Karachi in final after Super Over win as PSL restarts

Karachi Kings' players jubilant during their semifinal match against Multan Sultans on Nov. 14, 2020, after the resumption of Pakistan Super League after an eight-month break due to the coronavirus pandemic. (Photo courtesy: PSL)
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Updated 14 November 2020
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Karachi in final after Super Over win as PSL restarts

  • Karachi Kings scored 13-2 in the Super Over, with the Multan Sultans falling four runs short
  • The fifth edition of the league started on Feb. 20 but was abandoned after 30 of its 34 matches due to COVID-19

KARACHI: The Karachi Kings reached their maiden final Saturday after outlasting the Multan Sultans in a thrilling tie-breaker finish as Pakistan's Super League resumed eight months after stopping due to the pandemic.

The match at Karachi's National Stadium went into a Super Over after 40 overs ended with both teams tied on 141 — thanks to Kings skipper Imad Wasim hitting a last-minute boundary.

The local team scored 13-2 in the Super Over, with the Sultans falling four runs short.

The Sultans managed a below-par 141-7 in their 20 overs after they were sent in to bat, with former England all-rounder Ravi Bopara scoring a 31-ball 40 spiced with three boundaries and a six.

The Sultans' Sohail Tanvir, a former Pakistan paceman, turned the match on its head in the 17th over as the Karachi Kings were seemingly cruising to victory, needing just 26 runs in the last four overs.

Tanvir dismissed Babar Azam off the third ball and Chadwick Walton for two.

Azam, Pakistan's national captain and one of the world's best white-ball batsmen, smacked a 53-ball 65, hitting two sixes and five boundaries before falling with 25 still needed.

Peshawar Zalmi will face the Lahore Qalandars in the first eliminator later Saturday.

The winner will face the Sultans in the next eliminator Sunday to decide the second finalist.

The final is scheduled for Tuesday, also in Karachi.

The fifth edition of the league started on Feb. 20 but was abandoned after 30 of its 34 matches, after England player Alex Hales reported symptoms of COVID-19.


Pakistan telecom regulator urges restraint on social media amid regional tensions

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Pakistan telecom regulator urges restraint on social media amid regional tensions

  • PTA warns against sharing unverified content, says legal action may follow ‘fake news’
  • Advisory comes as Pakistan strikes targets in Afghanistan and Iran faces US, Israeli attacks

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s telecom regulator on Saturday urged citizens to avoid sharing “unverified or inflammatory” content online, warning that legal action could be taken against those spreading misinformation amid what it described as a “sensitive national situation.”

The advisory from the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) comes as Islamabad says it is targeting militant positions inside Afghanistan following a recent flareup between the two neighbors, while Iran is under attack by the United States and Israel in an escalating regional conflict that has heightened security concerns across South and West Asia.

“In view of the prevailing sensitive national situation, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) urges all citizens to be responsible while using social media and digital platforms,” the regulator said in a statement posted on X.

The PTA advised citizens “not to share, disseminate, forward, or upload any unverified, inflammatory, or misleading information/content that may directly or indirectly harm the national interest, public order, or state institutions.”

It said people should instead rely on authentic information based on official sources and refrain from spreading rumors and “fake news.”

“Sharing any fake news/information is liable to legal action in accordance with applicable laws,” the authority said, calling on citizens to act with “caution, maturity, and a strong sense of national responsibility” to help maintain stability and public confidence.

Pakistan in recent years has witnessed increasingly stringent implementation of the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA), a cybercrime law that has drawn criticism from rights groups, with journalists and activists arrested and prosecuted under its provisions.