Rizwan bags 2021 PCB awards for most valuable cricketer, T20I cricketer of the year

Pakistan's Mohammad Rizwan celebrates after scoring a half-century (50 runs) during the third Twenty20 international cricket match between Pakistan and West Indies at the National Stadium in Karachi on December 16, 2021. (AFP)
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Updated 06 January 2022
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Rizwan bags 2021 PCB awards for most valuable cricketer, T20I cricketer of the year

  • Hasan Ali, Babr Azam bag Test Cricketer of the Year, ODI cricketer of the Year awards respectively
  • Left-arm pace sensation Shaheen Afridi bagged ‘Most Impactful Performance of the Year’ award

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani wicketkeeper batter Mohammad Rizwan was on Thursday declared the ‘T20I Cricketer of the Year’ and the ‘Most Valuable Cricketer of the Year’ at the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Awards 2021.
The awards were held to celebrate the achievements of the men and women’s cricket teams through the year. 
Mohammad Rizwan won the PCB’s ‘Most Valuable Cricketer of the Year’ award following a stellar 2021 in which he scored 455 Test, 134 ODI and 1,326 T20I runs, besides accounting for 56 batsmen behind the wickets across all formats.
For the ‘Most Valuable Cricketer of the Year award’, Rizwan beat the challenge of Babar Azam, Hasan Ali and Shaheen Shah Afridi, who also had an impressive and outstanding yea reflected in Pakistan’s overall performance in 2021.
“I feel humbled and honoured to have been adjudged Pakistan’s Most Valuable Cricketer of 2021. This is the PCB’s most prestigious award and to be recognised for my contributions in the team’s superlative performances across all formats in 2021 in such a way gives me tremendous satisfaction and happiness,” Rizwan said. 
Pakistan’s left-arm pace sensation Shaheen Afridi bagged the ‘Most Impactful Performance of the Year’ award for his lethal 3/31 bowling against India at the ICC T20 World Cup 2020 last year.  
“I am extremely happy that my performance against our traditional rivals in a global event has been chosen as the Impactful Performance of the Year,” Afridi said. “For the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup, the team wanted an aggressive, fearless and convincing start to set the tone for the rest of the event and I am delighted that I was able to provide exactly that.” 
Fast bowler Hasan Ali bagged the Test Cricketer of the Year award for taking an impressive 41 wickets from nine Tests, including a 10-for and five, five-fors as well as two Player-of-the-Match and one Player-of-the-Series awards. 
The fast bowler described it as a “proud moment”, mentioning his comeback last year after a gruelling back injury.  
“Last year was sort of a comeback year for me after I had missed international cricket in 2020 due to an injury. I was not only able to make a successful return to international cricket but also played my part in the team’s overall success in 2021. 
“Taking 10 wickets against South Africa in Rawalpindi in my second Test in nearly two years and helping Pakistan win the series 2-0 was one of my highlights of the year and a very happy moment that set the stage for the remaining part of the year,” he added.
Pakistan’s all-format captain Babar Azam bagged the ‘ODI Cricketer of the Year’ award for scoring 405 runs in six ODIs with two centuries and a half-century.  
Mohammad Wasim Junior bagged the Emerging Cricketer of the Year for his 45 wickets in 2021, including 15 wickets in his first year of international cricket, while Nida Dar was named as the Women’s Cricketer of the Year after aggregating 604 runs and taking 25 wickets. 
Sahibzada Farhan won the Domestic Cricketer of the Year award following his 487 runs in the Pakistan Cup, 447 runs in the National T20 and 935 runs in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy. 
Pakistan cricket team’s visit to the Namibia dressing room following their 45-run victory to congratulate and appreciate the minnows on their qualification for their maiden ICC Men’s T20 World Cup and reaching the Super-12 stage won them the Spirit of Cricket award. 
For the second time in a year, the PCB’s elite match officials voted Asif Yaqoob as the ‘Umpire of the Year’.  
PCB Chairman Ramiz Raja congratulated the winners, lauding them for remaining consistent throughout the year across all formats of the sport.  
Members of the independent panel that selected the names of the winners are: Rashid Latif, Marina Iqbal (former international cricketers), Tariq Saeed (broadcaster), Mazher Arshad (statistician), Majid Bhatti, Mohammad Yaqoob, Mohi Shah, Rizwan Ali, Shahid Hashmi and Sohail Imran (all journalists).


Pakistan bans ex-army officer, YouTuber Adil Raja under Anti-Terrorism Act

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Pakistan bans ex-army officer, YouTuber Adil Raja under Anti-Terrorism Act

  • Pakistan interior ministry says Raja misused online platforms to promote, facilitate anti-state narratives
  • Raja, a UK-based YouTuber-commentator, is a harsh critic of Pakistan’s government, powerful military

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s federal government has listed a former army officer and pro-Imran Khan YouTuber-commentator Adil Raja as a proscribed person in the Anti-Terrorism Act for pushing anti-state narratives, the interior ministry said this week. 

Raja, who is now a UK-based blogger who broadcasts political commentary on Pakistan, is severely critical of the government and the military in his YouTube vlogs. Critics also accuse him of being biased in favor of former prime minister Imran Khan. 

Pakistani officials have accused Raja of running propaganda campaigns from abroad in the past. Pakistan Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi met British High Commissioner Jane Marriott in Islamabad this month and formally handed over extradition documents for Raja. The UK government has so far not commented on the development. 

In a notification issued on Saturday, the interior ministry said the government believes Raja has been demonstrating involvement in activities “posing a serious threat to the security, integrity and public order of Pakistan.”

“He has consistently misused online platforms to promote, facilitate and amplify anti-state narratives and propaganda associated with proscribed terrorist organizations, thereby acting in a manner prejudicial to the sovereignty and defense of Pakistan,” a notification by the interior ministry said. 

“Now, therefore in exercise of the powers conferred by section 11EE of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997, the Federal Government is pleased to direct to list Mr. Adil Farooq Raja, s/o Umer Farooq Raja, in the Fourth Schedule to the said Act as a proscribed person for the purposes of the said Act.”

Section 11EE empowers the government to list a person under the Fourth Schedule if there are reasonable grounds to believe that he/she is involved in “terrorism” or is an activist, office bearer or an associate of an organization kept under observation under the same Act, or is suspected to be concerned with any organization suspected to be involved in “terrorism.”

Those placed on the Fourth Schedule by the government are subjected to intense scrutiny and movement restrictions.

In a post on social media platform X, Raja denied any wrongdoing, saying the government had banned him after failing to extradite him from the UK.

“This designation is not a consequence of any crime, but a direct reprisal for my practice of journalism,” he wrote. 

Raja was also among two retired army officers who were convicted and sentenced under the Army Act, and for violations of the provisions of the Official Secrets Act in 2023.

 The former army officer was given 14 years of rigorous imprisonment by a military court. 

Khan, a former cricket star who served as Pakistan’s prime minister from 2018 to 2022, has been in jail since August 2023 on multiple charges his party says are politically motivated.

Despite incarceration, he remains the country’s most popular opposition figure, commanding one of the largest digital followings in South Asia. 

Overseas Pakistanis in particular drive sustained online activism on platforms such as YouTube and X, campaigning for his release and alleging human-rights abuses against Khan and his supporters, claims the Pakistani state rejects.