View: Cricket could rescue a lot more than Imran Khan
Imran Khan: Former cricket legends are calling for improved jail conditions for Imran Khan. Dozens of international captains have written to Pakistan's Prime Minister. They seek medical care and humane treatment for the former leader. This unprece...

For millions around the world, however, none of these pictures from his later life will ever be as memorable as the spectacle of nearly 40-year-old Imran holding up the world cup that Pakistan’s cricketers had just won. That’s certainly true for me. I can vividly recall sitting on the floor on that spring day in 1992, a young boy in Kolkata, watching the charismatic team captain’s victory speech.
Since Khan was sent to jail (allegedly for corruption) by the military-dominated establishment in 2023, this once-unstoppable supply of pictures has dried up. He has been isolated and denied proper medical attention for weeks; and eventually, Pakistanis and the world have come to realize that he might now be seriously ill.
Also Read: ‘Treat Imran Khan fairly in jail’: Sunil Gavaskar, Kapil Dev among 14 captains write to Pakistan government
Last week, support came from an unexpected quarter. More than a dozen former cricket captains wrote to the current prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, asking him to ensure that his predecessor received access to medical care, more humane conditions in jail, and proper access to legal counsel. The signatories were legends of equivalent luster to Kahn from Australia, India, West Indies, England and elsewhere: Allan Border, Greg Chappell, David Gower and Clive Lloyd.
This is unprecedented. How could it not be, given that Khan himself is practically unique? Nobody else has gone from being a timeless legend in a sport played by billions to being elected to lead a country of more than 200 million. (The closest parallel I can think of is the soccer player George Weah, who won the Ballon d’Or in 1995 before serving six years as president of Liberia.)
Khan was controversial in both sport and politics. The magic that he and his Pakistan teammates performed on the field in the 1970s and 1980s was, many argued, the product of surreptitious tampering with the ball. Similarly, his sudden dominance of his country’s politics was in no small degree a consequence of the all-powerful military eventually putting a hand on the electoral scales in his favor.
And in that world cup victory speech we listened to so raptly three decades ago, Khan famously forgot to mention his teammates — indeed, he used “I” throughout, not “we.” That is how, as his country’s most successful populist, he ran his party and government as well.
Indeed, any sympathy one feels for Khan, now 73, is in spite of his political career and not because of it. He might not have spoken a word against the treatment he’s now receiving had it been one of his political adversaries in jail instead.
The two Indian captains who signed, Khan’s rivals and contemporaries Sunil Gavaskar and Kapil Dev, probably didn’t hesitate a moment to lend their names to the letter — even though the two countries define themselves by their mutual rivalry in politics and in sport. But rivalry, the letter said, should end when a match does.
(Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this column are that of the writer. The facts and opinions expressed here do not reflect the views of www.economictimes.com.)
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