England to play 3 test matches in Pakistan in December 

Pakistan's Shan Masood (L) plays a shot in front of England's wicket-keeper Jos Buttler during the first day of the first Test cricket match between England and Pakistan at Old Trafford in Manchester, northwest England on August 5, 2020. (AFP)
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Updated 22 August 2022
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England to play 3 test matches in Pakistan in December 

  • Rawalpindi will host first test on Dec 1-5, while second test will be played in Multan on Dec 9-13 
  • Pakistan’s favorite home ground, National Stadium in Karachi, will host the final test on Dec 17-21 

ISLAMABAD: England will play a three-test series in Pakistan as part of the World Test Championship in December, the Pakistan Cricket Board announced on Monday. 

Rawalpindi will host the first test from Dec. 1-5 while the second test will be played at Multan from Dec. 9-13. Pakistan’s favorite home ground — the National Stadium at Karachi — will host the third and final test from Dec. 17-21. 

Pakistan has lost just two test matches at Karachi out of 44, with one of the defeats coming against England in 2000. South Africa won the other test when it beat Pakistan by 160 runs in 2007. Pakistan has won 23 test matches at the National Stadium. 

It will be England’s first test tour to Pakistan since 2005. England is also scheduled to play a seven-match Twenty20 series in Pakistan next month as a build-up for the T20 World Cup in Australia before returning in December for the test series. 

England will be playing a test match in Rawalpindi for the first time. Pakistan has happy memories in Multan where it beat England by 22 runs during its last tour 17 years ago. 

“We have been working closely with the PCB over recent months and I am grateful to them for everything they have done, and continue to do, to make our test and T20 tours a mouth-watering prospect for all involved,” ECB’s interim chief executive officer Clare Connor said in a statement. “The return of our men’s test team to Pakistan for the first time since 2005 will be a historic occasion. The opportunity to play test cricket in front of passionate cricket-lovers in Pakistan after such a long time is something to be cherished. 

Zakir Khan, the PCB’s director of international cricket, said Pakistan and England have historically produced some close test matches. 

“Pakistan cricket fans have waited for almost 17 years to see elite England players in action,” Khan said. “Both the sides have evolved since they last played in Pakistan in 2005 and have recently been playing entertaining and exciting cricket. I remain confident this series will live up to the expectations of the global cricket fans who want to watch and enjoy competitive and thrilling matches.” 

England is in seventh place in the WTC points table while Pakistan is fifth. 


Pakistan offers Turkmenistan its Arabian Sea ports for wider access to ‘South Asia and beyond’

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Pakistan offers Turkmenistan its Arabian Sea ports for wider access to ‘South Asia and beyond’

  • PM Sharif meets Turkmen president in Ashgabat, calls for deeper trade and energy cooperation
  • Islamabad cites Karachi and Gwadar as key to boosting regional connectivity, including TAPI links

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Thursday urged Turkmenistan to expand trade and connectivity through Karachi and Gwadar, saying its Arabian Sea ports offer Turkmen businesses and exporters a direct route to South Asian and global markets, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s office said after high-level talks in Ashgabat.

Pakistan and Turkmenistan have long discussed regional transport corridors and energy cooperation, including the Turkmenistan–Afghanistan–Pakistan–India (TAPI) gas pipeline, a proposed multibillion-dollar project that would carry Turkmen natural gas south through Afghanistan into Pakistan and India. Islamabad has also pushed to link the landlocked Central Asian states to the sea by offering transit access through its deep-water ports, which sit at the crossroads of the Middle East, Central Asia and South Asia.

On Thursday, Pakistan's Sharif met Serdar Berdimuhamedov, the president of Turkmenistan, in Ashgabat as both countries look to revive momentum in bilateral engagement after years of regional instability. Pakistan has supported Turkmen neutrality policies at the United Nations, while Ashgabat has backed Pakistan during crises, including helping evacuate Pakistani nationals caught in Iran during the Iran–Israel conflict earlier this year.

“The Prime Minister reaffirmed Pakistan’s desire to enhance connectivity with Turkmenistan through land and sea routes and said that Karachi and Gwadar ports were ideally located to be utilized by the Turkmen side to enhance their outreach to South Asia and beyond,” Sharif’s office said in a statement.

Sharif reiterated his intention to deepen trade and economic ties with Turkmenistan, saying enhanced transport links and energy cooperation could anchor long-term regional integration. He invited President Berdimuhamedow and Turkmenistan’s national leader, Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow, on official visits to Pakistan next year.

Sharif is on a two-day visit to Turkmenistan for the International Forum on Peace and Trust, accompanied by Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar, Energy Minister Awais Leghari, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar and senior officials.

Turkmenistan’s president thanked Sharif for attending the UN-backed peace forum and said Ashgabat was keen to expand cooperation across multiple sectors, according to the statement.