New Zealand into T20 World Cup semifinals, India eliminated 

New Zealand's Adam Milne celebrates after taking the wicket of Afghanistan's Mohammad Shahzad during the Cricket Twenty20 World Cup match between New Zealand and Afghanistan in Abu Dhabi, UAE, on November 7, 2021. (AP)
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Updated 07 November 2021
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New Zealand into T20 World Cup semifinals, India eliminated 

  • The Kiwis defeated Afghanistan by eight wickets in 18.1 overs 
  • Pakistan, England, Australia have already made to semifinals 

ABU DHABI: New Zealand reached the Twenty20 World Cup semifinals with a comfortable eight-wicket win over Afghanistan on Sunday, a result that eliminated India from the contest. 

Chasing a modest 125, skipper Kane Williamson (40) and Devon Conway (36) put on an unbeaten stand of 68 to drive the team home in 18.1 overs in Abu Dhabi. 

The Kiwis join Pakistan as the two teams in the semifinals from Group 2 with eight points each, leaving India’s final match against Namibia on Monday a dead rubber. 

England and Australia had already made the semifinals from Group 1. 

The semifinal match-ups will be decided after Pakistan play Scotland in the second match of the day. 

Left-arm quick Trent Boult returned figures of 3-17 from his four overs and was ably supported by Tim Southee, who took two wickets, to restrict Afghanistan to 124-8. 

Najibullah Zadran played a lone hand with his 48-ball 73 to give the Afghanistan total some respectability after they elected to bat first. 

New Zealand’s pace bowlers rattled the opposition’s top order with quick strikes as Adam Milne sent back Mohammad Shahzad caught behind for four in his first over. 

Boult got going from the other end to get Hazratullah Zazai out for two and Southee trapped Rahmanullah Gurbaz lbw for six as Afghanistan slipped to 19-3. 

Zadran counter-attacked with a handful of boundaries including two off Jimmy Neesham but soon took to defense after losing his partner Gulbadin Naib for 15. 

Naib dragged a wide delivery from Kiwi leg-spinner Ish Sodhi onto his stumps. 

Skipper Mohammad Nabi joined Zadran at the crease as the duo attempted to push the scoring against the spinners and singled out Mitchell Santner for runs. 

The left-handed Zadran smashed Santner for two sixes and later got to his 50 in 33 balls. It was his second fifty in this T20 World Cup and sixth overall. 

Southee broke the 59-run partnership, seeing off Nabi for 14. 

Boult got the key scalp of Zadran with Neesham taking a good diving catch in the deep and the Afghans struggled to get runs in the final overs. 

New Zealand remained clinical in their modest chase with Martin Gutptill and Daryl Mitchell mixing their singles and twos with occasional boundaries. 

Mujeeb Ur Rahman struck with the wicket of Mitchell, caught behind for 17. 

Spin king Rashid Khan then sent back Guptill bowled for 28 to bag his 400th wicket in T20 matches. 

But Williamson stood firm with Conway who joined his skipper for a smooth partnership that steered the team home. 

The left-hand Conway smashed four boundaries and the winning runs in his 32-ball knock. 


Tolerance for ‘cross-border terrorism’ has reached its limit, Pakistan warns Afghanistan after airstrikes

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Tolerance for ‘cross-border terrorism’ has reached its limit, Pakistan warns Afghanistan after airstrikes

  • Pakistan says carried out intelligence-based airstrikes in border regions with Afghanistan on Saturday, killing 80 militants
  • Afghan authorities dismiss allegations, saying Pakistan killed and injured dozens of civilians, vowing an “appropriate” response 

ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari has warned Kabul in a recent statement that Islamabad’s tolerance for “cross-border terrorism” has reached its limit after Pakistan carried out airstrikes in Afghanistan to target alleged militant camps. 

A Pakistani security official said Islamabad carried out intelligence-based airstrikes on Saturday and destroyed seven centers of the Pakistani Taliban or the TTP militant group in the three Afghan provinces of Nangarhar, Paktika and Khost. The official said more than 80 militants were killed in the attacks. An earlier statement from Pakistan’s information ministry said the targets included a camp of a Daesh regional affiliate, the Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP), which claimed a suicide bombing at an Islamabad Shia mosque that killed 32 people this month.

Saturday’s airstrikes followed a series of attacks inside Pakistan amid a surge in militancy. Authorities say the attacks, particularly in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province bordering Afghanistan and the Pakistani capital of Islamabad, were carried out by the TTP and allied groups that Islamabad alleges are operating from sanctuaries in Afghanistan. Kabul denies this and urges Pakistan to concentrate on its security issues without blaming Afghanistan.

In a post on X on Sunday, Afghan government spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said Pakistani forces had violated Afghanistan’s territory and killed and wounded dozens of civilians in Nangarhar and Paktika. The Afghan Taliban’s claims of civilian casualties could not be independently verified. Pakistan did not immediately comment on the allegation. 
In a statement issued by his office on Sunday night, Zardari said Pakistan’s recent actions in Afghanistan are rooted in its “inherent right” to defend its people against “terrorism” from across the border. 

 “Tolerance for cross-border terrorism has reached its limit,” Zardari said. 

The Pakistani president reiterated Islamabad’s stance that it is concerning that de facto authorities in Kabul continue to allow “terrorist elements” to operate from Afghan soil in violation of their commitments under the Doha Accord, an agreement signed between both sides in October after fierce border clashes last year, Kabul pledged that Afghanistan’s soil would not be used against any country for militant activities.

The president said it was regrettable that despite warnings and repeated engagement from Islamabad, Afghan authorities failed to take action against militants. 

“He said Pakistan exercised restraint for a considerable period and confined its response to terrorist hideouts located near the border areas,” the president’s office said.

“However, he warned that Pakistan is fully aware of where the planners, facilitators and patrons of violence are based. If bloodshed continues inside Pakistan, those responsible will not remain beyond reach.”

Zardari reaffirmed Pakistan seeks peace, stability and cooperative relations with its neighbors. However, the Pakistani president said peace “cannot rest on denial, duplicity or inaction against terrorism.”

“The protection of Pakistani lives remains paramount and non-negotiable,” he added. 

Afghanistan’s Ministry of National Defense said on Sunday that Pakistan’s airstrikes were in breach of international law and Islamic principles.

It warned that an “appropriate and measured response” will be given in a “suitable time.”

Saturday’s airstrikes and subsequent allegations marks one of the most direct confrontations between Islamabad and Kabul in recent months. It risks further straining already fragile ties along the volatile border between the two neighbors.