Haq anchors Pakistan after New Zealand pile on 449 in second Test

Pakistan's Imam-ul-Haq, right, and Saud Shakeel walk off the field on the end of second day play of the second test cricket match between Pakistan and New Zealand, in Karachi, Pakistan, on January 3, 2023. (AP)
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Updated 03 January 2023
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Haq anchors Pakistan after New Zealand pile on 449 in second Test

  • Haq was unbeaten on 74, Saud Shakeel 13 as hosts need 96 to avoid follow-on
  • The two-match series is tied after the first Test, also in Karachi, ended in a draw

KARACHI: Opener Imam-ul-Haq anchored Pakistan with a pugnacious half-century as the home team reached 154-3 at the close Tuesday after New Zealand piled up a handy 449 in their first innings of the second Test in Karachi. 

At the close of day two, Haq was unbeaten on 74 and Saud Shakeel 13 as the home team need another 96 runs to avoid the follow-on. 

Pakistan started chaotically, losing opener Abdullah Shafique (19), Shan Masood (20) and skipper Babar Azam (24) before the Haq-Shakeel stand added 55 runs for the unbroken fourth wicket. 

In contrast, New Zealand’s tail wagged furiously, with Matt Henry (68 not out) and Ajaz Patel (35) both scoring Test-bests as they added an invaluable 104 runs for the last wicket. 

The two-match series is tied after the first Test, also in Karachi, ended in a draw. 

The National Stadium pitch offered little to the bowlers, but Pakistan did themselves no favors by having skipper Azam, the team’s best batsman, run out. 

Haq drove Bracewell toward mid-wicket and saw Azam stranded at his end attempting a third run. 

But Haq took charge with his seventh half-century — even as Shakeel needed 42 balls to get off the mark at the other end. 

Earlier, Shafique was the first Pakistan wicket to fall when he pulled pacer Henry’s short delivery straight to the hands of Ajaz Patel and Masood gave a catch off Patel. 

Henry and Patel had combined earlier to lift New Zealand from 345-9. 

Henry smashed eight boundaries and two sixes in his knock, improving his previous high against Australia at Christchurch in 2016 by six runs. 

Patel also bettered his previous Test-best of 20 — against England last year — before he was the last wicket to fall, caught off spinner Abrar Ahmed. 

Naseem took the day’s first wicket when he bowled Ish Sodhi for 11 with a ball that cut through sharply. 

Blundell, who was 30 overnight, reached his fifty with a boundary and a single off Ahmed. He hit six boundaries in his 51 before being bowled by Ahmed. 

The spinner then had Tim Southee stumped for ten, before Henry and Patel prolonged the innings, helping New Zealand cross the 400-mark. 

Ahmed was the pick of the bowlers with 4-149, while Naseem Shah (3-71) and Agha Salman (3-75) were the other successful bowlers. 


Pakistan’s Sharif hopes to further ties with Bangladesh as Rahman takes oath as PM

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Pakistan’s Sharif hopes to further ties with Bangladesh as Rahman takes oath as PM

  • Tarique Rahman’s election comes amid a thaw in relations between Pakistan and Bangladesh
  • Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal also met Rahman after oath-taking, invited him to visit Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday said he hoped to further strengthen relations with Bangladesh as Tarique Rahman took oath as the country’s new premier.

Rahman was sworn in on Tuesday after his Bangladesh Nationalist Party’s landslide win in parliamentary elections last week, the country’s first since the massive 2024 uprising and a vote billed as key to the nation’s future political landscape after years of intense rivalry and disputed polls.

The 60-year-old, whose term will last for five years, is the son of former prime minister Khaleda Zia and former president Ziaur Rahman. He is also Bangladesh’s first male prime minister in 35 years. Since 1991, when Bangladesh returned to democracy, either Rahman’s mother or her archrival Sheikh Hasina had served as PMs.

His election as PM comes at a time when Pakistan and Bangladesh appear to be coming increasingly closer, following a thaw in their relations since the ouster of Hasina, who was widely viewed as an India ally. Ties between Bangladesh and New Delhi remain strained over India’s decision to grant asylum to Hasina.

“Warmest felicitations to Tarique Rahman on having been sworn in as the Prime Minister of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh,” Pakistan’s Sharif said on X Tuesday evening.

“I look forward to close and meaningful engagements with my brother, to further strengthen our bilateral cooperation across mutually beneficial areas and to deepen the historic ties between our two countries.”

Earlier in the day, Pakistani Planning Miniter Ahsan Iqbal called on Rahman after his oath-taking ceremony in Dhaka and conveyed warm congratulations on behalf of the government and people of Pakistan on his election, according to the Pakistani information ministry.

“He extended best wishes for the peace, progress and prosperity of Bangladesh under his leadership,” the ministry said. “Iqbal conveyed a formal invitation from the prime minister of Pakistan to Prime Minister Tarique Rahman to undertake an official visit to Pakistan at a mutually convenient date.”

Pakistan and Bangladesh were part of the same country until Bangladesh’s secession following a bloody civil war in 1971. However, Islamabad and Dhaka have lately been looking to strengthen institutional linkages to broaden their cooperation, following a reset of ties.