30 December,2009 09:51 AM IST | | AFP
England is seriously considering pulling out of next year's Commonwealth Games in India over fears its athletes will be victims of a terrorist attack, a report said on Wednesday.
Police and security advisers fear the England team will be targeted by Pakistani militants and feel the safety of athletes cannot currently be guaranteed, according to the Daily Telegraph, quoting unnamed sources.
It would be the first time that England has not competed in the 80-year Games, to be held in New Delhi in October.
The report comes after the England badminton team pulled out of the world championships in India in August, saying security in the host city of Hyderabad was lax, and sparking criticism that they were overreacting.
ALSO READ
I am always looking forward to new and unique opportunities, says Ponnappa
Mumbai Super League: Mamata Prabhu is top table tennis pick
Commonwealth Games: India will win gold in many events, says Saina Nehwal
Jwala Gutta-Ashwini Ponnappa reaches semifinals of Canada Open
Delhi government 'misleading' people on Commonwealth Games: BJP
Paul Stephenson, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, visited the Indian capital earlier this month to inspect the Games sites and was said to have voiced "serious concerns" about the security arrangements, the paper said.
"If you are an English athlete there is no way you are going to want to risk your life competing at the Games," a source was quoted as saying on the newspaper's website.
"We currently cannot see any way that England will be able to send a team to Delhi next year," the source added.
A spokeswoman for the English Commonwealth Games told the newspaper that the security situation was being monitored, and a final decision on whether to take part will be made next year.
"We take guidance from the Metropolitan Police. We can't make a judgment until nearer the time. We have had briefings on security and we will decide when we know what the terror threat is going to be like," she said.
Concern of an attack on England's athletes apparently stems from Britain's role in the international conflict against the Taliban in Afghanistan.
The perceived risk of foreign sports stars being targeted in South Asia has increased since gunmen attacked the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore, Pakistan, in March.
Six policemen and two civilians were killed and seven Sri Lankan squad members were wounded in the assault as the team travelled to a Test match.
Militant attacks in Mumbai last November that killed 166 people have also added to anxiety about teams travelling to India.
Concerns are also mounting in India over delays on the construction of venues for the Games, which involve 6,000 international athletes competing in 17 sports.