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Indian police say the organisers of the new tournament
transforming world cricket could be fined if cheerleaders are deemed to be
dressed indecently. The cheerleaders have been introduced into the Indian Premier League as
part of moves to add glamour and entertainment to the game.
Some politicians say the cheerleaders are "vulgar and obscene".
Mumbai police say they will be checking that the cheerleaders'
performances do not violate entertainment licences.
The cheerleading girls, wearing short skirts and low-cut tops, have been
hired from around the world to perform during the matches which are also
being heavily endorsed by leading Bollywood stars.
They include cheerleaders from the Washington Redskins.
'Lines of decency'
Ram Rao Vagh, the police commissioner for New Mumbai, a suburb of Mumbai,
where the home team is hosting five matches starting on Sunday, told the BBC
that they were not considering any action against the cheerleaders
themselves.
"It is difficult to enforce moral policing, we cannot define vulgarity
always. It is difficult to ascertain what is vulgar and obscene," Mr Vagh
said.
But he said the organisers could be fined for violating the norms of the
entertainment licence they had secured for allowing performances in the
stadium.
Senior officers would decide whether the cheerleaders had crossed the
"lines of decency".
A spokesman for the local team, the Mumbai Indians, said they were not
worried.
"Our cheerleaders are properly dressed. They are within limits of what
our culture permits. So we have no problems," Javed Akhtar told the BBC.
'Routine'
However, the junior interior minister of western Maharashtra state, of
which Mumbai is the capital, said the performances of cheerleading girls at
the Indian Premier League matches were "absolutely obscene".
"We live in India where womanhood is worshipped. How can anything obscene
like this be allowed?," Siddharam Mehetre told the Press Trust of India news
agency.
"This thing is meant for foreigners and not for us. Mothers and daughters
watch these matches on television. It does not look nice."
Many others find the indignation misplaced, coming from a city, which is
home to a thriving industry of Bollywood films where dance sequences
featuring women in skimpy dresses are routine.
Bollywood actor, Shah Rukh Khan, who also owns one of the teams in the
competition, is one of them.
"What's wrong with cheerleaders? I am also a family person, I do not see
anything negative in it," he said.
The head of India's National Commission for Women said there was nothing
wrong with the cheerleaders if it "just for adding entertainment to the
game".
"It has to be presented in the right manner keeping Indian values
intact," said Girija Vyas.
A former Bollywood actor and a politician belonging to the opposition
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), Shatrughan Sinha said the cheerleaders were
making a "mockery" of the game.
There have been reports in the Indian newspapers of cheerleaders
complaining of sections of the crowd jeering at them and making lewd comments.
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