It's a level of security detail usually reserved solely for a President -- and England's cricketers had better get used to it.
During its month-long tour
of Bangladesh the sight of armed guards, rooftop snipers, sniffer dogs
and bomb disposal units will become extremely familiar.
As
the team left the ring of steel around its Dhaka hotel to venture to
training, a decoy coach with blacked out windows was even deployed to
confuse any would-be terrorists.
"A
lot has been made about the problems they had and the attacks earlier
in the year but once Reg (Dickason) had given his OK then you've got to
trust him," England captain Jos Buttler told journalists at his first
press conference in the country.
Those 18 of them foreign nationals, when terrorists targeted a bakery popular with tourists in the capital.
Dickason is England's team security officer, who visited the country several times before declaring it safe to tour.
Prior
to July's mass shooting, Australia canceled its tour of Bangladesh in
October 2015 on government advice, then withdrew its Under-19 side from
the World Cup at the beginning of 2016.
Buttler
is filling in as skipper after England's one-day captain Eoin Morgan
refused to travel saying he had vowed never to put himself in a position
where security would become a distraction. Opening batsman Alex Hales
also opted not to go.
Despite roads
being closed and armed guards accompanying the team coach on the short
journey to the Sher-e-Bangla Cricket Stadium, Buttler said his players
had to block out those concerns.
"Visually
there is a lot of security but that is part and parcel of making the
tour OK and now we are here we can start focusing on the cricket," he
said.
"In terms of coming to places like this, I don't think it's been that different from what I expected and what it's been before.
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