Misbah tests positive in Jamaica, begins 10-day quarantine

Pakistan cricket team's coach Misbah-ul-Haq walk off the field after play was suspended during day 3 of the 2nd Test between West Indies and Pakistan at Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica, on August 22, 2021. (AFP/File)
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Updated 25 August 2021
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Misbah tests positive in Jamaica, begins 10-day quarantine

  • Cricket West Indies said Misbah will have a medical specialist assigned to look after his health and wellbeing
  • All other members of Pakistan squad will leave Jamaica on Wednesday

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan cricket team head coach Misbah-ul-Haq tested positive for COVID-19 in Jamaica and won't join his squad on their flight home Wednesday as he begins a 10-day quarantine.
“Misbah was the only Pakistan squad member who failed two pre-departure PCR tests,” the Pakistan Cricket Board said.
All other members of the squad will leave Wednesday.
The PCB said it was in contact with Cricket West Indies and that it confirmed he “will be shifted to another hotel for a 10-day quarantine with a medical specialist assigned to look after his health and wellbeing.”
Pakistan won the rain-hit Twenty20 series 1-0 and drew the test series 1-1.


Pakistan planning minister to attend Bangladesh PM oath-taking ceremony tomorrow 

Updated 11 min 55 sec ago
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Pakistan planning minister to attend Bangladesh PM oath-taking ceremony tomorrow 

  • New members of Bangladesh’s federal cabinet will be sworn in on Tuesday in Dhaka
  • Pakistan, Bangladesh have moved closer amid recent thaw in relations between the two

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal will attend the swearing-in ceremony of the new Bangladesh government this week, foreign office spokesperson Tahir Andrabi confirmed on Monday. 

Tarique Rahman’s Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) won a landslide victory in the elections on Thursday, the first since a deadly 2024 uprising ousted the iron-fisted rule of former premier Sheikh Hasina. The BNP won at least 209 seats out of the 299 contested, according to results released by Bangladesh’s Election Commission on Friday, paving the way for Rahman to become the country’s next prime minister.

According to Rahman’s office, the swearing-in ceremony will take place at the South Plaza of the National Parliament Building in Dhaka at 4:00pm on Tuesday. Bangladesh President Mohammed Shahabuddin is expected to administer oath to members of the new cabinet. The prime minister of Bhutan, Tshering Tobgay and Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla from India will attend the event along with other foreign dignitaries.

“Yes, Ahsan Iqbal will represent Pakistan there,” Andrabi told Arab News when asked whether the planning minister will attend the ceremony. 

Iqbal will represent Pakistan as Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif is in Austria on an official visit, the first by a Pakistani prime minister in 30 years to the country, to review bilateral trade, investment and economic ties. 

Pakistan and Bangladesh have improved bilateral ties amid a recent thaw in relations. Pakistan and Bangladesh were part of the same country until Bangladesh’s secession following a bloody civil war in 1971, an event that long cast a shadow over bilateral ties.

Both countries have moved closer since August 2024, following the ouster of Hasina who was considered an India ally. While Pakistan-Bangladesh ties warm up, relations between Dhaka and New Delhi remain strained over India’s decision to grant asylum to Hasina.

The success of BNP chief Rahman, 60, marks a remarkable turnaround for a man who only returned to Bangladesh in December 2025 after 17 years in exile in Britain, far from Dhaka’s political storms.

Rahman is the son of former prime minister Khaleda Zia and former president Ziaur Rahman. He returned to Bangladesh late last year after nearly two decades of self-imposed exile in the UK, and assumed BNP’s leadership days later, following his mother’s death from a prolonged illness.

In an interview with Arab News last week, the 60-year-old pledged to pursue accountability for the former leadership and meet the political and economic expectations of the youth movement that brought about the change.

Additional input from AFP