‘Don’t jump the gun’: Pakistan’s cricket chief responds to criticism on ‘dead pitch’

Ramiz Raja, former Pakistan's national cricket team captain and newly elected Chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), gestures as he addresses a news conference in Lahore, Pakistan, on September 13, 2021. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 10 March 2022
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‘Don’t jump the gun’: Pakistan’s cricket chief responds to criticism on ‘dead pitch’

  • Acknowledging that Pakistan should ‘massively redo’ its pitches, Ramiz Raja says it will not happen by waving a magic wand
  • The PCB chairman calls Australia the ‘powerhouse’ of cricket, says Pakistan cannot be in an experimental mode with them

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman Ramiz Raja responded to critics on Wednesday regarding the batting-friendly Rawalpindi pitch during the first Test match against Australia while asking them not to “jump the gun” since the upcoming contests would have plenty of exhilarating cricket.
The first match of the Pakistan-Australia Test series in Rawalpindi left many fans disappointed after it ended in a draw. The flat track had a lot to offer to batters, though bowlers on both sides were found struggling.
Pakistan’s information minister Chaudhry Fawad Hussain also criticized the PCB for preparing a “dead pitch” for the “historic” match, saying on Twitter that he was “extremely disappointed” by the outcome of the match.

Pakistan declared at 476/4 while Australia were dismissed at 459 runs in the first innings. The hosts scored 252 without a loss in the second innings before all five days of the match were consumed and the contest ended in a draw.
“Only one match has taken place [until now] so don’t jump the gun,” said the PCB chairman in a video message disseminated through the board’s social media accounts. “A lot of cricket is still left [in the series].”


Raja acknowledged that Pakistan needed to “massively redo” its pitches. However, he recalled that Pakistan’s cricket season had already started when he was appointed to his current position last year and it was not possible for him to immediately focus on the task.
He informed the PCB was working on transforming Pakistani pitches, adding that soil experts would work on them once the cricket season was over.
“We will redo 50-60 pitches all over Pakistan … once our [cricket] season ends in March or April,” he added.
Raja said while he understood fans’ frustration at the first Test match ending in a draw, he added the PCB did not want to “play into Australia’s lap” by making bouncy pitches “just for the heck of it.”
He maintained that Pakistan’s opening pair of bowlers had been disturbed due to Hassan Ali and Faheem Ashraf’s injuries.
The PCB chairman also pointed out that Pakistan went into the first Test with a “brand new” opening pair, considering Abdullah Shafique had played only a few Test matches and Imam-ul-Haq was just returning to the squad.
“So, when your opening bowling and batting pairs are disturbed, you take chances accordingly,” he said. “We didn’t even have a leg-spinner as Yasir Shah was unfit. We went into the Test match as an under-sourced squad of 15 men.”
Defending the need for batting-friendly pitches, Raja described Australia as the “powerhouse” of modern cricket, adding they were coming to Pakistan after decimating England in the Ashes series.
“We couldn’t have gone into an experimental mode so quickly,” he said while pointing out that Pakistani batters performed well despite the outcome of the first Test.
“Fans need to understand that we will try our best to make this a result-oriented series, but we can’t wave a magic wand to make pitches green at once,” he said, adding that Pakistan needed to defeat Australia and adopt a strategy with caution to make that happen.
“The strategy that makes sense [for this series] is that there should be low bouncy tracks, where reverse swing, bowled out and lbw decisions come into play,” he added.

 

 


Pakistan urges world to treat water insecurity as global risk, flags India treaty suspension

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Pakistan urges world to treat water insecurity as global risk, flags India treaty suspension

  • Pakistan says it is strengthening water management but national action alone is insufficient
  • India unilaterally suspended Indus Waters Treaty last year, leading to irregular river flows

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Tuesday urged the international community to recognize water insecurity as a “systemic global risk,” warning that disruptions in shared river basins threaten food security, livelihoods and regional stability, as it criticized India’s handling of transboundary water flows.

The call comes amid heightened tensions after India’s unilateral decision last year to hold the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty “in abeyance,” a move Islamabad says has undermined predictability in river flows and compounded climate-driven vulnerabilities downstream.

“Across regions, water insecurity has become a systemic risk, affecting food production, energy systems, public health, livelihoods and human security,” Pakistan’s Acting Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Ambassador Usman Jadoon, told a UN policy roundtable on global water stress.

“For Pakistan, this is a lived reality,” he said, describing the country as a climate-vulnerable, lower-riparian state facing floods, droughts, accelerated glacier melt, groundwater depletion and rapid population growth, all of which are placing strain on already stressed water systems.

Jadoon said Pakistan was strengthening water resilience through integrated planning, flood protection, irrigation rehabilitation, groundwater replenishment and ecosystem restoration, including initiatives such as Living Indus and Recharge Pakistan, but warned that domestic measures alone were insufficient.

He noted the Indus River Basin sustains one of the world’s largest contiguous irrigation systems, provides more than 80 percent of Pakistan’s agricultural water needs and supports the livelihoods of over 240 million people.

The Pakistani diplomat said the Indus Waters Treaty had for decades provided a framework for equitable water management, but India’s decision to suspend its operation, followed by unannounced flow disruptions and the withholding of hydrological data, had created an unprecedented challenge for Pakistan’s water security.

Pakistan has said the treaty remains legally binding and does not permit unilateral suspension or modification.

The issue has gained urgency as Pakistan continues to recover from last year’s monsoon floods, which killed more than 1,000 people and devastated farmland in Punjab, the country’s eastern breadbasket, in what officials described as severe riverine flooding.

Last month, Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar said Pakistan had observed abrupt variations in river flows from India, creating uncertainty for farmers in Punjab during critical periods of the agricultural cycle.

“As we move toward the 2026 UN Water Conference, Pakistan believes the process must acknowledge water insecurity as a systemic global risk, place cooperation and respect for international water law at the center of shared water governance, and ensure that commitments translate into real protection for vulnerable downstream communities,” Jadoon said.