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Tour of Pakistan under threat
Ongoing violence puts a cloud over Australia's planned cricket tour in March.
Last Modified: 11 Jan 2008 08:19 GMT

Pakistani policemen and relatives carry coffins of suicide bomb attack victims in Lahore [AFP]

Stephen Smith, Australian Foreign Minister, said he hoped the national cricket team's tour of Pakistan would go ahead despite renewed security fears after a suicide attack killed 26 people in Lahore.
Smith condemned the violence, much of which has followed the assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, with two suicide blasts in three days, but said he did not want Australia's March-April tour cancelled.
"Any time that something is either deferred or delayed or cancelled as a result of extremism, whether that's a cricket tour or whether that's an election, it's a victory for extremism," Smith told the ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation).
 
At least 22 police and four civilians were killed on Thursday when a suicide attacker detonated a device packed with ball-bearings outside the Lahore high court, raising fears that polls delayed to next month may be put back once again.
 
"We are very concerned about the latest bombing," Smith said.
 
"We of course condemned the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, we of course condemn this bombing overnight."
 
Cricket Australia has said it will make a decision on whether the three Tests, as well as five one-day internationals and a Twenty20 match, go ahead once it completes a security assessment after Pakistan's elections.
 
However even if officials give the tour the green light, some Australian players are reportedly considering withdrawing from the team because of security fears.
Source:
Agencies
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