BCA staging own Grand Kadooment (25 July 1999)
Ithas commanded more newspaper column inches and radio and television air time than the CARICOM Heads of Government Conference, the Kennedy plane crash and House of Assembly meetings
25-Jul-1999
25 July 1999
BCA staging own Grand Kadooment
Tony Cozier
Ithas commanded more newspaper column inches and radio and
television air time than the CARICOM Heads of Government
Conference, the Kennedy plane crash and House of Assembly
meetings.
It has rivalled Kadooment and its usual attendant controversies
for public attention - and that takes some doing at this time of
the year. Indeed, it is not far short of being a Kadooment
itself.
The candidates have assembled their teams and proclaimed their
worthiness for office with as much fanfare and self-possession
as Owen Arthur and David Thompson did back in January.
PR agencies have been employed, Press conferences held,
programme time bought, circulars posted, letters planted in the
Press.
All we need now are the corned beef and rum, the omnipresent
street posters, a couple of mass meetings in Independence Square
and Jennifer Laszlo and it would be a full-fledged political
campaign, not merely a contest for the presidency of a sporting
association with a membership of less than 2 000, or a mere
0.007 per cent of this country's population.
As the sport is cricket, for which Barbados has established a
record of excellence second to none and in which Barbadians take
justifiable pride, interest in how it is run must create public
interest.
This island could never have boasted this reputation or produced
its proliferation of great players without the enlightened
administrative groundwork of leaders like Sir Harold Austin,
Freddie Clairemonte, Mitchie Hewitt, Tony Hinds, Noel Peirce,
Eric Inniss, Keith Walcott and Peter Short.
It is that legacy that the current president, Tony Marshall, has
inherited and that Sir Conrad Hunte, himself an outstanding
product of that heritage, seeks to maintain with his challenge
that will be decided, by ballot, at the Barbados Cricket
Association (BCA) annual general meeting on Thursday evening.
As has been repeatedly reported, Marshall states that he is
seeking re-election on the strength of his record of three years
in office, principally his financial stewardsip.
Hunte counters that he and his team will place more emphasis on
cricket development that he believes has been neglected.
It seems straightforward enough for the mature members of the
BCA to consider the candidates, with whose personal credentials
they are certainly acquainted, and make their choice without the
hullaballoo that has surrounded it.
That may be how it used to be but, in this age, no more. It is
ironic that the parameters changed when Marshall first initiated
his unsuccessful bid for the presidency against Short in 1993.
In case memories have faded, the NATION reported prior to that
meeting that it had been a "fierce contest".
"The interest in the duel, and the intensity of the campaigning
that has accompanied it, is expected to be reflected in the
large turnout of the BCA's members of over 1 300," it stated.
"Both men and their supporters have been vigorously canvassing
members. Marshall is being backed by a group calling itself the
'Elect Tony Marshall Committee'."
There was similar electioneering when Marshall came to the post
at his second attempt, defeating the incumbent, Cammie Smith, in
1996.
The die had been cast and BCA elections could never be the same
again.
Inevitably, such a course has taken it into the public domain
and all sorts of odd interpretations are being put on the
election.
One of the most bizarre was advanced on a radio phone-in last
week. It was, proclaimed the caller, a fight between the "elite"
schools (Marshall, Harrison College) and the "lesser" schools
(Hunte, Alleyne), ignoring the cosmopolitan mix of both sides.
The most sinister was advanced in the editorial of the other
daily newspaper on Friday. Reaching into a well-worn pack, it
pulled out the dog-eared race card, in this case the fading
Joker.
Using the peg of last week's ill-advised umpires' strike in the
Nortel tournament, prompted by an ill-advised comment by
president Marshall, on which to hang its warped thesis, it
blamed Marshall's problems in office on "those who most loudly
profess loyalty to kith, kin and Africanity".
They were caused, it thundered, by "some reportedly envious of
his achievements, others seized of the barrel crab mentality:
pull down anyone that rises even if it means none will reach or
remain on top; still others incapable of recognising how they
portray their own ethnic group, particularly during (a) period
of exaggerated race-consciousness".
It was virulent stuff. It was also mischievous nonsense that
would have embarrassed the president it sought to acclaim.
Whatever Marshall's qualities might be in other areas, he has
failed to maintain the support of many of those elected to work
under him.
Those on his board of management who have left in frustration
during his term and others who have now committed themselves to
the Hunte ticket are numerous and diverse enough to testify to a
seriously fractured organisation.
Marshall contends that, under him, the BCA is in transition so
that "differences of opinion" can be expected. He complains that
the problem is that those differences have been aired outside
the BCA, adding: "I think therein lies a tale."
It was a concern that was also noted by Smith in his final
report as president before Marshall defeated him in 1996:
"The leaking of information has had the effect of stifling
discussion as members feared what they said would be taken out
of context.
"The use of the media has created a division on the board that
has undermined the democratic process."
It is a reality the BCA members have to confront on Thursday.
They know that a house divided against itself cannot stand. The
question is who can unite them?
Or is it all about something else altogether?
There is another cricketing presidential race, in both senses of
the word, going on in South Africa. There are those at
Thursday's meeting here who will be asking what the former South
African captain, Kepler Wessels, has asked there.
"Will anyone take time out to discuss cricket because, in many
ways, I wonder whether this meeting is about cricket at all.
This meeting sounds to me as though it is going to be about
power."
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)