Home ministry to decide about Indian team’s visit to Pakistan — Indian sports minister 

India’s sports minister Anurag Thakur addresses the inaugural ceremony of Khelo India Youth Games 2022 in Madhya Pradesh, India, on October 20, 2022. (@Anurag_Office/Twitter)
Short Url
Updated 20 October 2022
Follow

Home ministry to decide about Indian team’s visit to Pakistan — Indian sports minister 

  • BCCI has suggested hosting Asia Cup 2023 at any other venue than Pakistan
  • Indian sports minister says players’ safety, security is ‘an important matter’

ISLAMABAD: India’s sports minister Anurag Thakur on Thursday said the country’s home ministry will decide whether or not the Indian cricket team will tour Pakistan for next year’s Asia Cup.  

Tensions between the two sides escalated when the Board of Cricket Control for India (BCCI) Secretary Jay Shah this week suggested holding Asia Cup 2023 at any other venue than Pakistan.   

Shah also serves as president of the Asian Cricket Council (ACC), which last year granted Pakistan the hosting rights for Asia Cup 2023. Incidentally, he is the son of India’s Minister for Home Affairs, Amit Shah.  

PCB responded to Shah’s suggestion by saying India’s refusal to tour Pakistan could also ‘impact’ Pakistan team’s visit to India for the 50-over World Cup in 2023. India is scheduled to host the ODI World Cup next year and a host of other international ICC tournaments in the coming years.  

“It’s a decision that will be taken by the home ministry. Overall, players’ safety and security is an important matter,” Thakur said during an interaction with journalists, according to the Press Trust of India (PTI).  

The minister said he expected Pakistan to take part in next year’s ODI World Cup in India. “All teams who qualify for [the World Cup] are invited [to India],” Thakur said. “Many times Pakistan teams have come to India and played. I feel India is not in a position to be dictated [to] and there is no reason for anyone to do that,” he added.  

“I expect all countries to come and compete.” 

India’s last trip to Pakistan was for the 2008 Asia Cup, while Pakistan’s last visit to India was for the 2016 T20 World Cup. Due to strained political relations between the two countries, India and Pakistan have not played any bilateral cricket since Pakistan toured India in 2012-13.  

India and Pakistan last played each other at the 2022 Asia Cup in UAE in August-September this year, and they are due to face off in the T20 World Cup in Melbourne on October 23. 


Pakistan warns citizens in Iran to keep travel documents ready amid intensifying protests

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan warns citizens in Iran to keep travel documents ready amid intensifying protests

  • Iranian universities reschedule exams, allow foreign students to leave the country for one month
  • Donald Trump pledges support for Iranian protesters as ‘activists’ report more than 2,500 deaths

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s top diplomat to Iran on Tuesday urged Pakistani nationals to keep their travel documents handy and advised students to plan ahead after Iranian universities rescheduled examinations to allow international students to leave, as weeks-long nationwide protests further intensified.

Iran has been gripped by protests since late December after shopkeepers in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar shut their businesses to protest worsening economic conditions, triggered by the Iranian rial plunging to record lows against the US dollar.

The demonstrations quickly spread beyond the capital, with unrest reported in most of the country’s 31 provinces and involving traders, students and other groups.

Authorities have responded with arrests, use of force and Internet and mobile network disruptions, which rights groups say are aimed at curbing coordination and limiting coverage of the protests.

At least 100 Pakistani citizens, including students and pilgrims, have returned home through the Pakistan-Iran border in the southwestern province of Balochistan, a Pakistani official told Arab News on Tuesday, though many are still believed to be in the neighboring state.

“I urge all Pakistani citizens in Iran to keep their travel documents, particularly immigration-related documents such as passport and ID cards, readily available with them,” Ambassador Mudassir Tipu said in a post on X. “Those who have expired documents, or their documents are not in their possession, they may kindly urgently approach us for timely and expeditious assistance.”

In a separate post, he said Iranian universities had rescheduled examinations and allowed international students to leave the country for one month, advising Pakistani students to make their plans accordingly.

On Jan. 1, Pakistan advised its citizens to avoid traveling to Iran, citing safety concerns linked to the protests. The Pakistani embassy in Tehran also set up a crisis management unit to provide round-the-clock assistance to citizens.

Iran eased some restrictions on Tuesday, allowing international phone calls via mobile networks for the first time in days, but maintained limits on Internet access and text messaging as the death toll from the protests rose to at least 2,571 people, according to the Associated Press that quoted “activists.”

In a message on Truth Social, US President Donald Trump urged Iranian protesters to continue their anti-government demonstrations, saying “help is on its way,” without providing details. Shortly afterward, Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, accused the United States and Israel of responsibility for the deaths of Iranian civilians.

Iranian state television said officials would hold funerals on Wednesday for “martyrs and security defenders” killed during the unrest, which has intensified over the past week.