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Tuesday April 16, 2024

Horse racing suspended till April-end

By AFP
March 18, 2020

LONDON: Horse racing in Britain is to be suspended from Wednesday (today) due to the coronavirus outbreak, the British Horseracing Authority has announced.

Tuesday’s decision comes a day after the BHA said the sport would continue behind closed doors, initially to the end of March, although April’s Grand National was cancelled.

”As of tomorrow race meetings will cease up to the end of April,” the BHA said in a statement on its website “The decision will be kept under constant review.”

BHA chief executive Nick Rust described the COVID-19 crisis as “a national emergency, the like of which most of us have never seen before”.

”We’re a sport that is proud of its connection to rural communities and to the local businesses that support our industry,” he said. ”But our first duty is to the health of the public, our customers and to racing industry participants and staff.”

The two meetings scheduled for Tuesday at Taunton and Wetherby are going ahead as planned behind closed doors.

Racing in Ireland continues behind closed doors.

There has been a criticism over the decision to go ahead with jump racing’s four-day Cheltenham Festival last week, which attracted more than 250,000 spectators.

The authorities defended their decision at the time as they were following government advice.

Britain on Tuesday ramped up its response to the escalating coronavirus outbreak.

The government imposed unprecedented peacetime measures prompted by scientific advice that infections and deaths would spiral without drastic action.

Rust said the coronavirus would hit the racing industry hard. ”There will be difficult months ahead for many of us,” he said. “We need to focus now on ensuring that we can continue to look after our horses as the virus affects the thousands of participants and staff who dedicate their lives to caring for animals.

”We need to do what we can to support businesses inside and outside racing and the many people whose livelihoods depend upon this £4 billion ($4.8 billion) industry.”