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Pakistan skittled for 92 as West Indies wins third ODI by 202 runs for historic 2-1 series win

Pakistan skittled for 92 as West Indies wins third ODI by 202 runs for historic 2-1 series win
West Indies team celebrate with the trophy after winning the third and final One Day International (ODI) cricket match between West Indies and Pakistan at Brian Lara Cricket Academy in Tarouba, San Fernando, Trinidad and Tobago on August 12, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 13 August 2025

Pakistan skittled for 92 as West Indies wins third ODI by 202 runs for historic 2-1 series win

Pakistan skittled for 92 as West Indies wins third ODI by 202 runs for historic 2-1 series win
  • It was the first bilateral ODI series won by West Indies against Pakistan since 1991
  • Game ended run of home series defeats across test and T20 formats to Australia and Pakistan

TAROUBA, Trinidad and Tobago: Shai Hope helped deliver some long overdue good news for the West Indies with a century to inspire the Caribbean cricketers to a series-clinching, 202-run win Tuesday over Pakistan.

It was the first bilateral ODI series won by West Indies against Pakistan since 1991 and ended a run of home series defeats across the test and Twenty20 formats to Australia and Pakistan.

Hope stroked an unbeaten 120 before pace bowler Jayden Seales destroyed Pakistan’s chase with six wickets in the third and final one-day cricket international.

The West Indies captain said he was extremely proud of his team.

Hope added there’d been a lot of stress on negatives in the game but now there was “positives to shout about” for West Indies cricket.

The big win came in the wake of a two-day emergency summit for Caribbean cricket. Hope attended part of the summit, along with greats including Brian Lara and Clive Lloyd, to help create strategies to lift West Indies back toward the top of the international game.

The summit was called after a West Indian lineup scored just 27 runs in its second innings – one run short of the all-time test record for low totals — while losing the third of three tests to Australia.

After losing eight straight matches to Australia and then losing a Twenty20 series 2-1 to Pakistan in Florida, West Indies lost the ODI series-opener to Pakistan last week by five wickets.

West Indies leveled the series with a five-wicket victory in the second ODI to stoke hope of a revival and dominated the third.
Pakistan was dismissed for 92 in 29.2 overs Tuesday after West Indies posted 294-6 at Brian Lara Stadium in Tarouba, Trinidad and Tobago.

Hope hit five sixes and 10 fours in his 94-ball knock, sharing an unbroken seventh-wicket stand with Justin Greaves of 110 runs in around eight overs.

Greaves was 43 not out in only 24 deliveries, including two sixes and four fours.

Pakistan collapsed early in its chase to 23-4 in the ninth over, with three ducks from its top four batters. Opener Saim Ayub was caught behind on the third ball of the innings, Abdullah Shafique also failed to score, and Pakistan was 8-3 when captain Mohammad Rizwan was bowled by Seales for a golden duck in the third over.

Seales took his fourth wicket by trapping Babar Azam (9) lbw. Seales finished with figures of 6-18 from 7.2 overs.

Hasan Nawaz (13) advanced and was stumped against the bowling of Gudakesh Motie and Roston Chase bowled Hussain Talat (1), leaving Pakistan on 62-6 in the 21st over. Salman Agha top-scored for Pakistan with a 49-ball 30.

The match and series ended with another golden duck when Abrar Ahmed was run out by Chase.


Pakistan to table 27th constitutional amendment in Senate today, law minister says

Pakistan to table 27th constitutional amendment in Senate today, law minister says
Updated 10 sec ago

Pakistan to table 27th constitutional amendment in Senate today, law minister says

Pakistan to table 27th constitutional amendment in Senate today, law minister says
  • A key coalition partner earlier voiced support for three clauses, including one relating to structure of military command
  • The 27th amendment follows 26th amendment, passed in Oct. 2024, which gave parliament role in appointing top judge

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani government will present the proposed 27th constitutional amendment in the Senate today, Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar said on Saturday.

Tarar told reporters in Islamabad a meeting of the federal cabinet, presided over by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif through a video link from Baku, discussed key changes under the proposed 27th constitutional amendment.

According to political leaders, the amendment proposes creating a new constitutional court, restoring executive magistrates, revising the distribution of federal revenue among provinces under the National Finance Commission (NFC) and making changes to how senior judges and military leadership appointments are structured within the constitution.

The government had been holding consultations with parties in the governing alliance, including the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) and the Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q), in a bid to secure the two-thirds parliamentary majority required for constitutional changes.

“The things which have been agreed on, after consultations... there has been a consensus over the establishment of a constitutional court,” Tarar said.

“Now the proposal for a separate federal constitution court will be referred to parliament in the form of a bill, and as I said, parliament will decide on it after a debate.”

It has been proposed in the bill that the transfer of judges be handled by the Judicial Commission of Pakistan and provincial cabinet threshold of 11 percent be increased to 13 percent for smaller province like Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, according to the law minister.

Speaking about Article 243, which concerns the structure of the armed forces’ command, Tarar said the recent Pakistan-India war had taught a lot of lessons, including the fact that the contours of war have changed.

“So regarding this, appointments and their processes, which were in the Army Act but could not be discussed at the time of the 1973 Constitution, one of which is the role of the field marshal... it has been deemed necessary to discuss this,” he said.

“It has been suggested that the titles you give to national heroes, this is also a ceremonial title alongside being a rank, so it has been suggested that this should remain with them for lifetime... As far as their command is concerned, it will continue to be regulated as per the law.”

Tarar’s statement came hours after the PPP, a key coalition partner, said it supported amending Article 243, establishing a constitutional court and managing judges’ transfers.

While the draft of the 27th amendment is yet to be tabled in parliament, its most contentious element involves potential revisions to the National Finance Commission (NFC), which determines how federal tax revenue is shared among provinces.

The PPP, which spearheaded the 18th amendment in 2010 to expand provincial autonomy, has consistently opposed any measures that would dilute the financial or administrative powers of the federating units.

“NFC allocations can increase for provinces but cannot be reduced,” PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari said at a news conference late Friday, stressing that the constitutional protection of provincial financial rights “cannot be compromised.”

The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), the main opposition party led by former PM Imran Khan, has vowed to oppose the 27th amendment and demanded full disclosure of the draft before it reaches parliament.

In Pakistan, constitutional amendments have historically been used to reshape the balance of power between the legislature, judiciary and provinces.

The proposed 27th amendment follows the 26th amendment passed in October 2024, which gave parliament a role in appointing the chief justice and created a new panel of senior judges to hear constitutional cases, measures critics said weakened judicial independence.

Pakistan’s constitution, adopted in 1973, has been amended more than two dozen times, often reflecting shifts in authority among civilian governments and the military. Provisions governing the NFC award are among the most politically sensitive because they underpin the country’s federal structure and provincial autonomy.