Cricinfo West Indies



home


Slogout Game

Fantasy

Video

Cricinfo 3D

Betting

Shop

Help and Feedback



West Indies


News

Features

Photos

Fixtures

Domestic Competitions

Stanford 2020

Domestic History

Players/Officials

Grounds

Records

Daily Newsletter




 





Live Scorecards
Fixtures | Results
3D Animation






England v New Zealand
West Indies v Australia
County Cricket 2008
Indian Premier League

Current and Future Tours



News
Photos | Wallpapers




Cricinfo Magazine








Match/series archive
Records
Statsguru
Players/Officials
Grounds



Women's Cricket
ICC
Rankings/Ratings



The Wisden Cricketer

Wisden Almanack



Games
Fantasy Cricket
Slogout



Daily Newsletter
Desktop Alerts
Toolbar







Clash between heads of government

Stay out of player dispute, says Barbados prime minister

Rickey Singh

July 7, 2005

Owen Arthur, the Barbados prime minister, has said that he and his government have strong reservations about Caricom Heads getting involved in disputes between independent parties like the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) and the West Indies Players' Association (WIPA).

He did not deny that at one stage he found it necessary to leave a caucus meeting of Caricom leaders on Tuesday during an admittedly "heated session". But Arthur was most anxious to clarify that he returned to the session "after having a cup of coffee", and stressed his "right to speak freely and with candour---as is my style".

Arthur's explanation, geared primarily for recording by the Barbados Government Information Service (GIS) and state-owned Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), was in response to a news article in the region's media which focused on an initiative by Caricom leaders to resolve the current dispute between the WICB and WIPA.

Appearing under various headlines such as "Cricket Squabble - Bajan PM walks out of Caricom caucus", (Trinidad Express) - the article reported on angry exchanges between Arthur and his Grenadian counterpart, Keith Mitchell, who heads Caricom's Prime Ministerial Subcommittee on Cricket.

The exchanges became so sharp - Arthur prefers "frank" - that he rebutted what he described as an attack on "my integrity and that of my government". When told that prime minister Mitchell, who is currently in China, felt that he (Arthur) was accusing him of gross misrepresentation, "if not lying", in relation to a disagreement they had in March this year at the height of a financial sponsorship row involving the WICB, WIPA, Digicel and Cable and Wireless, the Barbados prime minister said: "I am the one who has been grossly misrepresented ... And I wish to make it clear that having returned to the caucus, it was the Barbados prime minister who contributed to the initiative to promote what I see as a good offices intervention by Caricom to resolve the current impasse that involves not only the WICB and WIPA, but also Digicel and Cable and Wireless [the two foreign telecommunication corporations]."

Asked it he had indeed used what some regarded as "indecorative language", Arthur said that he used language appropriate to the issue of contention in the interest of accuracy.

Prime minister Mitchell, who left the conference venue shortly after the cricket row, is expected to make a statement on his return from China this coming weekend. But already, other heads of government were reported to be engaged in behind-the-scenes efforts to "cool the temperature" between Arthur and Mitchell.

As far as Arthur is concerned, Caricom Heads of Government have "no right" to become involved in the kind of disputes in which WICB and WIPA and the two telecommunication corporations are involved. He noted that neither WICB nor WIPA has even an associate status with Caricom, and, therefore, at best, in the absence of an amendment to the Community Treaty, the Heads of Government cannot properly impose themselves to resolve the current impasse.

They could, however, use the "good offices" gesture by way of a proposed three-member committee, to seek informal discussions with the parties involved in an effort to resolve a crisis situation that affects the peoples of the region.

According to Arthur, Caricom does not now provide any funding for West Indies cricket and until such a time as they establish a special fund for development of cricket, they must be careful how they become involved with independent and private entities. Some of his counterparts, including prime ministers of the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), among them Grenada's Mitchell, share the view that structured engagement between Caricom and the WICB was now necessary to prevent the game of cricket collapsing in crisis.

Add to del.icio.us | digg this | Stumble It What's this?

Live scores, results, news, features and more - just a click away
Download the Cricinfo Toolbar
NEW: West Indies v Australia fantasy cricket game
Enter your teams here
Cricinfo on the go - our mobile services
WAP, Genie and Mobicast
Cricinfo home Print this page Email this page to a friend Feedback

Cricket Minute


Related Links



Stories

Teams






Cricinfo Products
Curtly Ambrose exclusive interview
Video on Cricinfo tv
NEW fantasy: WI v Aus
Enter/login here
Get a taste of the
2008 Wisden Almanack
CMJ - now on Cricinfo
Read him all summer

Sponsored Links
Eng v NZ npower Test
15-19 May - tickets available
Buy tickets to T20
at the Brit Oval
England 2009 Adidas kit
Available now at Cricshop
Bet LIVE on Eng v NZ
and every IPL match



 
Top 5 player searches
Most read stories