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Chennai Super Kings games moved to Pune amid water protests

Indian members of the Tamil ethnic group try to enter the MA Chidhambram cricket stadium amid ongoing protests over water rights in Chennai
Image: Indian members of the Tamil ethnic group try to enter the MA Chidhambram cricket stadium amid ongoing protests over water rights in Chennai

India's cricket board has shifted Indian Premier League games from Chennai, which is in the grip of a water crisis, after protesters threatened to release snakes during the next match.

The Board of Control for Cricket in India was mulling four alternate venues for Chennai's remaining six IPL matches after protesters scuffled with police and threw shoes on the pitch at their home match on Tuesday.

BCCI had four alternative venues up its sleeve - Visakhapatnam, Trivandrum, Pune and Rajkot - none of which is in Tamil Nadu, the water-strapped southern state home to Chennai.

Pune has been chosen from that list, with the six fixtures still scheduled to be played on their original dates.

"The matches had to be shifted out of Chennai as police had said that they were unable to provide security in the prevailing situation. CSK is not averse to shifting base to Pune," IPL chairman Rajeev Shukla said.

Indian members of the Tamil ethnic group hold placards and shout slogans during a protest
Image: Indian members of the Tamil ethnic group hold placards and shout slogans during a protest

The cash-rich Twenty20 tournament returned to Chennai after a two-year ban handed to the Super Kings for illegal gambling expired.

But their homecoming was marred when protesters - trying to raise awareness about a long-running water dispute with neighbouring Karnataka - burned merchandise and jostled with police outside the stadium.

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Shoes were hurled at Chennai players on the boundary ropes during the match, which the Super Kings won over the Kolkata Knight Riders despite the disruption.

A Tamil outfit also threatened to release snakes during the Kings' next match on April 20 against Rajasthan Royals if it is not shifted from Chennai.

The drought-prone state has witnessed increasing protests in recent weeks over a disputed accord with Karnataka on how to share water from the key Cauvery river.