In more than an hour of questioning by members of parliament,
Rafiq, 30, an offspin bowler and former captain of the England
Under-19s of Pakistani descent, catalogued a damning culture of
widespread racism at Yorkshire.
He and other players with Asian backgrounds were subjected to
comments such as "You lot sit over there" and routinely referred
to as "Paki", Rafiq said. "I felt isolated, humiliated at
times," he added in emotional testimony to the parliamentary
Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) panel.
The scandal has shaken English sport, cost Yorkshire the right
to host England internationals, seen the club's top brass quit,
and embroiled former England captain Maichael Vaughan and
present England skipper Joe Root.
Rafiq, who played for Yorkshire from 2008-14 and again from
2016-18, recounted having red wine poured down his throat as a
15-year-old and spoke of Asian players being blamed for mistakes
while they were fasting.
He spoke of being "ripped to shreds" by former coach Martin
Moxon on his first day back after the death of his child.
He also said the racism he endured at Yorkshire was "without a
shadow of doubt" replicated across the country and said the
England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) were more concerned with
box-ticking exercises than increasing the number of South Asian
players becoming professionals.
Former Yorkshire chairman Roger Hutton and Tom Harrison, chief
executive of the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB), were due
to answer questions later.
Hutton resigned following criticism of Yorkshire's handling of
an investigation into the claims first made by Rafiq in 2020. In
his resignation latter Hutton said there had been "constant
unwillingness" from members of Yorkshire's hierachy "to
apologise and to accept racism and to look forward."
'RACISM IS NOT BANTER'
Yorkshire have been removed as a host for international matches
and have lost key sponsors.
New club chairman Kamlesh Patel has apologised, praised Rafiq
for his courage and promised "seismic change".
Rafiq did not hold back about his experiences at the club.
He described the atmosphere in the dressing room under former
captain Gary Ballance as "toxic".
"Andrew Gale came in as coach, Gary Ballance as captain, and the
temperature changed. I felt isolated. On tour, Gary Ballance
walked over and said: 'Why you talking to him?' Going past a
corner shop, I was asked if my uncle owned it," he said.
"(Yorkshire director of cricket) Martin Moxon and (head coach)
Andrew Gale were there. It never got stamped out.
"In 2017 we went through a difficult pregnancy and the treatment
I received was inhuman," Rafiq trailed off as he broke down.
Yorkshire said last week that Moxon was absent from work due to
a "stress-related illness", while Gale had been suspended for an
alleged anti-Semitic tweet he sent in 2010.
Ballance, who played 23 tests for England, had described Rafiq
as his "best mate in cricket" but admitted he used a racial slur
and regretted his actions.
"Paki is not banter, racism is not banter," Rafiq added.
Rafiq also said he had been "pinned down" at the age of 15 and
had red wine "poured down" his throat while Gale and Moxon did
not show any compassion after the stillbirth of his son.
Asked about the scale of the problem in English professional
cricket, Rafiq said: "It's scary. It's clear the problem is
there. Everyone has known it for a very long time.
"It's an open secret. I've seen that if you speak out, your life
is made hell."
(Reporting by Rohith Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Andrew
Cawthorne)
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