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On January 3, 2026, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) directed the Kolkata Knight Riders to release Bangladesh fast bowler Mustafizur Rahman from his Indian Premier League (IPL) contract, citing unspecified “developments all around.” The move, widely linked to escalating India-Bangladesh tensions following former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s exile in New Delhi, ended Rahman’s IPL season before it began. Within days, he joined the Pakistan Super League, while the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) condemned the decision as “discriminatory and insulting.” Dhaka banned IPL broadcasts and asked the International Cricket Council (ICC) to relocate its T20 World Cup matches from India to Sri Lanka over security concerns.
The ICC assured Bangladesh of full participation in the 2026 T20 World Cup and pledged to coordinate on safety planning, though matches remain scheduled in Kolkata and Mumbai. Indian political figures were divided: a BJP leader opposed Bangladeshi participation in Indian events, while Congress’s Shashi Tharoor warned against politicising sport. Analysts said the episode reflected India’s growing use of cricket as a geopolitical tool, leveraging its financial dominance in the game to influence regional relations.
Observers noted that cricket, once a bridge for diplomacy, is increasingly becoming a stage for political confrontation in South Asia.
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