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No Pak tour without security clearance - Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka will not tour Pakistan unless they get security clearance, Sri Lanka Cricket secretary Nishantha Ranatunga has said

ESPNcricinfo staff
23-May-2011
Ajantha Mendis, with plaster on his head, along with Mahela Jayawardene and his wife at the airport, Colombo, March 3, 2009

Several of Sri Lanka's current cricketers were involved in the Lahore attack of 2009  •  AFP

Sri Lanka will not tour Pakistan unless they get security clearance, according to Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) secretary Nishantha Ranatunga. The PCB had asked SLC for their views on playing the scheduled series between the two sides in Pakistan - at the insistence of the Pakistan government - but Sri Lanka's concerns indicate the tour is very unlikely to happen.
"We have received requests from Pakistan over the past three or four months," Ranatunga said. "The PCB told us that they would like to host our team as scheduled in the FTP [Future Tours Programme]. We told them our stance that we need security clearance first before sending a team there again."
On Sunday night, a major terrorist attack in Karachi at a naval base - which was eventually held under siege overnight - near the National Stadium further diminished the possibility of Sri Lanka visiting. A PCB official privately conceded the chances of a visit after such an attack were now significantly reduced.
On Sri Lanka's last tour of Pakistan, the tourists' team bus was attacked on its way to the Gadaffi Stadium in Lahore, cutting the tour short. There has not been any international cricket in Pakistan since. Afghanistan will become the first international team to play in Pakistan next week when they take on Pakistan 'A' in three 50-over games, but the PCB were aiming at a higher profile home series.
"We have sent them a fresh invite to play the series of three Tests, five one-day internationals and one Twenty20 match in Pakistan in October-November," PCB spokesman Nadeem Sarwar said on Sunday. "We are waiting for their response but we have given them full security assurances." His comments came before the reports of the attack in Karachi.
SLC interim committee chairman Somachandra de Silva said Sri Lanka responded to the Pakistani invitation saying that they are not going to play the series in Pakistan.
"We have replied to the PCB and await their confirmation. We are not going to play in Pakistan at this stage and have offered to host the series in our country," de Silva told the Daily Mirror. "If they agree to play in Sri Lanka they will have to bear the entire hosting costs. We have also expressed our willingness to play at a neutral venue in Dubai or Abu Dhabi."
de Silva had earlier told AFP that security clearance from a Pakistan Task Team, formed by the ICC in 2009, is essential before considering any tour of Pakistan. Ranatunga confirmed that there were several issues that need to be worked out before any series in Pakistan can take place.
"Pakistan cricket is going through a difficult period, and we are keen to help them out as they are one of our best friends. But we have to consider the safety of our players," Ranatunga said. "First we have to get the security clearance. Then only will we discuss it with the cricketers. You have to remember that most of them were victims of the previous attack."
The difficulties in Sri Lanka committing to a tour of Pakistan were put into sharp perspective on Tuesday by Mahela Jayawardene, who was on the bus during the attack and said he still suffers flashbacks. "We were very, very lucky to be alive at the end of it … We were angry that, as innocent people, we had been placed at such risk," Jayawardene told the Guardian. "We know it's difficult to prevent terrorism but we asked for security and didn't get it. People died needlessly - and our wives back home were going crazy."
Sri Lanka captain Tillakaratne Dilshan was even more categorical and clearly stated that he won't be going to Pakistan. "It was a bad experience for me as a cricketer in Pakistan. As a player, I don't want to go through the same experience in the future," Dilshan said on Wednesday. "My personal view, I don't want to go back to play cricket there."