The ‘brotherhood’ endures: ‘Zimbabwe understands the meaning of isolation’

African side’s cricket chief assures Pakistan of their solidarity in tough times.


Photo Shafiq Malik/afp May 19, 2015
Tuesday was a busy day in Lahore, with both teams training hard and the visiting side’s cricket chief and captain holding a press conference. PHOTO: SHAFIQ MALIK/EXPRESS

LAHORE:


Zimbabwe’s cricket chief said on Tuesday that his team had decided to tour Pakistan as they too had experienced the cost of isolation as the African team embarked on the first series by a Test-playing nation since 2009.


Speaking at a press conference alongside Captain Elton Chigumbura after arriving overnight in the city of Lahore, Ozias Bvute likened Pakistan’s six years without top-flight cricket at home to the removal of Zimbabwe’s Test status from 2005 to 2011.

“Zimbabwe was isolated for many years, so therefore we understand the politics of isolation. We’ve therefore said no, isolation is not the right way,” he said. “We must break the barriers that exist between us. We are therefore here to affirm our position that brotherhood supersedes everything else and cricket unites us. We hope to give you a decent show.”

Zimbabwe’s Test status was removed after senior players quit to protest the sacking of then-captain Heath Streak, who was appointed after Andy Flower retired in a stand against the policies of the government of Robert Mugabe.

Zimbabwe are the first Test team to tour Pakistan since militants attacked the Sri Lankan team bus in March 2009, killing eight people and leading to the suspension of all international cricket in the country.

The tour was almost called off last week after gunmen massacred 45 minority Shiites in the city of Karachi, but Zimbabwe finally decided to go ahead.

Bvute confirmed there were fears but denied any player was forced to tour. “Being human beings, those events [in Karachi] unnerved a lot of people and created doubts in members of our fraternity as whether it [the tour] was the right thing to do. We obviously weighed the pros and the cons of what we wanted to achieve,” he said. “The position was that our players were offered the opportunity to voluntarily come to Pakistan. They accepted the position and that’s why we have a full-strength squad.”

Chigumbura admitted the heightened security, featuring 6,000 policemen, was something new for his team, but said they were focused on cricketing matters. “Obviously this is something new for us but, as I said, we are not worried about [that] as players and the main thing for us is to play cricket,” he said.

Zimbabwe will play two T20Is on Friday and Sunday followed by three ODIs on May 26, 29 and 31 — all in Lahore.

Published in The Express Tribune, May 20th, 2015.

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