/ 2 September 2009

Mediation collapses in Windies pay dispute crisis

Mediation efforts between the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) and the West Indian Players Association (WIPA) in a pay dispute collapsed at the brink of resolution, officials said late on Tuesday.

Former Commonwealth Secretary General Sir Shridath Ramphal, who had been appointed to mediate the mess, warned that the feared labour shutdown might happen as a result of the breakdown in talks.

”It was another bad day for West Indian cricket which, without fundamental changes, is now likely to deteriorate further,” Ramphal said in a statement from the Guyana-based Caribbean Community (Caricom) headquarters.

The latest dispute erupted in July when 13 of the leading West Indies players made themselves unavailable for the first Test against Bangladesh in St. Vincent, citing pay and contract issues.

Ramphal was appointed mediator on July 21 after current Caricom chairman and Guyana President Bharrat Jagdeo met with top representatives of both sides.

The mediator said the sides had been close to a deal a day earlier but talks were derailed after one side tabled a new draft agreement, not making any more details public on the sticking points.

Ramphal invoked assistance ”of various kinds to make implementation of the agreement feasible. However, all that changed dramatically when one party introduced an entirely new document and refused to negotiate on any other.”

Jagdeo, in his own statement, said he was ”disappointed to learn of the failure” of WICB and WIPA to reach agreement but added, ”I am not wholly surprised.”

”Caricom governments will have to consider what next to do to save West Indies cricket, and West Indians everywhere, from still further humiliation,” Jagdeo said.

Jagdeo blamed the WICB for failing to disclose to him and the WIPA that the board had already selected a ”B” team for the Champions Trophy in South Africa and hinted it was the WICB board that demanded a new document be considered.

”The President [of the board] later apologised for the omission but the damage had been done. Mediation was weakened from the start,” Jagdeo said.

”Now, it seems that the mediation has been the victim of the same spirit of board insistence on getting its own way whatever the consequences for our cricket. — AFP

 

AFP