Labuschagne immovable as Australia frustrate Pakistan in second Test
Labuschagne immovable as Australia frustrate Pakistan in second Test/node/2431951/pakistan
Labuschagne immovable as Australia frustrate Pakistan in second Test
Pakistan's Mir Hamza (L) appeals for a decision against Australian batsman Marnus Labuschagne (R) on the first day of the second cricket Test match between Australia and Pakistan at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) in Melbourne on December 26, 2023. (AFP)
Labuschagne immovable as Australia frustrate Pakistan in second Test
Australia scored 187 for 3 on the opening day of the match after thumping Pakistan by 360 runs in Perth
Earlier, Pakistan captain Shan Masood won the toss and opted to bowl first on a pitch suited to the seamers
Updated 26 December 2023
AFP
MELBOURNE: A stubborn Marnus Labuschagne weathered a storm to help steer Australia to 187-3 on a rain-disrupted opening day of the second Test in Melbourne Tuesday against a probing and resilient Pakistan attack.
At stumps, he was unbeaten on a glacial 44 off 120 balls and Travis Head was not out on nine after nearly three hours’ play were lost to rain.
Pakistan’s bowlers found plenty of movement in the overcast conditions and were rewarded with the wickets of David Warner (38), Usman Khawaja (42) and Steve Smith (26).
But a patient Labuschagne was immovable as the hosts look to seal the three-Test series after thumping the visitors by 360 runs in Perth.
Pakistan captain Shan Masood won the toss and opted to bowl first on a pitch suited to the seamers.
Spearheaded by Shaheen Shah Afridi, Pakistan bowled a good length and found early swing, with Warner dropped on two by Abdullah Shafique, who put down a regulation catch at second slip.
Warner, who made 164 in the first innings at Perth in his farewell Test series, was also fortunate to get away with an edge that sailed over the slips for a boundary on 17.
His luck ran out with a rash shot off part-time spinner Agha Salman in the final over before lunch, with Babar Azam holding a catch at slip off a thick outside edge.
Warner’s long-time opening partner Khawaja has been embroiled in a dispute with the International Cricket Council over how he can bring attention to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
He was denied a bid to display a sticker showing a black dove holding an olive branch on his bat and instead played with the names of his daughters on his shoes.
The 37-year-old hit a boundary off the second ball he faced and looked destined for a big score before speedster Hasan Ali, back in the team after being overlooked for Perth, drew an edge that Salman took well in the slips to leave Australia on 108-2.
With dark clouds overhead, the lights were turned on mid-afternoon with Labuschagne and Smith in survival mode as the bowlers turned the screws before the rain arrived.
The conditions eventually cleared and play resumed in front of a sparse crowd, with many of the 62,000 fans giving up and going home.
Smith and Labuschagne continued to play defensively, with runs hard to come by.
Labuschagne finally relieved some pressure when Aamer Jamal was brought on, hitting his first boundary in 75 balls, with the grin on his face telling a story.
It was similarly slow going for Smith, who was given out lbw on 19 after a big shout from Afridi, but a review showed the ball going high.
He was less fortunate against Jamal soon after. The umpire ignored an appeal from wicketkeeper Mohammad Rizwan for a catch, but Pakistan reviewed and it showed a faint edge, ending a 147-ball partnership.
KARACHI: Pakistan hopes to receive record $36 billion remittances this fiscal year through June, the finance minister said on Tuesday, as the South Asian nation seeks to boost its foreign exchange reserves in line with the tough conditions of an International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan program.
The lender wants Islamabad to increase its foreign exchange reserves to a level that can finance three months of imports. Presently, the country holds $11 billion reserves, providing two months of import cover.
Remittances are a lifeline for Pakistan’s cash-strapped economy, playing a critical role in stabilizing foreign exchange reserves and supporting balance of payments.
Pakistan recorded year-on-year growth of 38.6 percent in remittances with record inflows of $3.1 billion in February, the central bank said on Monday.
“In this fiscal year [2024-2025], we will again complete it at an all-time high,” Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said in a televised speech. “At this moment, our estimate is that about $36 billion remittances inflow will come into the country.”
In February 2025, according to central bank data, Pakistan received its highest inflows from Saudi Arabia, $744.4 million, followed by the UAE, which contributed $652.2 million. Remittances received from the United Kingdom and the United States stood at $501.8 million and $309.4 million respectively.
“Cumulatively, with an inflow of $24 billion, workers’ remittances increased by 32.5 percent during July to February FY25 compared to $18.1 billion received during July to February FY24,” the central bank said in a statement.
Among factors driving an increase in remittances are reforms that have curbed illegal foreign exchange trading and incentives implemented by the State Bank of Pakistan. Decreased global inflation rates have encouraged Pakistani migrants to send more money back home.
Families in Pakistan are also relying more on financial support from relatives working abroad due to inflation at home.
Pakistan’s consumer inflation rate slowed to a near decade low of 1.5 percent in February, largely due to a high year-ago base. That was below the government’s forecast and significantly lower than a multi-decade high of around 40 percent in May 2023.
The central bank’s policy committee said on Monday it expected inflation to fall further before gradually inching up and stabilizing within the state bank’s 5-7 percent target range.
The state bank kept its forecast of full-year GDP growth at 2.5 percent to 3.5 percent and said it expected economic activity to gain further momentum.
Pakistan’s economy grew by 0.92 percent in the first quarter of the fiscal year 2024-25 which ends in June.
On Monday, the central bank unexpectedly halted its easing cycle, keeping its key policy rate at 12 percent, saying there could still be price risks including from an escalation in global tariffs even though inflation was falling for now.
QUETTA: Separatist militants on Tuesday attacked a passenger train operated daily from Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province to other parts of the country, injuring the driver, a Pakistan Railways official said.
A low-level separatist insurgency in Balochistan is one of the chronic security problems undermining stability in Pakistan. The separatists accuse the government of stripping the province’s natural resources and leaving its people mired in poverty. They say security forces routinely abduct, torture and execute ethnic Baloch, accusations echoed by human rights campaigners. Government officials and security forces strongly deny violating human rights and say they are uplifting the province through development projects, including multi-billion dollar schemes funded by Beijing.
Insurgents in the province also target civilians, especially Pakistanis from other ethnic groups who have settled in Balochistan.
The latest attack on the Quetta-Peshawar bound Jaffar Express occurred in Mushkaaf, an area in the mountainous Bolan range of Balochistan. The Baloch Liberation Army, the most prominent among separatist outfits operating in the province, accepted responsibility in a statement sent to the media.
“A driver of the train was injured after armed men targeted the train with heavy firing,” Muhammad Farrukh, a Pakistani Railway official in Quetta, told Arab News. “We are unable to contact railway staff in the area because mobile service is not working in the area.”
He said there were 400 people onboard the train but could not confirm if they were safe.
The BLA said it had blown up the railway track, forcing the Jaffar Express to come to a halt.
“The fighters swiftly took control of the train, holding all passengers hostage,” the group said, adding that six military troops had been killed. The claims have not yet been confirmed by government officials or the army, which plays an outsized role in the running of the remote province, bordering Afghanistan and Iran.
Separatists have also recently attacked projects being developed as part of the $65-billion China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), part of President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road Initiative. The program is also developing a deep-water port close to the new $200-million airport in Gwadar, a joint venture between Pakistan, Oman and China.
‘Really suffocating’: Pakistan emerges from record smog season
Tens of millions of Pakistanis spent four months breathing toxic air 20 times above safe levels in worst winter smog season in years
This year, winter rains that bring relief did not arrive until February as climate change renders Pakistan’s weather patterns increasingly unpredictable
Updated 48 min 18 sec ago
AFP
LAHORE: Tens of millions of Pakistanis spent at least four months breathing toxic air pollution 20 times above safe levels, in the worst winter smog season for several years, according to data analyzed by AFP.
Pakistan regularly ranks among the world’s most polluted countries, with Lahore often the most polluted megacity between November and February.
AFP’s analysis of data recorded since 2018 by independent air monitoring project AQICN shows the 2024-2025 winter smog season started a month earlier in October and persisted at higher levels, including in cities normally less affected by pollution.
Lahore’s 14 million residents spent six months breathing concentrations of PM2.5 — tiny particles that can penetrate the lungs and bloodstream — at levels 20 times or more than recommended by the World Health Organization.
Those in Karachi, Pakistan’s biggest city, and the capital Islamabad were subjected to 120 days of the same choking pollution levels.
“The smog is just getting worse every year,” admitted a factory owner in Lahore, who wished to remain anonymous after openly criticizing government policies.
“If I was rich, my first decision would be to leave Pakistan for Dubai, to protect my children and raise them in a smog-free environment,” he told AFP.
This photograph taken on February 18, 2025 shows an Anti-Smog Squad (ASS) lab technician preparing to inspect emissions at a factory using a gas analyser in Lahore. (AFP)
Experts say the pollution is primarily caused by factory and traffic emissions. It worsens in winter as farmers burn crop stubble and cooler temperatures and slow-moving winds trap the deadly pollutants.
This year, winter rains that typically bring relief did not arrive until late February, as climate change renders Pakistan’s weather patterns increasingly unpredictable.
The smog was so thick it could be seen from space and prompted authorities to close schools serving millions of students across the largest province Punjab, including its capital Lahore.
Young climate activist Risha Rashid said Islamabad is fast becoming “another Lahore” and has launched legal action against the government.
“It’s really suffocating,” the 21-year-old, who has asthma, told AFP.
“I cannot go out, even if I have exams. It’s not just affecting our physical health but our mental health as well.”
An Ipsos poll in November found four out of five Pakistanis said they were affected by the smog.
It can cause sore throats, stinging eyes and respiratory illnesses, while prolonged exposure can trigger strokes, heart disease and lung cancer.
Its effects are worse for children, who breathe more rapidly and have weaker immune systems.
This smog season, Punjab’s provincial government declared a “war on smog,” increasing public air quality monitoring devices tenfold to around 30 and offering farmers subsidised rentals of machinery to clear crop stubble and avoid burning.
It also pledged to increasingly enforce emissions regulations on tens of thousands of factories and more than 8,000 brick kilns, a major source of black carbon emissions.
But environmentalists and experts say action has been piecemeal and sometimes counterproductive, including restrictions on private air quality monitoring devices that the government claims give “misleading results that spread panic.”
And anti-smog machines, including a tower in Lahore shut down two months after installation, are effectively useless, experts say.
“It is like putting an air conditioner out in the open,” said one who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Efforts that tackle pollution’s effects, rather than its source, miss the point, said Ahmad Ali Gul at Lahore’s University of Management and Technology.
“It’s like when you have a bathtub and it’s overflowing and it’s creating a huge mess, do you first grab a towel or you first close the tap?” he said.
“First, we need to focus on reducing the emissions and then we talk about how to protect ourselves from smog.”
The government has blamed rival India, which borders Punjab province, for pollution blowing over into Lahore.
But Pakistan has limited vehicle emissions standards, and officials admit 83 percent of Lahore’s carbon emissions are from transport.
“Switching to a cleaner fuel would give immediate results, we’ve seen it in other countries,” said Frank Hammes, the global CEO of the Switzerland-based AQI air quality project.
But that “needs a pretty strong central effort to push down sometimes the painful changes that need to be made in order to reduce air pollution,” he added.
Pakistan’s government wants electric vehicles (EVs) to account for a third of new sales by 2030.
Cheaper Chinese models launched in Pakistan in 2024, but currently make up just a fraction of overall car sales in a country where 40 percent of the 240 million population lives in poverty, according to the World Bank.
Pakistan had a taste of clean air during the pandemic, when a lockdown forced vhicles off the streets and factories to close in March 2020, but it was short-lived as the economic impact was too great for many to bear.
“Air quality improved so much that we could even see the stars in Lahore in the evening,” said Omar Masud, a director of Urban Unit, which analyzes pollution data for the government.
While climate change can make air pollution worse, few Pakistanis worry about global warming, explained Abdul Sattar Babar, Ipsos director for Pakistan.
“Most Pakistanis are overwhelmed by the economic challenges that they are facing,” he said.
“When you can barely survive, climate issues are obviously not your primary concern.”
ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday instructed authorities to take stern action against profiteers exploiting Ramadan price hikes, as officials reported 785 people had been arrested in the federal capital since the beginning of the holy month for price manipulation.
Food prices in Pakistan often surge during Ramadan due to increased demand and supply chain inefficiencies. However, a major factor is hoarding and speculative pricing by traders, who artificially inflate market rates to maximize profits.
Last month, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb warned the government would not spare hoarders, whose actions contribute to annual spikes in the cost of essential commodities during the holy month.
“We are committed to providing maximum relief to the public during Ramadan,” Sharif said during the meeting according to a statement released by his office. “Ensure that no profiteer escapes punishment and no innocent person is wrongfully targeted.”
Sharif, while chairing a meeting on Ramadan price controls, praised Islamabad’s administration for its efforts to regulate food prices and directed authorities to intensify monitoring to ensure that relief measures remain effective.
He also instructed federal ministers and public representatives to personally visit Ramadan markets, utility stores and other designated locations to oversee the availability of subsidized essential goods.
Officials briefed the prime minister on measures taken to curb inflation during Ramadan, saying price magistrates were using an online application to monitor and enforce price control regulations.
The also informed the authorities had conducted 4,915 inspections in Islamabad, leading to 785 arrests and fines totaling Rs728,000 ($2,595) against profiteers since the beginning of the holy month.
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday criticized Israel for cutting off Gaza’s power supply and blocking aid to the densely populated area, warning the “repressive measures” would endanger the lives of millions of Palestinians.
Israeli officials confirmed on Sunday that the Jewish state had cut off electricity supply to Gaza, with its move affecting a desalination plant producing drinking water for part of the arid territory. Hamas sharply reacted to the move, calling it part of Israel’s “starvation policy.”
The move came at the back of Israel’s decision to suspend supplies of goods to the territory last week. Israel is pressing Hamas to accept an extension of the first phase of their ceasefire, which ended earlier this month. Israel wants Hamas to release half of the remaining hostages in return for a promise to negotiate a lasting truce.
“We strongly condemn Israel’s latest suspension of humanitarian aid, including food and medicines from entering Palestinian Territories and cutting off power supply that threatens to limit water supplies in the area,” Sharif wrote on social media platform X.
“Such repressive measures during the holy month of Ramadan are highly condemnable as they endanger the lives of millions of innocent Palestinians including women and children.”
We strongly condemn Israel’s latest suspension of humanitarian aid, including food and medicines from entering Palestinian Territories and cutting off power supply that threatens to limit water supplies in the area. Such repressive measures during the holy month of Ramadan are…
The desalination plant affected by Israel’s suspension of power supply was providing 18,000 cubic meters of water per day for central Gaza’s Deir Al-Balah area, according to Gisha, an Israeli organization dedicated to protecting Palestinians’ right to freedom of movement.
Israel’s war on Gaza, which began from Oct. 7, 2023, and lasted till the uneasy ceasefire was brokered in January 2025, caused the deaths of over 48,000 Palestinians during the 15-month period. Pakistan is among several countries who have raised concerns that the recent escalating tensions may lead to resumption of armed hostilities between Hamas and Israel.
Hamas wants to start negotiations on the ceasefire’s more difficult second phase, which would see the release of remaining hostages from Gaza, the withdrawal of Israeli forces and a lasting peace. Hamas is believed to have 24 living hostages and the bodies of 35 others.
Pakistan, which does not have diplomatic relations with Israel, has repeatedly called for the United Nations to ensure implementation of its resolutions affirming the two-state solution in the Middle East. It demands an independent Palestinian state based on pre-1967 borders with Al-Quds Al- Sharif as its capital.