Pakistan put New Zealand into bat in T20 World Cup match in Sharjah 

Pakistan's captain Babar Azam (R) tosses the coin as his New Zealand's counterpart Kane Williamson stares at the coin before the start of T20 World Cup match Pakistan and New Zealand in Sharjah on October 25, 2021. (Photo courtesy: PCB)
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Updated 02 November 2021
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Pakistan put New Zealand into bat in T20 World Cup match in Sharjah 

  • Pakistan kept the same team that beat arch-rivals India by 10 wickets in Dubai on Sunday 
  • New Zealand were jolted by a calf injury to spearhead Lockie Ferguson minutes before the match 

Sharjah: Pakistan captain Babar Azam won the toss and sent New Zealand into bat in the Twenty20 World Cup Super 12 match in Sharjah on Tuesday. 
Pakistan, champions in 2009, kept the same team that beat arch-rivals India by 10 wickets in Dubai on Sunday. 
New Zealand, playing their first game in the tournament, were jolted by a calf injury to spearhead Lockie Ferguson minutes before the match. 
Ferguson is ruled out of the World Cup and his replacement Adam Milne can only be selected once approval is granted by the International Cricket Council technical committee.

Squads: Pakistan: Babar Azam (captain), Mohammad Rizwan, Fakhar Zaman, Mohammad Hafeez, Shoaib Malik, Asif Ali, Shadab Khan, Imad Wasim, Hasan Ali, Haris Rauf, Shaheen Shah Afridi
New Zealand: Kane Williamson (captain), Martin Guptill, Devon Conway, Glenn Phillips, Jimmy Neesham, Tim Seifert, Daryl Mitchell, Mitchell Santner, Tim Southee, Trent Boult, Ish Sodhi
Umpires: Michael Gough (ENG) and Richard Kettleborough (ENG)
TV Umpire: Paul Wilson (AUS)
Match Referee: Ranjan Madugalle (SRI) 


Pakistan reports first wild polio case of 2026 despite vaccination campaigns

Updated 05 March 2026
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Pakistan reports first wild polio case of 2026 despite vaccination campaigns

  • Four-year-old girl infected in Sindh’s Sujawal district as virus persists in high-risk areas
  • Pakistan conducted last nationwide campaign in January, vaccinating over 45 million children

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan reported its first wild poliovirus case of the year, health authorities said on Thursday, underscoring the persistence of the disease in high-risk areas despite ongoing vaccination campaigns.

The latest infection was confirmed in a four-year-old girl in Sujawal district of the southern Sindh province, according to the Regional Reference Laboratory for Polio Eradication at the National Institute of Health in Islamabad.

Polio is a highly contagious viral disease that can cause permanent paralysis, mainly in children under the age of five. Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan are the only two countries in the world where the disease remains endemic.

“The case was reported through the polio surveillance network and confirmed by the Regional Reference Laboratory for Polio Eradication at the National Institute of Health, Islamabad,” the statement said.

“The Polio Eradication Initiative is already analyzing the best response to tackle and prevent further transmission.”

In 2026, Pakistan conducted a nationwide polio campaign in January that vaccinated more than 45 million children, while the next national campaign is planned for April.

Since 1994, Pakistan has cut polio cases by 99.8 percent through vaccination efforts, reducing infections from an estimated 20,000 in the early 1990s to 31 in 2025.

Pakistan reported 31 polio cases in 2025. Southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa accounted for more than half of the country’s polio cases in 2025, with 17 of the 31 infections reported from the region.

According to health authorities, 74 cases were reported in 2024.

More than 200 polio workers and police officers assigned to protect polio teams have been killed in Pakistan since the 1990s, according to health and security officials.

Militants often falsely claim the vaccination campaigns are part of a Western plot to sterilize Muslim children.

The vaccination campaigns are also undermined by parental refusals in remote regions.