have pulled out of the match," Mani noted.
They made their position on security for their players clear when they pulled out of the ICC Youth World Cup in Bangladesh earlier this year," he said.
Mani said the PCB also needed to be very vocal and clear about not playing at Dharamsala since it was an ICC event.
Read: ICC World T20: Himachal won't provide security to Pakistan team, BCCI in a fix
The BCCI had criticised authorities in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh after they refused to provide security for World T20 tie, citing a January attack on an Indian army base.
Chief Minister Virbhadra Singh said Sunday that the match should be moved to another venue out of respect for the "martyrs" killed in the assault by militants on an Indian air force base in neighbouring Punjab.
Sources in the PCB said that alternate venues such as Mohali and Kolkata had been discussed by Manohar and Shaharyar Khan but nothing was final as yet.
Mani said that Pakistan had bent backwards to have normal cricketing relations with India but the environment was still the same in India.
The Pakistan government has also shown it believes in having cricketing relations with India but I would think playing in Dharamsala in this environment would be risky for the Pakistan team," he added.