Yorkshire penalised over Rafiq racism scandal

Yorkshire penalised over Rafiq racism scandal

Yorkshire have been hit with factors deductions in two codecs and fined 400,000 kilos ($A772,000) over a racism scandal linked to their former participant Azeem Rafiq.

A Cricket Discipline Commission panel mentioned 300,000 kilos of the advantageous imposed had been suspended for a interval of two years.

The membership have additionally instantly been docked 48 factors from their County Championship whole, and an extra 4 from their tally within the T20 Blast.

Yorkshire, who had admitted 4 costs following the conclusion of an England and Wales Cricket Board investigation, launched an announcement confirming they accepted the sanctions.

The first cost associated to how they mishandled an unbiased investigation into the allegations of racism and bullying made by Rafiq, who performed for the county between 2008 and 2014 and once more between 2016 and 2018.

The second involved a mass deletion of emails and paperwork, by individuals unknown, which was found in November 2021.

The third involved a failure to take ample motion over complaints of racism which have been raised to the membership in 2017 and 2018, whereas the fourth associated to a failure to handle the systemic use of racist and/or discriminatory language at Yorkshire over a chronic interval.

Yorkshire’s assertion accepted the sanctions however mentioned they have been disillusioned to obtain the factors deductions which impacts gamers and workers who weren’t accountable for the scenario.

ECB chief govt Richard Gould mentioned they have been critical costs referring to racism over a chronic interval.

“There can be no place for racism in our game, and the penalties announced by the Cricket Discipline Commission mark the end of a thorough disciplinary process.

“No one ought to need to expertise what Azeem Rafiq went by in cricket, and we as soon as once more thank him for his braveness in talking out.”

Six individuals with Yorkshire connections were sanctioned by the CDC earlier this year after admitting or being found to have used racist and/or discriminatory language.

A seventh, former England captain Michael Vaughan, was cleared of utilizing racist and/or discriminatory language to a bunch of Yorkshire gamers of Asian ethnicity earlier than a 20-over match in 2009.

Source: www.perthnow.com.au