Pakistan's Afridi buys bat after fake bids halt Bangladesh's charity auction

Multan Sultans's Shahid Afridi (L) makes an appeal for a runout against Peshawar Zalmi's Wahab Riaz (R on ground) during the Pakistan Super League (PSL) Twenty20 cricket match between Multan Sultans and Peshawar Zalmi at the Multan Cricket Stadium in Multan on February 26, 2020. (AFP)
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Updated 16 May 2020
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Pakistan's Afridi buys bat after fake bids halt Bangladesh's charity auction

  • Mushfiqur was the second Bangladeshi cricketer to raise coronavirus funds by selling a bat
  • Organizers called off the charity auction for coronavirus victims after fake offers sent the price soaring over $50,000

DHAKA: Former Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi has stepped in to buy a bat owned by Bangladesh's Mushfiqur Rahim after a charity auction for coronavirus victims was derailed by fake bids.
Mushfiqur put the bat he used to score Bangladesh's first Test double hundred in 2013 against Sri Lanka up for the highest bidder online this week.
But organizers called off the auction as fake offers sent the price soaring over $50,000, Mushfiqur said.
"Afridi contacted me personally and I sent him a link of the bid," he said in an online forum Friday.
"On May 13 he sent me a letter and offered $20,000. He bought my bat with this money. I am really privileged," he said.
Mushfiqur's management firm said the money would go to a development charity and to help people with coronavirus.
Afridi, who has his own foundation, said his purchase was a good one.
"We are faced with tough times and the need to help the poor is more in these times," he told AFP.
Mushfiqur was the second Bangladeshi cricketer to raise coronavirus funds by selling a bat. Suspended all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan last month got nearly $24,000 for the one he used in the 2019 World Cup.


OIC states discuss Islamophobia with UN officials, Pakistan envoy stresses solidarity

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OIC states discuss Islamophobia with UN officials, Pakistan envoy stresses solidarity

  • OIC Core Group meets UN General Assembly president to discuss commemorations of International Day to Combat Islamophobia
  • Pakistan top diplomat at UN says the observance symbolizes global unity against anti-Muslim prejudice and discrimination

ISLAMABAD: A group of Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) member states on Tuesday discussed the upcoming commemoration of the International Day to Combat Islamophobia with senior United Nations officials, with Pakistan’s envoy describing the observance as a symbol of global solidarity against prejudice, hostility and discrimination directed at Muslims worldwide.

The International Day to Combat Islamophobia is observed annually on March 15, following its designation by the United Nations General Assembly in 2022, aimed at raising awareness of discrimination and violence targeting Muslims and promoting tolerance and inclusion.

Pakistan’s Permanent Mission to the United Nations said representatives of the OIC Core Group on Islamophobia met Annalena Baerbock, President of the General Assembly, along with the UN Special Envoy on Islamophobia and the High Representative of the UN Alliance of Civilizations.

“The International Day holds immense significance for the OIC and symbolizes global solidarity in combating Islamophobia,” Pakistan’s top diplomat at the UN, Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad, said during the meeting.

The OIC Core Group at the UN is an informal coordination bloc of Muslim countries that works within the United Nations system to align positions, draft statements and lead negotiations on issues of shared concern to OIC member states.

According to the Pakistani mission, the Core Group exchanged views with the General Assembly president on plans to mark the upcoming commemoration and ways to strengthen international engagement around the issue.

Ambassador Iftikhar recalled that the first such observance was held in 2023 under Pakistan’s chairmanship of the OIC Council of Foreign Ministers, followed by commemorations in 2024 and 2025.

He also welcomed the contributions of the UN Special Envoy in advancing international efforts to address anti-Muslim prejudice and promote tolerance.