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Yorkshire Looks Into Claim Of 'Institutional Racism' At Club, Eoin Morgan Says No Place for Racism

English county cricket side Yorkshire said it is in contact with a former player who said institutional racism at the club left him close to taking his own life.

Associated Press |September 3, 2020, 6:51 PM IST
Pakistan-born England cricketer has spoken out about the racism at Yorkshire cricket.

LEEDS, England: English county cricket side Yorkshire said it is in contact with a former player who said institutional racism at the club left him close to taking his own life.

Azeem Rafiq, a former England under-19 captain, said in an interview with ESPNcricinfo that he was made to feel, as a Muslim, like an outsider during his time at Yorkshire.

"I know how close I was to committing suicide during my time at Yorkshire," he said.

"Do I think there is institutional racism? It's at its peak in my opinion," Rafiq added. It's worse than it's ever been.

The 29-year-old Rafiq played for Yorkshire from 2009-17, captaining the team in a Twenty20 fixture in 2012. He is not currently working in cricket.

In response to Rafiq's comments, Yorkshire said in a statement to the PA news agency that the chairman of its Equality and Diversity Committee, Hanif Malik, is in contact with Azeem about the allegations and will report back to the committee.

England captain Eoin Morgan said he was surprised at Rafiq's comments, particularly because of the diverse nature of the team he led to the Cricket World Cup title last year.

England's team included two players Moeen Ali and Adil Rashid with Pakistani heritage, as well as Barbados-born paceman Jofra Archer and South Africa-born opener Jason Roy. Morgan himself was born in Ireland.

"The ECB has been active in trying to rectify and become more diverse, and create equal opportunity for everybody," Morgan said in a video call ahead of England's Twenty20 match against Australia on Friday. "Given the squad of players we have and the guys of different cultures, backgrounds, races, the diverse nature of it really does epitomize where English cricket is at.

"I think travelling around during last years World Cup and going to 10 different grounds around the country, watching the supporters flood in of all different races, all following England, was great. It made us all feel very proud."

Morgan said English cricket needed to get better at allowing players from a diverse background to tell their story more.

"It is our continued ambition to try and create more sustainable awareness around our fight against racism and the creation of equal opportunity, and equality in sport is important to drive that forward, because it shouldn't exist in society," he said. "There is no place (for it) in society. When people talk about it, they should feel comfortable talking about it and coming out, and we want everyone to know that."

Rafiq said in the interview that Yorkshire don't want to listen and they don't want to change.

"And part of the reason for that,” he said, “is the people who were involved in the incidents I'm talking about are still at the club. They just want to sweep it under the carpet."

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2 New Zealand 2406 115
3 India 3085 114
4 England 3882 105
5 Sri Lanka 2454 91
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Rank Team Points Rating
1 England 5093 127
2 India 5819 119
3 New Zealand 3716 116
4 South Africa 3345 108
5 Australia 3518 107
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Rank Team Points Rating
1 Australia 5285 278
2 England 5083 268
3 India 9319 266
4 Pakistan 6009 261
5 South Africa 4380 258
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