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Asking Haryana’s athletes for one-third of their endorsement earnings is the cruellest cut

Sakshi Malik, Yogeshwar Dutt, Vijender Singh and Sardara Singh would have been affected by the directive that has now been put on hold by the Haryana CM

Updated on: Jun 12, 2018 03:34 PM IST
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It is a blow to Haryana’s perception as a state that prided itself on its sporting pedigree. In a government notification, now put on hold, the Sports and Youth Affairs department of the Manohar Khattar government had said that athletes should donate one-third of the income that they earn from professional sports or commercial endorsements to the Haryana State Sports Council. In the notification, the government had asked that sportspersons deposit 33% of their income to the Council. This wasn’t all. According to the circular, sportspersons employed by the government had to seek extraordinary leave (without pay) during the period of participation in professional sports.

Wrestler Sakshi Malik celebrates after winning the bronze in women's wrestling at the 2016 Rio Olympics. (PTI)
Wrestler Sakshi Malik celebrates after winning the bronze in women's wrestling at the 2016 Rio Olympics. (PTI)

With the chief minister now putting the order on hold, better sense appears to have prevailed. Such a diktat is unheard of in any part the world. It was a dramatic reversal for a state that pioneered the “padak lao, pad pao” (Bring medal home, get a job) scheme in which career opportunities in the government sector were guaranteed to medal winners in the Olympics, Commonwealth Games, Asian Games and the National Games. The Haryana model of producing world-beaters, for which they created a robust sports infrastructure in rural areas, including development of mini stadiums in each gram panchayat, was cited as an example for others. Although the state accounts for just 2.1% of the country’s population, 29% of the Indian contingent at the Rio Olympic Games in 2016 came from Haryana. In the recent Gold Coast Commonwealth Games, 22 of the 66 medals that were collected by the Indian contingent came from Haryanvi athletes.

aasheesh.sharma@hindustantimes.com

@Aasheesh74

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Aasheesh Sharma

Aasheesh Sharma works with the opinion team at Hindustan Times. Over the last 20 years, he has worked with a wire service, newspapers, magazines and television. His story on the longest train journey in India was included in an anthology on train writings in 2014.

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