

SYDNEY, Australia (AP) - Cricket Australia will be left to make the final decision about touring India following a series of bomb attacks in New Delhi, Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said Monday.
Australia, led by captain Ricky Ponting, is due to leave Australia next Sunday. The third test of the four-match series is scheduled to start in New Delhi on Oct. 29.
A series of blasts ripped through the Indian capital Saturday, killing at least 20 people and wounding about 100 others.
Cricket Australia is waiting on a security report and was scheduled to hold meetings with the country’s players association. But Peter Young, Cricket Australia’s general manager of public affairs, said later Monday that the team planned to leave as scheduled, pending the security assessment.
"Our position is that the tour is going ahead unless we are otherwise persuaded," Young was quoted saying on the Cricinfo website. "Our advice is there are some concerns and to exercise caution, but currently they do not compromise the tour. Our plan is to depart on Sept. 21 subject to our advice."
Smith said the government would provide all the information at its disposal.
"We will do what we do with Cricket Australia whenever they are looking at a difficult tour ... we will provide them with all our up-to-date travel assessments and advice briefs," he told Australia’s Sky News television.
"And they are also, as I understand it, getting their own independent security advice. In the end it’s for Cricket Australia to make a decision, which is how we have dealt with the proposed Pakistan test tour and the proposed Champions Trophy."
Australia pulled out of a Pakistan tour earlier this year and also expressed safety fears ahead of the Champions Trophy limited-overs tournament, which was due to be held in Pakistan this month.
The Champions Trophy was eventually postponed for a year after pressure from several countries including Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.
Australian Cricketers Association chief Paul Marsh said there would be no double standards when deciding whether the national team should tour India.
"As much as it’s sometimes reported that we cancel series at the drop of a hat, that is simply not the case," Marsh said. "I would not say there is panic among the players I have spoken to, but a degree of concern.
"If the team stays in India, there might be some who criticize us for double standards. But people need to understand our starting point is that we always want to tour."