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Pakistan head coach slams ‘unacceptable’ pitch after Bangladesh loss

Pakistan head coach slams ‘unacceptable’ pitch after Bangladesh loss
Bangladesh’s Taskin Ahmed (center) runs out Pakistan’s Salman Mirza during the first Twenty20 international cricket match between Bangladesh and Pakistan at the Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium in Dhaka on July 20, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 1 min 7 sec ago

Pakistan head coach slams ‘unacceptable’ pitch after Bangladesh loss

Pakistan head coach slams ‘unacceptable’ pitch after Bangladesh loss
  • Pakistan lost to Bangladesh by seven wickets on Sunday in first T20I of three-match series
  • Bangladesh batter Emon disagrees, says his team’s batters adjusted better than Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s white-ball Head Coach Mike Hesson recently slammed the pitch at the Shere Bangla National Stadium as “unacceptable” after his team succumbed to a seven-wicket defeat against hosts Bangladesh on Sunday. 

After what looked to be a promising start by aggressive opening batters Fakhar Zaman and Saim Ayub, Pakistan slipped to 46 for 5 by the eighth over, with most of their batters falling while going for big shots.

The green shirts also collapsed due to three run-outs, eventually being bowled out for a modest 110 runs in 19.3 overs. 

“I think (the pitch) is not ideal for anybody,” Hesson said at the post-match conference on Sunday. “Teams are trying to prepare for the Asia Cup or the (T20) World Cup. It is not acceptable.”

The Pakistani coach conceded there was “no excuse” for some of the decisions the green shirts made with the bat but quickly added that the pitch “is not up to international standards.”

“We chose some poor options. When the ball started to nip through, and bounced steeply, we probably didn’t assess that it was a bit more challenging to play high-risk shots,” Hesson said.

“Couple of run-outs also didn’t help.”

Bangladesh batter Parvez Hossain Emon, who smashed an unbeaten 56 from 39 balls to lead his team to a win, disagreed with Hesson. 

“We didn’t feel (it was a bad pitch) as we chased it down in less than 16 overs,” he said. “We could have scored 150-160 runs if we batted the full 20 overs. It may be so that they couldn’t adjust to the pitch. We adjusted better than them.”

Hesson, however, said that when a team isn’t sure whether 130 or 150 is a good enough target, then that pitch isn’t an impressive one.

“I don’t think (the pitch) is good for anybody,” he said. 

Pakistan next play Bangladesh in the second T20I match of the three-match series on July 22. Pakistan defeated Bangladesh 3-0 in a home T20I series in May this year.


Pakistani camel relearns to walk with prosthetic leg

Pakistani camel relearns to walk with prosthetic leg
Updated 12 min 36 sec ago

Pakistani camel relearns to walk with prosthetic leg

Pakistani camel relearns to walk with prosthetic leg
  • Cammie’s leg was allegedly severed by landlord in June 2024 as punishment for entering his field
  • Veterinarian says will take Cammie another 15 to 20 days for her to fully adjust to the new limb

KARACHI: Cammie, a young camel whose front leg was chopped off by a landlord in Pakistan’s southern province of Sindh, left her caregivers emotional as she walked for the first time on a prosthetic leg.

“I started weeping when I saw her walking with the prosthetic leg. It was a dream come true,” Sheema Khan, the manager of an animal shelter in Karachi told AFP on Saturday.

Veterinarian Babar Hussain said it was the first time a large animal in Pakistan had received a prosthetic leg.

Cammie’s leg was allegedly severed by a landlord in June 2024 as punishment for entering his field in search of fodder.

A video of the wounded camel that circulated on social media prompted swift government action.

According to the deputy commissioner of Sanghar, she was transported the very next day to Karachi, over 250 kilometers (155 miles) away, and has been living in a shelter there ever since.

“She was terrified when she first arrived from Sanghar. We witnessed her heart-wrenching cries. She was afraid of men,” Khan told AFP.

One of the biggest challenges the caregivers faced was gaining her trust.

“I cannot put her condition into words,” Khan added.

To aid her recovery, the caregivers introduced another young camel named Callie. Her presence brought comfort to the injured Cammie, who tried standing on her three legs for the first time after seeing her new companion.

“Cammie had been confined to her enclosure for almost four to five months before Callie arrived,” Khan added.

After treating the wound and completing initial rehabilitation, the shelter — Comprehensive Disaster Response Services (CDRS) Benji Project — arranged a prosthetic leg from a US-based firm so she could walk on all fours again.

“We don’t force her to walk. After attaching the prosthetic leg, we wait about 15 to 20 minutes. Then she stands up on her own and walks slowly,” veterinarian Hussain told AFP.

He said that it would take another 15 to 20 days for her to fully adjust to the new limb.

The caregivers said Cammie will remain at the shelter permanently.


Trump’s renewed interest in Pakistan has India recalibrating China ties

Trump’s renewed interest in Pakistan has India recalibrating China ties
Updated 21 min 58 sec ago

Trump’s renewed interest in Pakistan has India recalibrating China ties

Trump’s renewed interest in Pakistan has India recalibrating China ties
  • Trump’s lunch meeting with Pakistan’s army chief prompted private diplomatic protest from Delhi, say officials
  • Last week, India’s Jaishankar made first visit to Beijing since 2020 border clash between Indian, Chinese troops

NEW DELHI, India: US President Donald Trump’s lunch meeting with Pakistan’s military chief prompted a private diplomatic protest from India in a warning to Washington about risks to their bilateral ties while New Delhi is recalibrating relations with China as a hedge, officials and analysts said.

The meeting and other tensions in the US-India relationship, after decades of flourishing ties, have cast a shadow in trade negotiations, they said, as Trump’s administration weighs tariffs against one of its major partners in the Indo-Pacific.

India blames Pakistan, especially its military establishment, for supporting what it calls cross-border terrorism and has told the US it is sending the wrong signals by wooing Field Marshal Asim Munir, three senior Indian government officials directly aware of the matter told Reuters.

It has created a sore spot that will hamper relations going forward, they said.

Pakistan denies accusations that it supports militants who attack Indian targets and that New Delhi has provided no evidence that it is involved.

US-India ties have strengthened in the past two decades despite minor hiccups, at least partly because both countries seek to counter China.

The current problems are different, said Michael Kugelman, a Washington-based senior fellow at the Asia Pacific Foundation think tank.

“The frequency and intensity with which the US is engaging with Pakistan, and seemingly not taking Indian concerns into account, especially after India’s recent conflict with Pakistan, has contributed to a bit of a bilateral malaise.”

“The concern this time around is that one of the triggers for broader tensions, that being Trump’s unpredictability, is extending into the trade realm with his approach to tariffs,” he said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s office and India’s foreign ministry did not respond to a request for comment. The foreign ministry has previously said that it had “taken note” of the Trump-Munir meeting.

A US official said they do not comment on private diplomatic communications and that the United States enjoys strong relationships with both India and Pakistan.

“These relationships stand on their own merits, and we do not compare our bilateral relationships with one another,” the US official said.

LUNCH AT THE WHITE HOUSE

The US seems to have taken a different tack on Pakistan after a brief conflict broke out between the nuclear-armed rivals in May when India launched strikes on what it called terrorist targets across the border in response to a deadly attack on tourists from the majority Hindu community in Indian Kashmir the previous month.

After four days of aerial dogfights, missile and drone attacks, the two sides agreed to a ceasefire. Hindu-majority India and Islamic Pakistan have skirmished regularly and fought three full-scale wars since independence in 1947, two of them over the disputed Kashmir region.

A few weeks after the May fighting, Trump hosted Munir for lunch at the White House, a major boost in ties with the country, which had largely languished under Trump’s first term and Joe Biden.

It was the first time a US president had hosted the head of Pakistan’s army, considered the most powerful man in the country, at the White House unaccompanied by senior Pakistani civilian officials.

Indian leaders have said Munir’s view of India and Pakistan is steeped in religion. 

“Tourists were murdered in front of their families after ascertaining their faith,” Indian foreign minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar said in May, referring to the Kashmir attack.
“To understand that, you’ve got to also see...you have a Pakistani leadership, especially their army chief, who is driven by an extreme religious outlook.”

Pakistan says it is Modi who is driven by religious extremism, and that his brand of Hindu nationalism has trampled on the rights of India’s large Muslim minority.

Modi and the Indian government say they do not discriminate against minorities.

Munir’s meeting in the White House added to India’s chagrin over Trump’s repeated insistence that he averted nuclear war between the two nations by threatening to stop trade negotiations with them.

The comment drew a sharp response from Modi, who told Trump that the ceasefire was achieved through talks between army commanders of the two nations, and not US mediation.

In the days following his June 18 meeting with Munir, people from Modi’s office and India’s national security adviser’s office made separate calls to their US counterparts to register a protest, two of the officials said.

The protest has not been previously reported.

“We have communicated to the US our position on cross-border terrorism, which is a red line for us,” said a senior Indian official. “These are difficult times ... Trump’s inability to understand our concerns does create some wrinkle in ties,” he added, seeking anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter.

Trump and Munir discussed continuation of a counter-terrorism collaboration, under which the US has previously provided weapons to Pakistan, a non-NATO US ally, and talked about ways to further strengthen ties, a Pakistani readout of the meeting said.

That raised concern in New Delhi that any arms Pakistan receives from the US could be turned on India if the neighbors end up in conflict again, two of the officials said.

HARDER STANCE

Despite what used to be public displays of bonhomie between Trump and Modi, India has been taking a slightly harder stance against the US in recent weeks, while trade discussions have also slowed, the Indian officials and an Indian industry lobbyist said.

Modi declined an invitation from Trump to visit Washington after the G7 meeting in Canada in June.

Earlier this month, New Delhi proposed retaliatory duties against the US at the World Trade Organization, showing trade talks were not going as smoothly as they were before the India-Pakistan clashes.

India, like other nations, is trying to figure out a way to deal with Trump and is recalibrating ties with China as a hedge, said Harsh Pant, foreign policy head at India’s Observer Research Foundation think tank.

“Certainly there is an outreach to China,” he said. “And I think it is mutual...China is also reaching out.”

Last week, India’s Jaishankar made his first visit to Beijing since a deadly 2020 border clash between Indian and Chinese troops.

India is also making moves to ease restrictions on investments from China that were imposed following the 2020 clash.

The thaw comes despite India’s prickly relations with China and Beijing’s close ties and military support to Pakistan.

But New Delhi’s concern about Trump’s own engagement with China, which has ranged
from conciliatory to confrontational, appears to have contributed to its shift in stance on Beijing.

“With an unpredictable dealmaker in the White House, New Delhi cannot rule out Sino-US rapprochement,” said Christopher Clary, an associate professor of political science at the University at Albany, New York.

“India is troubled by Chinese help to Pakistan and growing Chinese influence elsewhere in India’s near abroad, such as Bangladesh. Yet New Delhi has largely concluded that it should respond to creeping Chinese influence by focusing its pressures on its nearest neighbors and not on China.”
 


Pakistan condoles passing of ֱ’s Prince Alwaleed bin Khalid

Pakistan condoles passing of ֱ’s Prince Alwaleed bin Khalid
Updated 21 July 2025

Pakistan condoles passing of ֱ’s Prince Alwaleed bin Khalid

Pakistan condoles passing of ֱ’s Prince Alwaleed bin Khalid
  • Prince Alwaleed passed away after spending over two decades in a coma on July 19
  • His courageous struggle drew admiration from many across world, says Shehbaz Sharif

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif expressed his condolences at the recent passing of ֱ’s Prince Alwaleed bin Khalid bin Talal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud on Monday, noting that his “courageous” struggle drew admiration and prayers from across the world. 

Prince Alwaleed passed away on July 19 after spending more than two decades in a coma following a traumatic car accident.

As per media reports, the Saudi prince received urgent medical care from specialized American and Spanish physicians but never regained full consciousness.

“Deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Prince Alwaleed bin Khalid bin Talal,” Sharif wrote on the social media platform X. 

“His long and courageous struggle drew admiration and prayers from many across the world.”

The Pakistani premier offered condolences to ֱ’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi royal family and the people of ֱ on the prince’s passing. 

“May Allah grant him exalted ranks in Jannah,” Sharif concluded. 

Prince Alwaleed’s funeral prayers were held at the Imam Turki bin Abdullah Mosque in Riyadh on July 20, as per the Saudi Press Agency. 


Pakistan deputy PM in New York for UN conference on Palestine, multilateral meetings

Pakistan deputy PM in New York for UN conference on Palestine, multilateral meetings
Updated 21 July 2025

Pakistan deputy PM in New York for UN conference on Palestine, multilateral meetings

Pakistan deputy PM in New York for UN conference on Palestine, multilateral meetings
  • Ishaq Dar will hold bilateral and multilateral meetings in New York, Washington from July 21-28
  • International conference is being organized, co-chaired by ֱ and France in New York 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar arrived in New York on Monday to attend a United Nations conference to discuss Palestinian statehood and hold multilateral meetings in the city, the foreign office said. 

The High-Level International Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State Solution is being co-chaired and organized by ֱ and France. 

The event, convened by the UN General Assembly, will take place at the UN headquarters in New York on July 28. The aim is the urgent adoption of concrete measures that will lead to the implementation of a two-state solution and end decades of conflict in the Middle East.

“Deputy Prime Minister/Foreign Minister, Senator Mohammad Ishaq Dar @MIshaqDar50, arrived in New York for an official visit from 21 to 28 July 2025,” the Pakistani foreign office said. 

The statement said Dar would lead “high-level signature events” under Pakistan’s presidency of the UN Security Council and hold bilateral and multilateral meetings in New York and Washington during his stay.

“And represent Pakistan at the International Conference on the Two-State Solution, co-hosted by ֱ & France,” the foreign office added. 

Pakistan has consistently supported Palestinian statehood and called for an end to Israeli occupation in various multilateral forums.

Israel has killed nearly 59,000 Palestinians since October 2023 in Gaza, triggering anger and outrage from countries around the world who have called for an immediate ceasefire in the Middle East. 

Islamabad has demanded an immediate ceasefire in the Middle East and for Israel to allow access to food and humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza. 
 


Pakistan arrests 11 after Balochistan ‘honor killing’ video sparks outrage

Pakistan arrests 11 after Balochistan ‘honor killing’ video sparks outrage
Updated 21 July 2025

Pakistan arrests 11 after Balochistan ‘honor killing’ video sparks outrage

Pakistan arrests 11 after Balochistan ‘honor killing’ video sparks outrage
  • Viral video clip shows couple being shot at by armed men for marrying of their choice
  • Balochistan chief minister says operation ongoing, vows all those involved will be arrested

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani authorities have arrested 11 suspects for their involvement in the recent “honor killing” of a couple in the southwestern Balochistan province, Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti said on Monday after a disturbing video of the incident went viral online last week.

The provincial government sprang into action on Sunday after a video clip, which shows a couple in Balochistan being shot at by armed men for marrying of their choice, sparked nationwide outrage and calls for bringing the perpetrators to justice. 

Bugti had taken to social media on Sunday to announce that one person had been arrested in connection with the incident. Speaking at a press conference in Karachi, Balochistan government spokesman Shahid Rind had said the incident captured in the viral video had taken place in Balochistan around Eid Al-Adha. 

“Update: So far, 11 suspects have been arrested and the operation is ongoing,” the Balochistan chief minister wrote on X.

“All those involved will be brought to justice. The state stands with the oppressed.”

So-called honor killings are common in Pakistan, where family members and relatives sometimes kill women and men who don’t follow local traditions and culture or decide to marry of their own choice.

Rind had said on Sunday that families of both victims had not reported the incident, vowing that the government would register a case over the incident with the state as a complainant.

The couple had been executed on the orders of a jirga, a council of tribal elders, according to reports. Rind said authorities had taken the suspects’ data after their identification through the viral video clip.

The incident also prompted condemnation from the Pakistan Ulema Council (PUC), a group of clerics and religious scholars, who said the killing of a woman or a man in the name of honor is “un-Islamic, anti-Sharia and terrorism.”

The PUC said “terrorism” cases should be filed against people involved in such incidents.

“Pakistan Ulema Council demands of Chief Minister Balochistan, Governor Balochistan and IGP Balochistan to arrest the culprits who killed a woman under ‘honor killing’ as depicted in a viral video on social media,” the council said in a statement on Sunday.