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Former England batter explains why Bangladesh’s T20 World Cup protest pales in comparison to India-Pakistan rivalry

Photo by Dianne Manson-ICC/ICC via Getty Images
Photo by Dianne Manson-ICC/ICC via Getty Images
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A former England batter has downplayed the scale of Bangladesh’s T20 World Cup protest, arguing it does not come close to the structural and historical weight of the India-Pakistan rivalry.

The situation has reignited debate around how international cricket handles political and security-related disputes, particularly when they impact major ICC tournaments.

While Bangladesh’s stance has drawn attention, Mark Butcher believes the response should be measured and rooted in precedent rather than accommodation.

Newly-elected President of the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB), Aminul Islam Bulbul, speaks during a press conference in Dhaka.
Photo by Munir UZ ZAMAN / AFP via Getty Images

Mark Butcher outlines the firm ICC precedent view

Speaking on the latest episode of the Wisden podcast, the former England player laid out what he believes should be the ICC’s default response in such scenarios.

“The ICC had a choice to make at that point, do they do what actually should happen from now on in? This is a precedent that I think is worth following, that when a team, whether it’s through their government,” Butcher said.

He added: “Or it’s off their own bat, have security concerns or whatever concerns about visiting a country for a tournament, then basically they should be scrapped and the next cab off the rank qualifies and you go ahead without them. That I think is the precedent.”

The argument centred on consistency, with Butcher stressing that allowing withdrawals without consequence risks undermining tournament integrity.

Former England batter compares Bangladesh issue to India-Pakistan rivalry

He then explained why he believes the Bangladesh situation should not be placed in the same category as long-running India-Pakistan disputes.

“There have been a lot of preceding events, not to this particular farrago, that have parallels. Obviously, the India Champions Trophy issue with Pakistan and how that ended up being resolved with India playing matches in Dubai, including the final,” Butcher continued.

He concluded, stating: I think the India example for the Champions Trophy, everyone could see that coming, that was so obvious that you could see it from space that that was going to be the position.

“I’m certainly not being naive in thinking that everyone else stands in the same position in India does because they don’t. … However, the integrity of the sport should still be more important than where most of the money comes from.”

Butcher’s conclusion was that while adjustments in cricket are not new, only the India-Pakistan relationship has consistently reshaped global tournament structures.

In his view, Bangladesh’s protest may be significant, but it does not carry the same unavoidable weight.