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Australia delays Bangladesh tour over security risk

MELBOURNE (Reuters) - The Australian cricket team has delayed its planned departure to Bangladesh after being warned by its government that there was a potential security risk from militants. The touring side were due to fly from Sydney on Monday morning for the three-week tour which includes two tests. But Cricket Australia (CA) announced on Saturday that the team's travel plans had been placed on hold after its Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) warned that militants could be planning an attack. "We have received advice from DFAT and based on that information we are working with security experts and the Bangladesh Cricket Board on a revised security plan for the tour," CA chief executive James Sutherland said in a statement. "We want the tour to go ahead and are planning for that but the safety and security of our players and support staff is our number one priority and won't be compromised." Bangladesh Cricket Board president Nazmul Hassan said he was "surprised" by Australia's decision. "This is very disappointing," added Hassan. "There is no violence in the country. "Cricket Australia's head of security Sean Carrol is coming to Dhaka tomorrow. We are hoping things will be sorted out quickly." FRESH ADVICE DFAT, which provides travel advice to Australians planning to go overseas, issued a fresh one on Bangladesh on Friday. "There is reliable information to suggest that militants may be planning to target Australian interests in Bangladesh. Australian officials in Bangladesh have been advised to limit their movements in public places," the DFAT advisory said. Australia has not played a test match in Bangladesh for a decade but were scheduled to make their return this year, playing a three-day warm-up match in Fatullah, starting Oct. 3, before back-to-back tests in Chittagong from Oct. 9 then Dhaka from Oct. 17. "We will wait to receive updated security information early in the week before confirming the team's travel arrangements," Sutherland added. "In the meantime we are working with the ACA (Australian Cricketers Association) and keeping our players and support staff fully informed." Militants have targeted secularist writers in Bangladesh in recent years, while the government has cracked down on Islamist groups seeking to make the South Asian nation of 160 million people a sharia-based state. Cricket is the most popular sport in the subcontinent but security remains a constant concern for visiting international teams. Australia and West Indies both refused to play matches in Sri Lanka during the 1996 World Cup after bombings in Colombo while New Zealand cut short tours of Pakistan and Sri Lanka for similar reasons. In 2009, gunmen in Pakistan attacked the Sri Lankan team bus as it was travelling in Lahore. Pakistan now plays its home matches in the United Arab Emirates. Australia have not toured Pakistan since 1998 while England suspended their tour of India in 2008 after the attacks on Mumbai, which killed about 170 people, but later agreed to return on the promise of tightened security. (Reporting by Julian Linden in Singapore; editing by Sudipto Ganguly)