Bangladesh Cricketer Shakib Al Hasan Apologises After Threats Over Attending Hindu Ceremony
Shakib Al Hasan spoke hours after a man made personal threats against him on a Facebook live forum, accusing him of "hurting religious sentiment".
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: November 17, 2020 03:01 pm IST
Highlights
-
Bangladesh star Shakib Al Hasan has been forced to make a public apology
-
Shakib received Islamist threats for attending a Hindu ceremony in India
-
The star all-rounder attended a Hindu ceremony in Kolkata
Star Bangladesh cricketer Shakib Al Hasan has been forced to make a public apology after receiving Islamist threats for attending a Hindu ceremony in India. The leading all-rounder is the latest target of increasingly vocal Islamists who have also staged huge anti-France rallies in recent weeks over the publication of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. Shakib, who has recently completed a year's ban for failing to report corrupt approaches, set off a social media storm in the Muslim-majority country after attending a ceremony in Kolkata dedicated to a Hindu goddess.
Islamic preachers in Bangladesh say people should not attend the ceremonies of other faiths.
"I was on the stage for barely two minutes. People are talking about this and thought I inaugurated it," Shakib told an online forum late Monday.
"I did not do this and being a conscious Muslim I would not do this. But, maybe, I should not have gone there. I am sorry for this and apologise," he said.
"As a practising Muslim I always try to follow religious customs. Please forgive me if I have done anything wrong," he added.
Shakib spoke hours after a man made personal threats against him on a Facebook live forum, accusing him of "hurting religious sentiment". The man later apologised and went into hiding, but he was arrested in the northeastern district of Sunamganj on Tuesday.
Shakib, currently the International Cricket Council's top-ranked all-rounder in one-day internationals, was found in October 2019 to have breached the ICC anti-corruption code and was banned for two years, with one year suspended.
In 2015, he became the first cricketer to hold the ICC's top all-rounder ranking in the game's three formats -- Tests, one-day internationals and Twenty20 internationals.