Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Indian Olympic body, IPL to review deals with Chinese companies amid border standoff

THE Indian Olympic Association (IOA) and the Indian Premier League (IPL) will review their sponsorship deals following a public backlash against Chinese companies.

Chinese companies in India are facing a backlash after the killing this week of 20 Indian soldiers by Chinese forces in a Himalayan border dispute. China has maintained silence over its casualties.


A wave of anti-China sentiment has led the IOA to reconsider its association with Chinese company Li Ning, its apparel partner.

"We have a tie-up with them until the Tokyo Olympics," IOA secretary-general Rajeev Mehta told Reuters.

"We'll discuss the matter in our annual general meeting. Our approach will always be country-first."

There have also been demands on social media for Chinese smartphone maker Vivo to be dropped as the title sponsor of the country's popular Twenty20 cricket league.

Former test spinner Harbhajan Singh tweeted: "Ban all Chinese products".

The IPL said in a statement on Friday (19) that its governing council would hold a meeting next week to review its various sponsorship deals.

"Taking note of the border skirmish that resulted in the martyrdom of our brave jawans (soldiers), the IPL Governing Council has convened a meeting next week to review the IPL’s various sponsorship deals," the IPL wrote on Twitter.

Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) treasurer Arun Singh Dhumal questioned whether dropping Vivo, which bagged the 2018-22 IPL title rights for 21.9 billion rupees ($287.21 million), would serve any purpose.

"People are naturally emotional but we have to differentiate -- whether it's helping the Chinese companies, or their sponsorship is helping India's cause," Dhumal told Reuters.

"Rather than the money going back to China, if that's retained here as sponsorship money, and I'm able to pay tax to the government, that's helping India's cause, isn't it?"

Dhumal said the BCCI would not engage any Chinese company in stadium construction but sponsorship was a different issue.

"We are not giving any building contract to any Chinese company, when money flows out of BCCI to China. This is the other way round."

More For You

Migrants boat
Migrants swim to board a smugglers' boat in order to attempt crossing the English channel off the beach of Audresselles, northern France.
Getty Images

Small boat migrant arrivals in UK cross 200,000 mark

Highlights

  • Small boat migrant arrivals in the UK have crossed 200,000 since 2018
  • Latest Home Office figures showed 70 people arrived on Friday
  • Reform UK made gains in local elections where immigration was a key issue
  • Britain and France recently agreed a new three-year deal to curb crossings

MORE than 200,000 migrants have arrived in the UK in small boats since records began in 2018, according to the latest government figures.

Keep ReadingShow less