Sri Lankan team to be evacuated


George Binoy: Terror struck at the heart of cricket when masked gunmen attacked the bus carrying the Sri Lankan cricket team to the Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore. Five cricketers, including Mahela Jayawardene, the Sri Lankan captain, and his deputy Kumar Sangakkara, received minor injuries. The attack also left six security men and two civilians dead. Duleep Mendis, the Sri Lanka Cricket chief, said that they were "getting the team back [to Sri Lanka] today".

6:47 George Binoy: Sri Lankan team to be evacuated

Ijaz Butt, the PCB chief, has said the Test has been called off. Salman Tasheer, the Punjab governor, said a helicopter will soon evacuate the Sri Lankan players from Gaddafi stadium and take them to a nearby airbase from where the team will fly back to Sri Lanka.

The reserve umpire Ahsan Raza was also injured in the attack. Nadeem Ghauri, the TV umpire, who was traveling in a bus behind the Sri Lanka team bus said the firing continued for some time. He said the bus driver was critically injured in the attack.

Umpire Steve Davis, who was on the team bus, called the terrorist attack “terrible”. “I’m lost for words,” he said.

6:48 George Binoy: Team to take first available flight home

Sri Lanka's foreign secretary Palitha Cohona has confirmed that the team will return today. He said they hoped to take the first available flight. He said that six players were hurt and that the players were being evacuated from the stadium and taken to a safe play. He's praising the Pakistan authorities for their cooperation and is appalled that a sporting team has been targeted in this manner.
6:49 George Binoy: Samaraweera and Paranavitana most seriously hurt

Our sources tell us Samaraweera and Paravitarana were the ones most seriously injured and have been taken to hospital. they had shrapnel wounds in the chest and hamstring which have been dressed and they are doing fine.
6:50 George Binoy: BCCI, CA condemn attacks

The BCCI issued a release expressing its "sorrow and anguish over the dastardly attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team at Lahore. We pray for the speedy recovery of the injured cricketers, and sympathize with their families and compatriots.

Cricket Australia chief executive officer James Sutherland said Australian cricket was shocked to hear the news. "Australian cricket has many friends in Sri Lanka and in Pakistan and we sincerely hope they are all safe after this awful incident,” he said. “Early reports are unclear but we are deeply saddened to hear reports that security officials in Pakistan have been killed in this attack."

This is what the Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapakse had to say. "I condemn this cowardly terrorist attack targeting the Sri Lankan cricket team," Rajapakse told AFP. "The Sri Lankan players had gone to Pakistan as ambassadors of goodwill."

6:50 George Binoy: Indians in NZ shocked

NDTV are reporting that there's shock among the players in the Indian dressing room in New Zealand ...

India were scheduled to tour Pakistan but the trip was cancelled after the terror attacks in Mumbai by Pakistan-based terrorists. Sri Lanka stepped in to fill the gap for Pakistan. Pakistan are scheduled to host the Champions Trophy later this year ...

6:50 George Binoy: How the attack happened

The Sri Lankans were on their way to the Gaddafi Stadium when their bus was attacked by five armed terrorists near Liberty market. Habibur Rehman, chief commissioner of police, said 12 masked terrorists fired at the Sri Lankan team bus. The gunmen shot at the wheels of the bus and also injured the driver. A grenade was also thrown at the bus but it missed.

"The bus came under attack as we were driving to the stadium, the gunmen targeted the wheels of the bus first and then the bus," Mahela Jayawardene told Cricinfo. "We all dived to the floor to take cover. About five players have been injured and also Paul Farbrace [a member of the support staff], but most of the injuries appear to be minor at this stage and caused by debris."

Lahore police chief Habib-ur Rehman said, "They appeared to be well-trained terrorists. They came on rickshaws." Television footage of several gunmen creeping through the trees, crouching to aim their kalashnikovs then running onto the next target were aired by Pakistan's private channel Geo, AFP reported. Crystals of broken glass littered the road next to a gun cartridge and an empty rocket-propelled grenade launcher. A police motorbike was shown crashed sideways into the road at the Liberty Chowk (roundabout) in Lahore. Bullet holes ripped through the windscreen of another vehicle and a white car was shown smashed headlong into the roundabout as nervous security officers guarded the site.

6:51 George Binoy: Concerns have come home to roost - Dickason

Reg Dickason, the security expert hired by England and Australia, said " A lot of concerns we raised during the Champions Trophy have unfortunately come home to roost. The notion of sporting teams being a protected species was held by many, but it was not a view that we shared, unfortunately."
6:52
George Binoy: Two car bombs defused

Pakistan police’s disposal unit inspector Abdul Ghafoor said that two car bombs had been defused, one at Liberty Square and the other at Firdus Park.

"We have defused a bomb in a white Hyundai and after some time we got information about a suspect car in the Firdus car park. We also defused the bomb there," he told AFP. Local sector warden Malik Fayyaz told AFP that grenades, three kilograms of explosives, a pistol and a one-metre detonating cable had been recovered.

6:52 George Binoy: Terrible and very sad - Miandad

"It has never happened before in Pakistan, sports persons haven’t been targeted," Javed Miandad told GEO TV. "It’s terrible and really sad. It looks like a well-thought and planned assault. Sri Lanka and Pakistan have always helped each other. They have never said no to tour Pakistan and have always helped us in troubled situations. The foreign teams were already not coming and this [incident] is going to affect Pakistan cricket in the future. This is not to say that cricket will stop. The world will have to stay united and fight terrorism. I hope they just don’t say they won’t tour Pakistan. If we do that we will only support the terrorists’ cause."

6:58 George Binoy: ICC statement on the Lahore attack

“We note with dismay and regret the events of this morning in Lahore and we condemn this attack without reservation," said Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief executive."



“It is a source of great sadness that there have been a number of fatalities in this attack and it is also very upsetting for the wider cricket family that some of the Sri Lanka players and one match official have been injured in this attack. At this time our thoughts and prayers are with the injured people and also the families of those who have died."



“I have confirmed with both Member Boards that the remainder of the tour has been cancelled and we are working hard to get our match officials out of the area as safely and as quickly as possible. I know, also, that the Pakistan Cricket Board is working with Sri Lanka Cricket to make sure the players are flown home at the earliest opportunity.”
7:00
Update: Inzamam to GEO TV

Inzamam-ul-Haq to GEO TV, “This is the first time that a cricket team has been seriously targeted. This is the most serious incident that has ever happened. Pakistan’s image will be hit and only time will tell how much damage has been done to Pakistan cricket. The World Cup too might be affected. Preparations for the world cup will start much before 2011 and no country would want to come now to Pakistan. As I said, we will know the extent of damage to our cricket in some time. So I am worried where Pakistan will get a chance to play, not only in Pakistan but outside as well. This is all so sad.”

7:03
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7:16
Update: Samaraweera and Paranavitana out of danger

Samaraweera and Paranavitana were the most seriously injured but they are out of danger. "The two players are in hospital but are out of danger," Mendis told reporters adding "we are trying to get the team out of Pakistan as early as possible".
7:21
Update: Lawson "shocked and very very sad".

"I am shocked, and very, very sad," Lawson told Cricinfo. "It was an honest belief we held (that sporting teams would not be targetted by terrorists), and it is tragic that this has happened. I have been looking at the footage on TV and I know that area very well. I have a lot of friends over there and have been in contact."
7:25
Update: More reactions from Lawson

"Cricket won't be played in Pakistan for the forseeable future," Lawson told Cricinfo. "Pakistan look like they will become a wandering cricket team now. They will be playing at neutral venues, because you can guarantee that there won't be games there. Obviously, there is no chance of the Champions Trophy or the World Cup going ahead there."

7:28
Update: Security is priority - Modi

“We were fearful of the fact that cricketers may be targeted. It’s a very sad day for cricket that players have been targeted in Pakistan.” Modi told NDTV. “I think India is a very safe country. Yes we have had our share of attacks in the past. We are going to be extremely strict and tight in our security measures going forward. It is top most priority for us.”

7:30
Update: Sky news are reporting that the route of the Sri Lankan convoy was changed following the threat yesterday
7:37
Update: Nadeem Gauri, the TV umpire, to GEO TV: As soon as the bus reached the liberty market, we heard the noises of gun shots. We hid under the seats. The driver got shot and he died at the spot. The firing continued. The other umpire Ahsan Raza also got shot. All the umpires are safe now. Police squad got us to the airport.
7:37
Update:

Rameez Raja: I was entering through Ferozpur gate – this incident had happened near Liberty market gate – I heard the blast and the commotion. I never thought we will face a situation like this in Pakistan where sportspersons will be targeted. We have to get united and fight the terrorists. The civil society, sportsmen have to wake up and raise their voice. Time for staying quiet is over. Sri Lanka have always helped us and they are our friends in the cricketing world. Our way of life has been targeted. Our favorite pastime – cricket- has been targeted. Younis Khan’s triple ton garnered positive headlines across cricketing world. People had started to come in to watch and we were hoping that cricket would revive in Pakistan. Then this has happened.
7:45
Update: Sri Lankans airlifted out of Gaddafi Stadium

A helicopter landed on the centre pitch at Gaddafi stadium in Lahore. The Sri Lankan cricketers and support staff hurried towards the chopper, dragging their luggage. Some of the cricketers took pictures of the helicopter before boarding it. They will be flown to the airport from where they will leave for their country via Abu Dhabi.

Abdul Qadir to GEO TV: I don’t have words to express. This has never happened before in history. Cricket is such a sport that is loved across towns, cities and gullies in Pakistan. I had gone to the hospital and met Samaraweera and Tharanga. They were in the same room. I told them the country will be eternally grateful for coming to Pakistan to play.

7:52
Update:

New Zealand prime minister John Key said he was “very concerned at this turn of events, where an international sports team has been targeted by terrorists”.
8:00
Update:

We’re shocked but everyone is OK – Sangakkara

"There are a few injuries but everyone is safe and all the players are out of danger,” Kumar Sangakkara had told CNN IBN. "We are shocked, but apart from that everyone is okay. Thilan [Samaraweera] has a shrapnel wound in his leg, but he is fine. [Tharanga] Paranavitana had shrapnel in his chest, but thank God it wasn't very deep and just on the surface.

"I had shrapnel injuries in my shoulder, but they have all been removed and I'm okay now. Ajantha [Mendis] had shrapnel in his neck and scalp, but he too has had medical attention and is fine. Everyone else is perfectly all right.

"It's very unfortunate that this has happened. Everything had gone on very well until this morning, but it just goes to show that nothing is as it seems. I don't regret coming here to play cricket because that's what we have been doing all our lives. That is our profession.

"But I regret this incident, what has happened and the situation that we have had to go through. All we want to do now is to go back home to our families, get back home and be safe."

8:12
Update:

Attacks "frightening" - NZC chief

Justin Vaughan, New Zealand Cricket’s chief executive, said the attacks were “frightening” and that New Zealand would conduct a security review before their tour of Pakistan later this year.

"It's very frightening that for the first time a cricket team are what appears to be the specific target of terrorist action," Vaughan told NZPA. "That's never happened before -- previously all the incidents have been about being in the wrong place at the wrong time. This is a very different proposition and I think just a very frightening one for world cricket."

New Zealand are scheduled to play in Pakistan in November. "The tour is scheduled for November, and that's eight months away," Vaughan said. "We would be doing a security review prior to any commitment to the tour and that would normally take place around June or July. You'd have to say this would throw further doubt over that tour, but we don't make those sort of decisions off the cuff like that. This is really serious."
8:15
Update: Priority is safety and security of SL team - Lorgat



Haroon Lorgat, the ICC chief, termed the attacks in Lahore on the Sri Lankan team bus as “pretty, pretty serious” and said that the repercussions could be severe for Pakistan’s cricket.





“It is pretty, pretty serious and it is very obvious that the landscape and the thinking has changed dramatically,” Lorgat told Cricinfo. Lorgat said the ICC’s top priority now was to arrange a safe trip back home for the Sri Lankan team. “Our priority is safety and security of the Lankan team and how to get them back home.”





Asked if the future of international cricket was in jeopardy in Pakistan at least in the immediate future, Lorgat said it would be too early to make any conclusive remarks but admitted it looked uncertain for the moment. “We are going to have to reevaluate what we do and where Pakistan plays its cricket.”







Lorgat also said that the terror attack in Lahore had come as an “absolute shock” for him because last year the ICC had done an assessment of suitable venues for the Champions Trophy and Lahore was listed as a safe place to play.

8:22
Update:

Wasim Akram said that Pakistan hosting the World Cup in 2011 was now a “distant dream”



"I don't want to talk about cricket alone. The attacks are unwarranted and have put Pakistan to shame. Please pray for us," Akram told ESPNStar. "I don't know who has done this but any attack on our guests is simply uncalled for.



"We should stand united under the circumstances and the world should understand that terrorism is now a universal concern. I can see a similar hand working in Mumbai and India must now know that Pakistan are equally at the receiving end.”



"How do you expect a foreign team to come to Pakistan now? We took pride in hosting our guests. This image has taken a beating. It's sad for Pakistan.”
8:25
Update: Pakistan's next assignment is an ODI series against Australia in the UAE. Cricket Australia's spokesman, Peter Young said: "We do not expect this to effect the series (in the UAE). We are due to complete a security inspection tour at the end of the week, and that is expected to go ahead as planned. "
8:27
Update: Waqar Younis on Geo Tv: "We pride ourselves on being a loving sporting nation but if these kinds of things happen, well it’s really sad. This is not good for our society or for our cricket. We wanted foreign teams to come and play but now it looks remote. Hopes of hosting World Cup is also receding. We have to agree with whatever ICC decides. People will refuse to travel to our part of the world."
8:32
Update:

The Australian Cricketers’ Association said the attack on the Sri Lankan team would have a “lasting impact” on the game in Pakistan.



"It is one of those things, you know the risk is pretty large in that part of the world in Pakistan, but there has always been a belief that sports people will not be targeted and I am just stunned," ACA’s chief Paul Marsh told AFP. "It is very sad that it has come to this for all the cricketers and Pakistan cricket in particular. This is not their doing but I am sure the fallout from this is going to have a lasting impact on Pakistan cricket and the future of the game in Pakistan."

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