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Boxing Day Test: Cricket Australia assures fans over security fears

December 23, 2016 14:33 IST

IMAGE: Australian cricket fans at the Melbourne Cricket Ground during the second Test between Australia and West Indies on December 26, 2015. Photograph: Scott Barbour/Getty Images

Cricket Australia assured fans over security arrangements for the Boxing Day Test against Pakistan on Friday after police foiled a terror plot to attack prominent sites in Melbourne with a series of bombs on Christmas Day.

About 400 police and members of Australia's domestic spy agency conducted overnight raids on homes in the suburbs of Melbourne and arrested six men and a woman, all Australian citizens in their 20s.

"Our security team is in contact with the relevant authorities to ensure we have the appropriate level of security at the Boxing Day Test and other cricket matches being held around the country," CA chief executive James Sutherland said.

"The safety and security of our fans, players and officials attending any cricket match is our number one priority.

"We applaud Victoria Police for their efforts this morning in neutralising the threat and we will continue to work with the relevant authorities to ensure the highest security standards and protocols are maintained."

Extra police would be on patrol on Christmas Day and at the annual Boxing Day cricket Test, which starts on December 26 and attracts tens of thousands of fans every year, in Melbourne the following day, acting Victorian police commissioner Graham Ashton said.

Australia lead the three-Test series 1-0 after a nervous 49-run victory in a day-night fixture at Brisbane.

The sport was the target of an attack in Lahore in March 2009, when the Sri Lankan team bus was set upon by at least 10 gunmen armed with rifles, grenades and rockets, wounding six players and a British coach and killing eight Pakistanis.

Most international cricket tours to Pakistan were subsequently cancelled and the country have since played all their home games in the United Arab Emirates.

Source: REUTERS
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