Miyerkules, Disyembre 1, 2021

Claims de Kock stance aimed at Cricket South Africa, not anti-racism gesture

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There is also a belief de Kock’s defiance is linked to CSA’s decision in March to strip him of the captaincy across all three formats. There was an expectation de Kock would remain at the helm of the white-ball teams, but head selector Victor Mpitsang said he had not been fired but that there was an agreement for him to step away from the captaincy.

South African journalist Lungani Zama backed de Kock on Wednesday.

South African players before their match against Australia.

South African players before their match against Australia.Credit:Getty Images

“I’ll qualify it by saying Quinton de Kock, if you’re asking me if he’s racist or against Black Lives Matter, I’ll unequivocally say no because I know him personally,” Zama said on SEN.

“I know the work that he’s done to improve the lives and experiences of black players and black people around him for years and years, long before Black Lives Matter was a trend on social media.

“I think because their constitutional rights were taken away from them, it was an instruction from the boss when it hadn’t been previously discussed.

“Added to that, from my conversations with him before, he sees it as a token gesture, which has been watered down to almost mean nothing. It’s something that you have to do to be seen to be doing the right thing.”

CA’s diversity and inclusion manager Rana Hussain said the governing body would not order players to do something they were not comfortable with, a position backed up by David Warner.

“Our approach is absolutely that our athletes have the freedom to make their own choices,” Hussain told the Herald and The Age. “Personally, I think that’s really important.

“From a Cricket Australia point of view we encourage our athletes to have a voice and make the choices they want to.

“The conversation being around force or not is really just missing the point. It’s how are we engaging in the conversation itself and nudging to a more progressive and safe place for everybody in sport.”

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Malcolm Speed, a former chief of the ICC and Cricket Australia, is a supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement, but was critical of CSA for imposing on players an obligation to support a moral issue.

“Whether that’s right or wrong, there’ll be a lot of commentary on that, but my personal view is no, that cricket boards shouldn’t be able to go that far and direct players on ethical and moral issues,” Speed said on SEN.

“And if we think about other ethical/moral issues like sexism and homophobia, you could make a list of other issues like that, if we start telling players this is the view that you must take on these issues, that takes it a step too far in my view.”



Claims de Kock stance aimed at Cricket South Africa, not anti-racism gesture
Source: Philippines Alive

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