ICC Rejects Bangladesh's T20 World Cup Relocation Request, Pakistan Disappointed

The International Cricket Council has decided against relocating Bangladesh's T20 World Cup matches from India to Sri Lanka, a decision that has disappointed Pakistan. Sources indicate Pakistan, while backing Bangladesh on principle, will not withdraw from the tournament as they have no valid security reason to boycott. Former Pakistan cricketer Kamran Akmal criticized the ICC, suggesting its decisions often favor India due to its revenue-generating power. The T20 World Cup is set to proceed as scheduled from February 7 to March 8, co-hosted by India and Sri Lanka.

Key Points: ICC Rejects BCB's T20 World Cup Relocation, Pakistan Reacts

  • ICC rejects Bangladesh's match relocation request
  • Pakistan disappointed but will not withdraw
  • Kamran Akmal criticizes ICC's perceived bias
  • Tournament schedule remains unchanged for India & Sri Lanka
2 min read

Pakistan left disappointed as ICC rejects BCB demand on World Cup, but will not consider withdrawal

Pakistan expresses disappointment after ICC denies Bangladesh's request to move T20 World Cup matches from India to Sri Lanka, but confirms no withdrawal.

"Most of the ICC decisions prove they are in favour of India, and this should not happen with member countries except equal treatment. - Kamran Akmal"

Mumbai, Jan 22

The International Cricket Council decision to proceed with Bangladesh's matches in the upcoming Men's T20 World Cup in India as scheduled has been met with disappointment in Pakistan, with a former star claiming the decision was on expected lines, a news report said on Wednesday.

Though Pakistan was left disappointed after the ICC rejected Bangladesh's request to relocate their T20 World Cup matches out of India to Sri Lanka because of "security" reasons, sources said Pakistan will not pull out of the event to support Bangladesh, Telecom Asia Sport reported.

"Pakistan backed Bangladesh's stance on principles because, on India's insistence, their matches were moved out from Pakistan to Dubai, but the same reason by Bangladesh was not accepted, which is disappointing," sources told www.telecomasia.net.

Sources said Pakistan will consider options, but that does not include withdrawing from the event. "Pakistan is considering various options, but withdrawal from the event is never an option nor was it considered," said sources.

Sources told www.telecomasia.net that PCB officials understand they do not have a valid reason to boycott the event, as they are already playing in a neutral venue where they have no security fears.

Moreover, sources said, Pakistan never threatened to withdraw from the event officially, and most of the reports came from social media.

The report quoted former Pakistan wicketkeeper batter Kamran Akmal as saying the ICC decision was on expected lines.

"Most of the ICC decisions prove they are in favour of India, and this should not happen with member countries except equal treatment," Kamran told Telecomasia.net.

"Champions Trophy case was one example where India's will was accepted because they are a revenue generator for ICC and they also forced Pakistan to host the 2023 Asia Cup on a hybrid model," he said.

The report said Kamran thinks ICC's hands were tied in this case. "I think ICC was in a tough situation as they had decided the schedule, and at this point, it was tough to change it."

The T20 World Cup will be hosted jointly by India and Sri Lanka from February 7 to March 8

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As a cricket fan living in Mumbai, I think the ICC made the right call. India has hosted numerous international events safely. The hybrid model for the Asia Cup showed a workable compromise. Constant venue changes disrupt the tournament for fans and organizers.
A
Arjun K
Kamran Akmal has a point about equal treatment, but the context matters. India moved its matches from Pakistan due to explicit government directives, not just PCB's whims. The situations are not identical. ICC probably considered the logistical nightmare of a last-minute shift.
P
Priya S
Honestly, it's tiring. Every time there's an India-Pakistan cricket issue, it becomes a huge drama. Pakistan is right that they won't withdraw—what would that achieve? Their players want to play the World Cup. Let the best team win on the field, not in boardrooms.
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Vikram M
While I support our country hosting, we must acknowledge the perception issue. The "revenue generator" argument is real and does create a power imbalance in ICC. A more transparent process for such decisions would help the sport's image globally.
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Karthik V
The report says most noise is from social media, not official channels. That explains a lot! Fans need to chill. Sri Lanka is co-hosting anyway, so what's the big deal? Excited for the World Cup, hope we get an India-Pak final! 🤞

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