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NZ vulnerable for black cricketers, says harm Franklyn Rose
- Updated: June 12, 2016
Auckland: Former West Indies cricketer Franklyn Rose, who was deported from New Zealand progressing this year, has claimed a nation is not protected for general cricketers “especially if they are black”.
Franklyn Rose
Rose, who was a theme of a sex attack censure while vital in a country, told Television New Zealand on Saturday he was racially monotonous by police.
The sex attack review was eventually forsaken with no charges laid and a 44-year-old was deported in Apr for overstaying his visa carrying spent his final weeks in prison.
Rose, who played 19 Test matches for a West Indies between 1997-2000 and is now behind in Jamaica, had been in New Zealand given 2011 on a work visa to play and manager in Auckland.
“You can't entice someone to your nation to play and manager cricket, afterwards chuck him in jail for no reason, afterwards flog him out of your country,” he said. “What have we finished to be sealed in a jail dungeon for 7 weeks? we felt so shocked and shaken when we realised we was vital with and among sequence killers, rapists and drug dealers.”
Rose pronounced he has created to a International Cricket Council observant “New Zealand is not a protected place for general cricketers, generally if they are black”. He pronounced he would have left New Zealand progressing had he not finished adult in sanatorium after being assaulted in Nov 2012. While in sanatorium recuperating from his wounds, Rose grown a blood clot in his lungs that prevented him from flying, he said, observant this was a reason he remained in a nation for as prolonged as he did.
Police superintendent rebut Rose’s claim
Police superintendent Bill Searle pronounced military “strongly refute” Rose’s explain that a attack was not investigated properly, and that a questioning officer “racially stereotyped” him. “A full and consummate review was carried out into Mr Rose’s reported assault,” Searle said.