Pakistan calls it 'matter of great pride' to be chosen to host ICC Champions Trophy in 2025

Pakistan team celebrate their win at the presentation after the ICC Champions Trophy final cricket match between India and Pakistan at The Oval in London, United Kingdom, on June 18, 2017. (AFP/File)
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Updated 17 November 2021
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Pakistan calls it 'matter of great pride' to be chosen to host ICC Champions Trophy in 2025

  • The country will be hosting its first major cricket tournament in 29 years after making strenuous efforts to revive international cricket in Pakistan
  • The ICC also announced the United States will co-host 2024 T20 World Cup with West Indies

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan's top cricket official said on Tuesday it was a "matter of great pride" for his country that the International Cricket Council (ICC) had chosen it to host the Champions Trophy in 2025.

The ICC announced world cricket tournaments scheduled to take place from 2024 to 2031 earlier in the day, surprising everyone by mentioning that the United States would co-host the T20 World Cup for the first time with West Indies.

Pakistan, which tried to revive international cricket after militants targeted the Sri Lankan team in 2009, will host its first major tournament in 29 years, said the Associated Press.

"It's a matter of great pride and delight that Pakistan will be hosting ICC Champions Trophy 2025," the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman Ramiz Raja said in a Twitter post. "This great news will surely excite millions of Pakistani fans, expats and world fans to see great teams and players in action and will allow the world to sample our hospitality."

 

 

A PCB statement noted the ICC decision meant that Pakistan would "defend the ICC Champions Trophy title in their backyard when the eight-team and 15-match tournament is held at three iconic venues in February 2025."

It recalled that "Pakistan had defeated India by 180 runs in the 2017 tournament at The Oval" in London.

Commenting on its decision to allow the US, a non-cricket playing country, to host the next T20 World Cup, ICC chairman Greg Barclay said: "The USA is a strategic growth market for us."

Despite rigorous efforts to revive international cricket in the country, Pakistan faced tough challenges until September this year when New Zealand abandoned their cricket tour without playing a single match in the country over "security alert."

Days later, England called off its scheduled tour to Pakistan as well, disappointing millions of cricket fans in the country who were hoping to see the world's top cricket teams in action in local stadiums.

While the Pakistan cricket players did not get much practice, they still performed well during the recent Twenty20 World Cup and secured a place in the semi-finals.


Pakistan, China to sign multiple MoUs at major agriculture investment conference today

Updated 18 January 2026
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Pakistan, China to sign multiple MoUs at major agriculture investment conference today

  • Hundreds of Chinese and Pakistani firms to attend Islamabad event
  • Conference seen as part of expanding CPEC ties into agriculture, trade

KARACHI: Islamabad and Beijing are set to sign multiple memorandums of understanding (MoUs) to boost agricultural investment and cooperation at a major conference taking place in the capital today, Monday, with hundreds of Chinese and Pakistani companies expected to participate.

The conference is being billed by Pakistan’s Ministry of National Food Security and Research as a platform for deepening bilateral agricultural ties and supporting broader economic engagement between the two countries.

“Multiple memorandums of understanding will be signed at the Pakistan–China Agricultural Conference,” the Ministry of National Food Security said in a statement. “115 Chinese and 165 Pakistani companies will participate.”

The conference reflects a growing emphasis on expanding Pakistan-China economic cooperation beyond the transport and energy foundations of the flagship China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) into agriculture, industry and technology.

Under its first phase launched in 2015, CPEC, a core component of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, focused primarily on transportation infrastructure, energy generation and connectivity projects linking western China to the Arabian Sea via Pakistan. That phase included motorways, power plants and the development of the Gwadar Port in the country's southwest, aimed at helping Pakistan address chronic power shortages and enhance transport connectivity.

In recent years, both governments have formally moved toward a “CPEC 2.0” phase aimed at diversifying the corridor’s impact into areas such as special economic zones, innovation, digital cooperation and agriculture. Second-phase discussions have highlighted Pakistan’s goal of modernizing its agricultural sector, attracting Chinese technology and investment, and boosting export potential, with high-level talks taking place between planning officials and investors in Beijing.

Agri-sector cooperation has also seen practical collaboration, with joint initiatives examining technology transfer, export protocols and value-chain development, including partnerships in livestock, mechanization and horticulture.

Organizers say the Islamabad conference will bring together government policymakers, private sector investors, industry associations and multinational agribusiness firms from both nations. Discussions will center on investment opportunities, technology adoption, export expansion and building linkages with global buyers within the framework of Pakistan-China economic cooperation.