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Cricket diplomacy takes centre stage

India and Pakistan have fought three wars and edged to the brink of nuclear attack. Next week, the bitter rivals will try to spur a fragile peace process with help from a common passion: cricket.

Updated on: Mar 5, 2004, 15:13:00 IST
PTI | By , Islamabad
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India and Pakistan have fought three wars and edged to the brink of nuclear attack. Next week, the bitter rivals will try to spur a fragile peace process with help from a common passion: cricket.

HT Image
HT Image

Work will come to a halt, restaurants and tea shops in big cities and remote villages will swell with people, and millions of TVs on both sides of the border will be tuned in.

It's India's first full cricket tour of Pakistan since 1989, although there were three one-day matches in 1997. Karachi will host the series-opening match March 13.

Indian batsman Yuvraj Singh described it as "the mother of all games." Veteran Pakistani commentator Omar Qureishi called the series "war by other means."

The South Asian neighbours reached a broad agreement last month on a timetable for sustained peace talks over the disputed province of Kashmir and other tough issues.

The talks represent the first real test of flexibility on long-entrenched positions, including Kashmir — the cause of two of the countries' three wars since their 1947 independence from Britain.

In recent months, India and Pakistan have moved to restore transportation links and diplomatic ties. In November, soldiers halted cross-border firing in Kashmir.

The hope is that the cricket series can play a role similar to US table tennis players' traveling to China in the 1970s. That came to be known as "Ping-pong Diplomacy," paving the way for normalized relations.

Next week's cricket tour was almost derailed by Indian fears over security after a wave of terrorist attacks in the past three years. But Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee last month pressed for its go ahead.

"Cricket means... a lot to people in Pakistan and India," said Qureishi, who has covered all but two of the India-Pakistan cricket series since the first in 1952.

"It's the one colonial legacy that we are hanging onto. It's almost a secular religion on the subcontinent."

The countries' sporting ties often have been waylaid by politics. From 1960-78 — a period marked by wars over Kashmir and Bangladesh and failed peace talks — there were no India vs. Pakistan cricket matches.

Hope for change has emerged in recent months. Peace talks will stretch over months and possibly years, but observers say they offer the best chance in a generation for an end to five decades of enmity.

"People in both countries are sick and tired of the posturing and bogus belligerence," Qureishi said. "There's a genuine hunger for normalization in relations and this cricket series is a tremendous opportunity to build bridges."

Khalid Mahmood of Islamabad's Institute of Regional Studies said India's decision to make the tour was a goodwill gesture. "It will further help to ease tension," he said.

Pakistan's cricket team toured India in 1999, before New Delhi blocked further visits.

That year, suspected Hindu extremists, angered at Pakistan's alleged support of Islamic separatist guerrillas in disputed Kashmir, dug up the cricket pitch in New Delhi and forced the first Test to be rescheduled.

Militants also ransacked the Indian cricket board's headquarters, damaging the 1983 World Cup trophy.

During India's 1997 three-match visit to Pakistan, fans hurled stones at Indian players in Karachi.

"I'm sure the Pakistani crowd will give the Indians a warm welcome," said Pakistan's cricket coach, Javed Miandad.

In 1999, "we went to India and had a lovely time. There were no differences between people. We were accepted simply as sportsmen."

The hosts have promised heavy security; attacks by Islamic extremists led to cancelations of a number of international cricket tours to Pakistan in 2002-2003.

New Zealand cut short a tour in May 2002 after a deadly bomb blast outside its hotel in Karachi. No players were hurt.

C. Rajamohan, professor of South Asia Studies at New Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University, said sporting contacts were "good therapy" for relations between the two countries. "But they inflame passions and carry the risk of cutting both ways," he added.

Sports certainly can be politicized. The United States boycotted the 1980 Moscow Olympics to protest the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan. The Soviets replied by leading a boycott of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.

Sports also can be lucrative.

Pakistan Cricket Board spokesman Samiul Hasan said about 8,000 visas are being issued to Indian fans for the tour.

He said the board would earn at least $21 million from TV rights and sponsorship for eight matches, and up to $1.25 million from ticket sales.

"It will be a complete sellout, no question about it," he said.

India goes into the tour as favorite after it tied a Test series in Australia against the world's top-ranked lineup.

With enormous pressure on the players of both sides to perform, India's batting maestro, Sachin Tendulkar, revered among his more than 1 billion countrymen, warned against taking the game too seriously.

"It's not a war, it's a game, so treat it as such," he said.

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