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Cricket’s 12-point action plan to tackle racism amid Azeem Rafiq scandal

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Azeem Rafiq’s racism claims have rocked the cricket world (Picture: Getty)

The ECB have released a 12-point action plan to combat racism in cricket as the ongoing Azeem Rafiq scandal continues to rock the sport. 

Officials from the ECB met with all 18 first-class counties last week to discuss the plan, which has been put in place to overhaul cultures at both dressing room and boardroom level.

Counties could even have their ECB funding revoked if they fail to adhere to the new rules. Read below for details of the comprehensive plan…



The ECB's 12-point plan to tackle racism

1. Adoption within three months of a standardised approach to reporting, investigating, and responding to complaints, allegations, and whistleblowing across the game.

2. Full promotion of the aims of the Independent Commission for Equity in Cricket (ICEC) through proactive engagement with its investigations and recommendations.

3. Ongoing EDI training for all those who work in cricket, including all staff, volunteers, recreational club officials, umpires, directors, and coaches.

4. A full review of dressing room culture in all men’s and women’s professional teams, both domestic and international.

5. Delivery of a redesigned programme of player and coach education, addressing any gaps identified through the dressing room review.

6. Action to aid progress into professional teams of people from diverse backgrounds (especially South Asian, Black and less privileged youngsters) through measures to address i) talent identification and scouting, ii) education and diversity of coaches and iii) targeted support programmes for players from diverse or under-privileged backgrounds.

7. A full-scale review, in advance of the 2022 season, into the detection, enforcement, and sanctions against discriminatory and abusive crowd behaviour at each of our professional cricket grounds.

8. Delivery of plans (tailored to local communities) to ensure professional cricket venues are welcoming to all, including provision of accessible seating, food and beverage offering catering to all faiths and cultures, and the availability of facilities such as multi-faith rooms and alcohol-free zones.

9. Upgraded education in recreational cricket to ensure players, volunteers and coaches understand and champion inclusion and diversity in the game.

10. A commitment to best practice governance with targets for Board diversity (30% female, locally representative ethnicity by April 2022) and plans to increase diversity across the wider organisation. (Compliance will be subject to a “comply or explain” provision to ensure Counties can respect their own governance processes in making the required change).

11. The introduction of fairer recruitment processes through measures including the immediate adoption of anonymised recruitment tools for senior roles, open appointment processes for all roles and the use of balanced and diverse panels to assess interviews.

12. Every senior executive employed across the game will have personal EDI objectives as part of their annual performance targets, driving leadership accountability.

England and Wales Cricket board chief executive Tom Harrison, meanwhile, has not ruled out an independent regulator for cricket after admitting an ‘earthquake’ had hit the sport in the last few weeks.

‘The last few weeks have been very, very tough for cricket. It feels like an earthquake has hit us,’ Harrison said.

‘The most damning part of Azeem’s testimony is that he didn’t want his son to be part of the game. That is, for someone in my job, the most difficult thing you can hear.’

One of the points in the action plan is a governance review of the ECB. In a week where a fan-led review recommended an independent regulator for football, Harrison said it was appropriate that the review should at least consider whether that was the best way forward for cricket too.

‘We had a meeting yesterday with the county chairs… whether we should be the regulator and the national governing body going forward,’ he said.

‘That conversation is one we’re going to have with the game as well.

‘I think it’s the right time for us now to go back as a collective again and work out whether we have got the right governance structures, given the pressures and the uniquely different role that ECB plays now as a major sport, with the multiple hats that we have to wear, overseeing the game as we do.

‘If a governance review comes back with a recommendation (that an independent regulator is appropriate) then you’ve got to have a very good reason not to go along with that recommendation.’


MORE : BT Sport reviews Ashes coverage after Michael Vaughan axed by BBC over racism claims


MORE : Alex Hales denies ‘any racial connotation in the naming of my dog’ after Azeem Rafiq allegation

For more stories like this, check our sport page.

Follow Metro Sport for the latest news on FacebookTwitter and Instagram.




Former Yorkshire cricketer Azeem Rafiq.
Azeem Rafiq’s racism claims have rocked the cricket world (Picture: Getty)

The ECB have released a 12-point action plan to combat racism in cricket as the ongoing Azeem Rafiq scandal continues to rock the sport. 

Officials from the ECB met with all 18 first-class counties last week to discuss the plan, which has been put in place to overhaul cultures at both dressing room and boardroom level.

Counties could even have their ECB funding revoked if they fail to adhere to the new rules. Read below for details of the comprehensive plan…



The ECB's 12-point plan to tackle racism

1. Adoption within three months of a standardised approach to reporting, investigating, and responding to complaints, allegations, and whistleblowing across the game.

2. Full promotion of the aims of the Independent Commission for Equity in Cricket (ICEC) through proactive engagement with its investigations and recommendations.

3. Ongoing EDI training for all those who work in cricket, including all staff, volunteers, recreational club officials, umpires, directors, and coaches.

4. A full review of dressing room culture in all men’s and women’s professional teams, both domestic and international.

5. Delivery of a redesigned programme of player and coach education, addressing any gaps identified through the dressing room review.

6. Action to aid progress into professional teams of people from diverse backgrounds (especially South Asian, Black and less privileged youngsters) through measures to address i) talent identification and scouting, ii) education and diversity of coaches and iii) targeted support programmes for players from diverse or under-privileged backgrounds.

7. A full-scale review, in advance of the 2022 season, into the detection, enforcement, and sanctions against discriminatory and abusive crowd behaviour at each of our professional cricket grounds.

8. Delivery of plans (tailored to local communities) to ensure professional cricket venues are welcoming to all, including provision of accessible seating, food and beverage offering catering to all faiths and cultures, and the availability of facilities such as multi-faith rooms and alcohol-free zones.

9. Upgraded education in recreational cricket to ensure players, volunteers and coaches understand and champion inclusion and diversity in the game.

10. A commitment to best practice governance with targets for Board diversity (30% female, locally representative ethnicity by April 2022) and plans to increase diversity across the wider organisation. (Compliance will be subject to a “comply or explain” provision to ensure Counties can respect their own governance processes in making the required change).

11. The introduction of fairer recruitment processes through measures including the immediate adoption of anonymised recruitment tools for senior roles, open appointment processes for all roles and the use of balanced and diverse panels to assess interviews.

12. Every senior executive employed across the game will have personal EDI objectives as part of their annual performance targets, driving leadership accountability.

England and Wales Cricket board chief executive Tom Harrison, meanwhile, has not ruled out an independent regulator for cricket after admitting an ‘earthquake’ had hit the sport in the last few weeks.

‘The last few weeks have been very, very tough for cricket. It feels like an earthquake has hit us,’ Harrison said.

‘The most damning part of Azeem’s testimony is that he didn’t want his son to be part of the game. That is, for someone in my job, the most difficult thing you can hear.’

One of the points in the action plan is a governance review of the ECB. In a week where a fan-led review recommended an independent regulator for football, Harrison said it was appropriate that the review should at least consider whether that was the best way forward for cricket too.

‘We had a meeting yesterday with the county chairs… whether we should be the regulator and the national governing body going forward,’ he said.

‘That conversation is one we’re going to have with the game as well.

‘I think it’s the right time for us now to go back as a collective again and work out whether we have got the right governance structures, given the pressures and the uniquely different role that ECB plays now as a major sport, with the multiple hats that we have to wear, overseeing the game as we do.

‘If a governance review comes back with a recommendation (that an independent regulator is appropriate) then you’ve got to have a very good reason not to go along with that recommendation.’


MORE : BT Sport reviews Ashes coverage after Michael Vaughan axed by BBC over racism claims


MORE : Alex Hales denies ‘any racial connotation in the naming of my dog’ after Azeem Rafiq allegation

For more stories like this, check our sport page.

Follow Metro Sport for the latest news on FacebookTwitter and Instagram.

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

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