Charismatic Pakistan undone by their own chaos in crucial World Cup loss to Australia

Pakistan's Mohammad Amir and team mates after losing an ICC World Cup match to Australia at the County Ground, Taunton, Britain on June 12, 2019 (Reuters)
Updated 13 June 2019
Follow

Charismatic Pakistan undone by their own chaos in crucial World Cup loss to Australia

  • Australia win by 41 runs in an exciting clash against Pakistan at Taunton on Wednesday
  • We can never win a match if we make small mistakes, Pakistan captain says ahead of match against India on Sunday

KARACHI: The man stood right near the boundary, alone, as the camera zoomed in on him. From his clothes, it wasn’t immediately clear which side he was supporting.

He wasn’t wearing the signature greens of the Pakistani cricket fan -- just jeans and a flannel shirt and sleeveless windbreaker. But eventually, it wasn’t his outward appearance that gave away his allegiances; it was his stance, and his look of complete dismay: both hands on his hips as he turned away from the camera in the unceasing disappointment of a Pakistani cricket fan wondering why he had, yet again, made the questionable decision of supporting the Pakistani cricket team.

On the first ball of the 37th over of Australia’s innings in their match against Pakistan -- which Australia won by 41 runs on Wednesday evening -- their opener David Warner slashed a wide ball straight to Asif Ali’s hands.

Asif, returning to the team after the tragic death of his infant daughter to cancer, had already dropped one catch earlier in the day. He spilled this one too, and as he did, the camera zoomed in on the fan described above, and one disappointed believer out of millions of disillusioned Pakistani devotees was catapulted out of obscurity to become an instant meme-legend.

The fan didn’t look angry; he wasn’t cursing, or being boisterous. He wasn’t waving his arms, stamping his feet or shaking his head -- the usual gesticulations of panicked fans of the Pakistan team. He just stood there silently, his lips pursed, his gaze fixed, and his soul broken as he turned away from the camera.

That utter disappointment, in that made-for-TV-and-internet moment, wasn’t reserved for his favoured team alone. His disillusionment, a rude awakening, was very personal. Because even though Pakistan Cricket lets you down so consistently, the fans still believe in it. And even when the fans try and have the lowest expectations, such as their team being able to take simple catches in international matches, the squad still finds a way to disenchant them. And inevitably, the fans ask themselves: why do we even bother showing up? Maybe that’s why, perhaps, this fan didn’t look angry -- because he knew that at some level that it was his own fault for continuing to believe in his team.

To be fair to Pakistan superfans, few other teams that lose so regularly do so while looking like they might win each of the lost matches. During Wednesday’s engrossing encounter at Taunton, there were several times when Pakistan looked like they had the upper hand, only to throw it away almost immediately -- and doing so without any inspiration from their opponents, but of their own remarkable ability to self-implode.

Indeed, once again, the Pakistan team’s selection belied belief. Shadab Khan, a consistent threat both on the field and with the ball, was dropped for newcomer Shaheen Afridi in a four-pronged pace attack. Pakistan also continued to go without all-rounder Imad Wasim and instead retained veteran Shoaib Malik who yet again fell for a cheap score in what has been a wretched run of form.

The greenness of the pitch and overcast skies suggested that going without both these spinners would have been acceptable, but either the pitch didn’t offer much or Pakistan just bowled poorly.

Australia’s Warner, who had been struggling for fluency earlier in the tournament, scored his first international century since serving a year-long ban for his part in a ball-tampering scandal. From a man who struggled in Sunday's defeat by India, he made his way to 107.

Prior to Wednesday’s game, Australian captain Aaron Finch had defend Warner’s selection, arguing that “every evidence suggests he'll be back to his dangerous best. And when you give good players an opportunity, [there] might be just a little mindset change.”

The Pakistani bowlers provided just that mindset change as the beleaguered opener played his most fluent innings of the World Cup. But just when Australia looked poised to post a huge total, Pakistan’s bowling pulled off a remarkable comeback, somehow conceding under run-a-ball in the final fifteen overs while picking up eight wickets to bowl Australia out.

A target of 308 felt like a completely gettable one. Just last Monday, Pakistan had beat England, the World Cup favourites, in a crucial encounter at Trent Bridge in Nottingham. But then on Wednesday, Pakistan immediately made life difficult for itself when opener Fakhar Zaman got out for a duck. Babar Azam, their most important batter on the Pakistani side, played perhaps the most delightful innings of 30 you would see, before getting out as well. Pakistan had dug themselves into a hole already, but Imam-ul-Haq and Mohammad Hafeez had other ideas. Batting sedately yet almost always in control, the two wrested the team back to a position of hope.

And hope is perhaps the most seductive option for Pakistan cricket. In the space of half an hour, Pakistan lost four wickets to lapses in concentration rather than good bowling.

The two set batters, Imam and Hafeez, fell to particularly poor deliveries, while Malik continued his wretched run with the bat. With under half the target still left to chase, this should have been the match. But of course, the Pakistan cricket fan had one more spell of exquisite torture to undergo.

First Hasan Ali and then Wahab Riaz -- two bowlers who aren’t meant to lead batting chases -- both played sparkling cameos, slapping the ball around the park and picking up boundaries for fun. But just when Pakistan were close enough for it to get exciting, they lost their last three wickets for two runs. That intoxicating hope had immediately brought about its own hangover.

“I’m very disappointed. We lost three wickets in 15 balls [in the middle order] and that’s why we lost the match,” Pakistani skipper Sarfaraz Ahmed said. “We conceded too many runs at the start of the innings … the other bowlers did not bowl well with the new ball.”

Speaking on the upcoming match against India, he added that “India as you know is a strong team and we can never get a chance to win a match if we make small  mistakes. We are playing well, but unfortunately we are making small mistakes because of which we are losing matches.”

In a previous article, I described Australia as bullies and this was yet another bullying performance from a team that performs much worse than its results, reputation, and attitude indicate.

Much like against Afghanistan and West Indies, Australia never truly dominated Wednesday’s game against Pakistan. The clincher was that like so many times before, their opponents seemed to lose their nerve against the idea of Australia the bullies rather than the effort and skills of its players. This was perhaps why India, the only strong side the defending champs have faced so far, was able to beat them so convincingly on June 9. But such observations don’t matter to the points table, where Australia are now second.

For Pakistan, they now have to go face arch-rivals India in an encounter that their team has never won in a World Cup. With all the media hype and historical context, their fans will still go in with some semblance of hope. But at some point on Sunday, they might find themselves standing hands on hips, that same disappointed, desolate look on their faces that the lone fan on Wednesday wore when Asif Ali dropped a catch Warner threw straight into his hands.


Pakistan launches operation in Kurram district, sets up camps for displaced families

Updated 19 January 2025
Follow

Pakistan launches operation in Kurram district, sets up camps for displaced families

  • Tribal and sectarian clashes since Nov. 21 have killed at least 136 people in Kurram and caused medicine, food and fuel shortages
  • A senior police official says military will lead the operation in Kurram’s Bagan area, with police providing ‘second-tier support’

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani security forces have launched an operation to clear the northwestern Pakistani district of Kurram of militants, a senior police official said on Sunday, following months of unrest in the region.
Kurram, a district of around 600,000 people in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, has been rocked by tribal and sectarian clashes since November 21, when armed men attacked a convoy of Shia passengers, killing 52 people.
The attack sparked further violence and blockade of a main road connecting Kurram’s main town of Parachinar with the provincial capital of Peshawar, causing medicine, food and fuel shortages in the area, as casualties surged to 136.
The operation in Lower Kurram comes after the KP government announced the establishment of camps for temporarily displaced persons (TDPs), following an ambush on a supply convoy that killed 10 people on Thursday.
“The operation has commenced in Lower Kurram’s Bagan area and the sanitization process to clear the area is underway,” Abbas Majeed Marwat, the Kohat regional police officer (RPO), told Arab News.
“The military will lead the operation, with the police providing second-tier support through the Elite Force, regular police, and other security forces.”
Asked about the scale of the operation, Marwat said it was targeted at specific areas where militants were using hideouts to sabotage peace efforts.
“The operation will focus on certain pockets, particularly in Bagan and its adjacent areas,” he said.
Thursday’s ambush targeted a convoy of 33 vehicles set to resupply local traders in the region with rice, flour and cooking oil and two aid vehicles carrying essential medicine. It followed a similar attack on a supply convoy this month that injured five people, including a top administration official in the region.
The violence has continued despite a peace agreement signed between the warring tribes on Jan. 1. Under the peace agreement, both sides had agreed on the demolition of bunkers and the handover of heavy weapons to authorities within two weeks.
RPO Marwat said the operation aimed to target elements “embedded within the local community who were acting as spoilers.” He said authorities had completed arrangements for TDPs, while some families had already left the most affected areas to stay with their relatives elsewhere.
“The commissioner of Kohat and I visited the proposed sites for TDP camps in Hangu to inspect the administrative and security arrangements,” he told Arab News on Sunday.
“As of yesterday, more than 20 families had relocated [from Bagan] and more are leaving because the situation here remains critical.”
Separately on Sunday, the KP government announced action against militants in violence-hit areas of Kurram, following a high-level huddle in Peshawar.
“Action against few miscreants in the affected areas has become unavoidable and a decision has been made to take strict and indiscriminate action against miscreants,” said a statement issued from the office of KP government spokesperson Mohammad Ali Saif.
For the past three months, the statement said, the KP government had been working hard to restore peace and stability in Kurram, and a peace agreement was reached through a grand jirga in line with Pashtun traditions.
“A few miscreants in Kurram have attempted to sabotage the peace agreement,” it said, adding that the militants attempted to assassinate Kurram Deputy Commissioner Javedullah Mehsud, leaving him seriously injured, and were also targeting security personnel and supply convoys.
The statement said the government feared that the “miscreants” had infiltrated peaceful communities, and to protect peaceful citizens, they would be separated.
“Alternative housing arrangements have been made for the affected population,” it added.
Feuding tribes have battled with machine guns and heavy weapons in Kurram, cutting off the remote and mountainous region bordering Afghanistan from the outside world.
Provincial authorities have been supplying relief goods and transporting ailing and injured people from Kurram to Peshawar via helicopters since late last month.


Pakistan commerce minister arrives in Cambodia to hold bilateral trade talks

Updated 19 January 2025
Follow

Pakistan commerce minister arrives in Cambodia to hold bilateral trade talks

  • The development comes amid Pakistan’s push to revive its $350 billion economy since avoiding a default in June 2023
  • Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan will attend the inaugural Joint Trade Committee and Ministerial Meeting in Phnom Penh

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan on Sunday arrived in Cambodia on a three-day official visit to hold bilateral trade talks, his ministry said, amid Pakistan’s push for trade and investment.
The commerce minister will participate in the inaugural Joint Trade Committee and Ministerial Meeting in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh, according to the Pakistani commerce ministry.
Upon arrival, Khan was received by Pakistan’s Ambassador to Cambodia Zaheer Uddin Baber Thaheem and Tith Rithipol, undersecretary of state from the Cambodian ministry of commerce.
“The visit aims to strengthen bilateral trade ties, explore new economic opportunities, and enhance cooperation between the two nations,” the Pakistani commerce ministry said in a statement.
“The meetings are expected to cover a range of topics, including trade facilitation, investment prospects, and market access.”
The development comes amid Pakistan’s efforts to revive its $350 billion economy since avoiding a default in June 2023. The South Asian country last year secured a new $7 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and has been actively pursuing trade and investment opportunities to put the economy on the path of recovery.
The Pakistani commerce ministry said Khan’s visit marked a “significant step” toward deepening economic engagement between Pakistan and Cambodia.
“Further discussions and agreements are anticipated during the visit,” it added.


Minister calls for strict measures to curb carbon emissions to deal with Pakistan smog crisis

Updated 19 January 2025
Follow

Minister calls for strict measures to curb carbon emissions to deal with Pakistan smog crisis

  • Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province experiences smog each year, with the provincial capital of Lahore ranking second among world’s most polluted cities on Sunday
  • Officials say smog is a byproduct of large numbers of vehicles, construction and industrial work as well as burning of crop residue at the start of winter season

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar on Sunday called for the enforcement of stringent policy measures to mitigate heat-trapping carbon emissions from vehicles in order to tackle the issue of smog, Pakistani state media reported.
Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province experiences dense smog each year, with the provincial capital of Lahore ranking second among the world’s most polluted cities on Sunday, according to Swiss air monitor IQAir.
Late last year, the province closed down schools and offices, banned outdoor activities and shortened timings for restaurants, shops and markets in a bid to contain the crisis.
The dangerous smog is a byproduct of large numbers of vehicles, construction and industrial work as well as burning of crop residue at the start of the winter wheat-planting season.
“Smog has emerged as a serious environmental and public health concern,” Tarar said as reported by Radio Pakistan, stressing the need to ensure conformity with Euro-5 or higher-grade fuels to improve the air quality and mitigate heat-trapping carbon emissions.
The comments came at a meeting of a committee to implement the National Climate Change Policy, aimed at steering Pakistan toward climate resilience and low carbon development.
Officials informed the participants that efforts had already been ramped up to transition the South Asian country to renewable energy sources, with significant investments in solar, wind, and hydropower projects.
“The government’s plan to achieve a 30 percent share of renewables in the energy mix by 2030 is well on track and all-out efforts are being made to promote Electric Vehicles to reduce the environmental impact of transportation,” they were quoted as saying.
Pakistan is among countries deemed most vulnerable to extreme weather caused by climate change, despite contributing less than 1 percent to global carbon emissions, according to officials. 
In 2022, devastating floods, blamed on human-driven climate change, killed more than 1,700 Pakistanis, affected another 33 million and caused the country over $30 billion in economic losses.


Top Bangladeshi commander meets Pakistan Navy officials, discusses regional maritime security

Updated 19 January 2025
Follow

Top Bangladeshi commander meets Pakistan Navy officials, discusses regional maritime security

  • The development comes amid a thaw in relations between both nations since PM Sheikh Hasina’s ouster in August
  • The two sides discussed joint military exercises, reciprocal visits and training exchange programs, Pakistan Navy says

ISLAMABAD: Lt. Gen. SM Kamr-ul-Hassan, principal staff officer (PSO) of the Bangladesh armed forces division, on Sunday met senior Pakistan Navy officials and discussed with them regional maritime security cooperation, Pakistan Navy said.
Lt. Gen. Hassan toured Pakistan Navy ships and units during his visit to the southern Pakistani port city of Karachi, according to the Directorate General Public Relations (DGPR) of Pakistan Navy.
He met Pakistan Fleet Commander Rear Admiral Abdul Munib, Coast Commander Rear Admiral Faisal Amin and Managing Director of Karachi Shipyard & Engineering Works (KS&EW) Rear Admiral Salman Ilyas.
“During these engagements, discussions focused on professional matters of mutual interests, including regional maritime security and bilateral defense collaboration,” the DGPR said in a statement.
“Various potential areas of cooperation were highlighted, such as joint military exercises, reciprocal visits, and training exchange programs between the two countries.”
Pakistan and Bangladesh were once one nation, but they split in 1971 as a result of a bloody civil war, which saw the part previously referred to as East Pakistan seceding to form the independent nation of Bangladesh.
In the years since, Bangladeshi leaders, particularly former prime minister Sheikh Hasina, chose to maintain close ties with India. Relations between Pakistan and Bangladesh have warmed up since Hasina’s ouster as a result of a student-led uprising in August, witnessing a marked improvement.
“The visit of Lt. Gen. SM Kamrul Hassan is expected to further strengthen defense ties between the two brotherly nations, enhancing cooperation and solidifying the bonds between the armed forces of Pakistan and Bangladesh,” Pakistan Navy said.
Lt. Gen. Hassan, who is currently on a visit to Pakistan, this week met Chief of Army Staff (COAS) General Asim Munir in Rawalpindi, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the Pakistani military’s media wing. During the meeting, both military commanders stressed the need for an enduring partnership between the two countries to remain “resilient against external influences.”
Earlier in the day, the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) said it would send two trade delegations to Bangladesh on Jan. 19-20 to increase bilateral relations and economic collaboration as both countries move to repair strained ties.
“The first delegation of dates comprising 13 exporters will leave for a week-long visit on Jan. 19 while the second delegation of citrus will leave for a business-to-business (B2B) meeting on Jan. 20,” the TDAP said.
The delegations will explore more trade opportunities, promote business partnerships and Pakistan’s export potential in the Bangladeshi market, it added.
The development comes days after the signing of a landmark agreement between Pakistan and Bangladeshi businesspersons to establish a joint business council between the two countries.
Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar is also scheduled to visit Dhaka at the start of February to further consolidate the relations between the two countries.


Pakistan to launch yuan-denominated Panda bonds by June, finance minister says

Updated 19 January 2025
Follow

Pakistan to launch yuan-denominated Panda bonds by June, finance minister says

  • The South Asian country intends to raise approximately $200 million from Chinese investors through Panda bonds
  • Muhammad Aurangzeb says the move is part of a strategy to achieve sustainability in Pakistan’s balance of payments

ISLAMABAD: Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb has said that Pakistan plans to launch yuan-denominated Panda bonds in June to enhance its presence in Chinese capital markets, Pakistani state media reported on Sunday.
The development follows an upgrade in Pakistan’s sovereign rating by all three major credit agencies. The country aims to get into the “single-B” category that would allow it to return to global bond markets to raise funds.
Aurangzeb said the South Asian country intends to raise approximately $200 million from Chinese investors through the issuance of the Panda bonds, the Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported.
“This step is part of a broader strategy to transition Pakistan’s economy toward export-driven growth, with a focus on achieving sustainability in the country’s balance of payments,” he was quoted as telling Hong Kong’s TVB news channel.
The South Asian country is navigating a challenging economic recovery path and has been buttressed by a $7 billion facility from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in September. The government is optimistic it will meet the terms of the program.
Pakistan is being advised on the issuance of Panda bonds by the China International Capital Corporation, a partially state-owned financial services company, according to the finance minister. However, the latest figure is lower than the $300 million targeted by Pakistan last year.
Aurangzeb extended an invitation to Hong Kong to send delegations to explore trade and financial opportunities in Pakistan, according to the Radio Pakistan report.
“Hong Kong could serve as a strategic hub for joint ventures between Chinese and Pakistani companies,” he said.
To revive its $350 billion economy, Pakistan has been making efforts to position itself as a regional trade and transit hub by leveraging its strategic geopolitical position.
The South Asian country has witnessed a flurry of visits, investment talks and economic activity involving officials from Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, China and Central Asian nations in recent months.