The ICC today agreed to allow Indian TV channels to attend the  high-voltage World Cup semifinals between India and Pakistan tomorrow following  a request from Information and Broadcasting Minister Ambika Soni. 
Soni today  stepped in to resolve the ongoing tussle between the ICC and the electronic  media, which was barred by ICC from covering tomorrow's semi-final clash. The  minister had a meeting with the representatives of the News Broadcasters  Association this morning and then wrote a letter to Pawar requesting him to  allow the electronic media to cover the event. 
She proposed a 24-hour 'truce' in  a dispute created by Indian non-rights holders (NRH) breaching the terms and  conditions they had agreed to follow when they were awarded accreditation for  the World Cup. 
"Ms Soni had written to ICC President Sharad Pawar and asked for  the television channels be allowed access into the ground at Mohali for this  important game," ICC Chief Executive Haroon Lorgat said. 
"At the same time she  agreed to convene a meeting at the Ministry on 31 March 2011 to address the  dispute which has been caused by repeated and serious breaches of the terms and  conditions which these organisations had signed up to." Giving a vivid outline  of the facts, Lorgat said, "Firstly, the News Access Guidelines for Broadcasting  the ICC Cricket World Cup were issued in January 2011 and all news broadcasters  were reminded of these Guidelines in a letter from the ICC on 27 January. 
"No  objections to the guidelines were received and accreditations were issued to the  NRH reporters and cameramen on condition that these guidelines were followed.  "Sadly there have been many breaches and despite requests for such activity to  cease the NRH stations continued to break the rules. "It was only as a last  resort that the ICC withdrew the accreditation of these companies when they  refused to sign an undertaking that they would desist from breaching the  guidelines. It was not something done without very good reason," he added.
Lorgat, however, pledged to protect the rights of its broadcast and commercial  partners. "It is also important to understand that the removal of the  accreditation does not prevent these channels from reporting the ICC Cricket  World Cup. It only prevents them from entering the stadium. Footage is provided  to them from several agencies, including SNTV and Reuters, the ICC's official  news providers," he said. 
"I am grateful for the minister's intervention in  calling a meeting but I must repeat that we are committed to protecting the  rights and investments of our broadcast partners as well as the exclusivity of  our commercial partners. "We will not allow that to be compromised and if the  relevant members of the News Broadcasters Association are not willing to give  the necessary undertakings we require, we will have no other option but to  withdraw accreditation for the final in Mumbai," he added. 
Earlier in the day,  ICC had barred electronic media, who breached the media guidelines for covering  the ongoing World Cup, access to the PCA stadium, depriving them of covering the  pre-match press conferences. Last night too, the ICC had barred a large number  of electronic media, mainly from India and Bangladesh from covering the  remaining matches of the cricket World Cup for breaching the media guidelines.  
ICC officials, armed with a list of banned channels, checked the media  accreditations of all the journalists as they entered the stadium to cover the  press conferences of Indian skipper Mahendra Singh and Pakistan captain Shahid  Afridi. 
Only those channels who were not in the banned list were permitted to  enter the stadium while others had to report on World Cup related matters from  outside the venue. As a result, there were hordes of reporters from the print  media but only a handful of television cameras at the press conference. —PTI
Cricket is a bat-and-ball team sport. Many variations exist, with its most popular form played on an oval-shaped outdoor arena known as a cricket field at the centre of which is a rectangular 22-yard (20.12 m) long pitch that is the focus of the game.
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