Former BJP MLA Opposes Indian Premier League Matches in Rajkot
Former BJP MLA Siddharth Parmar and his supporters held a sit-in dharna in Rajkot on Monday.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: April 11, 2016 08:30 pm IST
Highlights
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This is the ninth edition of the IPL
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IPL will be played from April 9 to May 29
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Rajkot is scheduled to host five IPL matches
Members of Rashtriya Dalit Maha Sangh, led by former BJP MLA Siddharth Parmar, on Monday staged a dharna in Rajkot opposing holding of Indian Premier League (IPL) matches at Khandheri stadium in view of the water scarcity in the city and other areas in Gujarat. (Shifting Indian Premier League Matches Not Solution to Drought: Mahendra Singh Dhoni)
Parmar and his supporters staged the sit-in near Ambedkar statue at Civil Hospital circle. (Bombay High Court Tells BCCI to Shift Matches From Drought-Hit Maharashtra)
"Farmers are committing suicide because of shortage of water for crops. At the same time thousands of gallons of water would be wasted to maintain cricket pitches and grounds," Parmar said.
The newly-built stadium at Khandheri is managed by Saurashtra Cricket Association (SCA) and will be hosting five IPL matches, starting from April 14.
"The cricketers should be ashamed that they are only interested in making money. They don't have any feelings for the farmers. We demand that all the IPL matches to be played here should be shifted elsewhere," said Parmar.
Rajkot has been facing a severe water shortage since the beginning of April. With major dams providing water to the city drying up, Rajkot Municipal Corporation recently imposed a water cut once every fortnight.
SCA, however, said Gujarat's water crisis was not as bad as in the neighbouring Maharashtra (where a PIL has been filed in the Bombay High Court opposing the IPL matches).
"Water crisis in Gujarat is not as bad as that in Maharashtra. Rajkot is also not facing any acute water shortage at present. We don't use drinking water supplied by RMC to maintain our ground. We have our own system to meet our water demand," said SCA secretary Niranjan Shah.
"We never waste water or use more than what is required to maintain the ground," Shah said.