I was of the opinion that when the French-creole looking
fellah with the handle-bar moustache had departed West Indian
cricket that we would be free at last of that kind of administrator
and overseer, of that kind of relationship between the powerful
and the subordinate, that has underlined Caribbean history
and Caribbean civilisation from the very inception.
All that fellah needed to complete the picture and to fit
the bill appropriately was a bush-jacket, a whip, a
cork-hat and a high-powered rifle. Absolutely nothing changed
after he left.
Many prided themselves that new leadership of the people,
from the bowels of the people, would emerge to take us unto
a fundamentally different system of relationships. None of
the leaders of the WICB that followed proved able to take
the people of the Caribbean into their confidence, not the
Jamaican businessman, not even Banks and Griffith of the present
time.
And Bob Marleys philosophical warnings echoes through
and through the archipelago: We got rid of sheriffs
but left deputies intact...
So we are now caught up in a corporate war to the finish,
led into it deceptively by the three protagonists, the administrators
of the WICB, Cable & Wireless, and Digicel, while our
West Indian cricketers, our heroes, are the pawns, and our
cricket will suffer untold damage as a result.
If this debacle is not resolved quickly and intelligently,
the 2007 ODI World Cup that we are due to host at best will
have to be scrapped. To do otherwise will be foolhardy.
But how and why did this sorry impasse come to be, what is
its genesis? Cable & Wireless has been here from time
immemorial, brought to the table by colonial interest and
provided with licences and leases and actual telecommunications
mono-poly in the English-speaking Carib-bean for over 100
years.
Those agreements to which West Indian governments, even after
Independence, found themselves bounded by law, expired recently
and all the West Indian islands sought to have the terms and
conditions of those agreements renegotiated in our favour.
C&W fought tooth and nail to place obstacles to the demands
of the West Indian governments.
Their highly paid lawyers displayed open hostility to the
desires of the West Indian governments to open up the communications
industry, given the additional Internet and cellular requirements,
in accordance with modern practices and the dictates of the
WTO particularly on fair and open trade.
The Caribbean had been the stomping ground for C&W for
over a century and they did not take too kindly to losing
out in almost every situation to the aggressive Digicel.
This Irish-based company with the backing of a consortium
of international bankers plus local financing institutions
such as Unit Trust and Scotia Bank (T&T) has raised the
sum of US$400 million to back their Caribbean expansion. Digicel
is now everywhere in the Caribbean and they are boasting to
have already grabbed 60 per cent of the cellular market in
the region.
Digicel grabbed Caribbean football and made its play for cricket
as well, mindful of its importance to the region. C&W,
the previous sponsors of the West Indian team, did not or
cared not to match the Digicel bid for reasons best known
to themselves, and, having lost out to Digicel in everything
else, has sought to make a last defiant stand in the area
of cricket by holding on to their endorsement of key individuals
such as Lara, Gayle, Sarwan etc.
The war is on and both sides are playing dirty. We have to
take the attacks and counter attacks with a pinch of salt.
All the claims about women in dressing room and
lies about not knowing of details of personal endorsements
are to be seen as ammunition geared to heighten the conflict.
The WICB stands to be condemned. Knowing the bitter conflict
between C&W and Digicel, why did the WICB not insist that
Digicel buy out the personal endorsements? WICB had to know
that these two protagonists would never partner each other
in any one project; too much bad blood exists between them.
Since the WICB is weak and lacks any competence, the West
Indian people must intervene now and dictate the way forward.
My good friend Leroy Butcher of St Lucia, a lawyer who lives
in Ottawa, puts it best in his e-mail to me. He says inter
alia:
...Maybe we are at the point of dialectical transformation.
Maybe Digicel and Cable and Wireless will have brought us
to the point where necessity truly will have become the mother
of finding new means.
Maybe the time has come when a new dispensation is needed
for West Indies cricket. Maybe it is time to stop thinking
that we are helpless. After all, it is 500 years since we
were enslaved, 140 since so-called emancipation.
Why do both Digicel and Cable and Wireless see an opportunity
based on our own Caribbean successes and the huge marketing
and market potential that its formidable characteristics portend,
while all we can see is that if there is no sponsorship there
can be no West Indies team?
Imagine how much worse off we as a Caribbean people
would be today if our ancestors had come to believe that their
situation was helpless; imagine what we as a people would
be today if our ancestors had internalised the idea that we
are inferior and that captivity and powerlessness and disenfranchisement
and poverty and servility constituted our lot.
...Why cant we, the Caribbean people for example,
demand that the West Indies cricket team, indeed West Indies
sports as a whole, be set up under the ownership and control
of a public corporation wholly owned by the Caribbean governments,
the people and the players themselves, in share proportions
that forbid the monopolisation of such a publicly owned company
by rich individuals and private corporations.
That is the precise point at which we will see the accountability
that has eluded the WICB, because the management personnel
will have to account for their actions and decisions and profitability
at annual general meetings or special general meetings of
all the shareholders, as all corporate managers have to.
Contracts can then be structured to give full play to
incentives based on performance goals that the Caribbean people
deem to be their standard.
Enough with the secrecy and one-man-ism and the constant
repeating of the mantra that sports is big business
as if our own history is not one that for centuries has been
about finding the path to equality, a new democracy and a
higher form of humanity...
That, dear friends, is well said.