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Racism claim: Sherinne Anderson says that only white girls were allowed to perform for crowds at India's Twenty20 cricket premier league

Cheerleaders 'told they were too dark' for Indian show

Pamela Timms
22.05.08

Two London cheerleaders hired to entertain crowds at India's Twenty20 cricket premier league have accused organisers of racism.

Ellesha Newton and Sherinne Anderson say they were banned from performing because they had "dark skin" and told to sit out of the opening routine at the India Premier League's inaugural match in Chandigarh.

They said they were left sobbing as Team Chennai and Team Mohali took to the field and that event organisers told them only "white girls" would be allowed to perform.

Ms Newton, 22, from Islington, said they had been called "n*****s" and banned from performing.

She said: "An organiser pulled us away. He said the people here don't want to see dark people. The n***** word was used and they said they only wanted beautiful white girls."

Ms Anderson, 25, from Hayes, added: "This kind of thing has never happened to us not in Europe, not here, nowhere. We are offended."

The girls had been hired by Fierce Performance Productions which has offices in London and Bombay.

Director Jorge Aldana said the girls were eventually allowed to take part as cheerleaders after he intervened with local officials.

Several of India'sTwenty20 cricket teams have hired American and British cheerleaders, including a number of black African-Americans, but this is the first allegation of racism.

The raunchy routines have caused outrage in the country, where protesters condemned their introduction as an insult to traditional Indian modesty.

Now India's Twenty20 organisers are braced for a fresh and potentially more damaging row over the cheerleaders' allegations. Women's rights groups in India have condemned the organisers, and called for action to be taken.

The All India Democratic Women's Association, said: "Stopping anyone performing on the basis of colour of skin is not only illegal but unconstitutional.

Racism is rarely discussed in India, but African visitors, immigrants from Nepal face regular abuse.

The event management firm Wizcraft today denied the allegations and accused the women of having "an ulterior motive" for making them. A spokesman said: "They are totally fabricated."

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I hope that the poor girls are not too surprised by this. The religion of the country they were performing in is quite explicitly racist. A number of good articles explicating this can be found on Jared Taylors website. Google it if you have the inclination.
The ante penultimate sentence in this article states that racism is rarely discussed in India, and that is quite right. The reason for this is that it is discussed only in places where profit can be made for it, whether by gold or by power. Ultimately, Race qua race is only moderately interesting if kept within its proper sociological and/or anthropological sphere. As stage dressing for lurid political theatre, it is as repulsive as a Fassbinder film. All people of sensibility realize this.

- Wm. Smith, Midlands


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