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Rugby Theatre

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Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Rugby Theatre
Phone:
+44 1788 541234

Hours:
SundayClosed
Monday7pm - 8pm
Tuesday7pm - 8pm
Wednesday7pm - 8pm
Thursday7pm - 8pm
Friday7pm - 8pm
Saturday10:30am - 12:30pm


The 1981 South African rugby tour polarised opinions and inspired widespread protests across New Zealand. The controversy also extended to the United States, where the South African rugby team continued their tour after departing New Zealand.Apartheid had made South Africa an international pariah, and other countries were strongly discouraged from having sporting contacts with it. Rugby union was an extremely popular sport in New Zealand, and the South African team known as the Springboks were considered to be New Zealand's most formidable opponents. Therefore, there was a major split in opinion in New Zealand as to whether politics should influence sport in this way and whether the Springboks should be allowed to tour. Despite the controversy, the New Zealand Rugby Union decided to proceed with the tour. The government of Prime Minister Robert Muldoon was called on to ban it, but decided that commitments under the Gleneagles Agreement did not require the government to prevent the tour, and decided not to interfere due to their public position of no politics in sport. Major protests ensued, aiming to make clear many New Zealanders' opposition to apartheid and, if possible, to stop the matches taking place. This was successful at two games, but also had the effect of creating a law and order issue: whether a group of protesters could be allowed to prevent a lawful game taking place. The dispute was similar to that involving Peter Hain in the United Kingdom in the early 1970s, when Hain's Stop the Tour campaign clashed with the more conservative 'Freedom Under Law' movement championed by barrister Francis Bennion. The allegedly excessive police response to the protests also became a focus of controversy. Although the protests were among the most intense in New Zealand's recent history, no deaths or serious injuries resulted. After the tour, no official sporting contact took place between New Zealand and South Africa until the early 1990s, after apartheid had been abolished. The tour has been said to have led to a decline in the popularity of Rugby Union in New Zealand, until the 1987 Rugby World Cup.
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