The Board of Control for Cricket in India and its Australian counterpart, on Wednesday, slammed racism in cricket and announced their support to eradicate the menace from the sport.
"There is no place for racism in cricket either on or off the field," BCCI president Sharad Pawar and Chairman of Cricket Australia Creagh O'Connor said in joint-statement on Wednesday.
They also noted that racism is a global problem, and is not confined to specific nations.
"Cricket crowds in all cricket nations are often noisy and boisterous, which is part of the fun of cricket. But all cricket nations have to be on guard to ensure that the fun does not cross the boundary into unacceptable behaviour.
"If it does, it is our expectation that the specifics of the ICC Anti Racism Code be enforced without fear or favour.
"Players of all countries have a right to expect they will be treated with respect wherever they play in the world.
"Spectators, team officials or players who are concerned about inappropriate behaviour of other people at venues should draw that behaviour to the attention of venue authorities immediately so that it can be assessed on the spot and, if appropriate, addressed immediately rather than being reviewed via media reports published well after the crowd has gone home."
Pawar and O'Connor said that everybody cricket must do whatever they can to address racism.
One of cricket's strengths is that it is played, watched and loved by people of many races, nationalities, cultures and languages and when it is played and staged in the right spirit, it has the ability to bring people of diverse backgrounds together, the statement added.
Pawar and O'Connor said they were concerned the ICC Anti Racism Code could only work if it was genuinely embraced for the intent it sought to achieve, and said they had instructed their respective managements to ensure that the objectives of the Code were understood and implemented appropriately at all venues.
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