Quetta rejoices as cricket returns to city after 26 long years

Excited fans, with tickets in hand, line up in hundreds outside the Muhammad Yousaf enclosure at the Nawab Akbar Bugti Stadium in Quetta on February 5, 2023. (Photo by Saadullah Akhter)
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Updated 06 February 2023
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Quetta rejoices as cricket returns to city after 26 long years

  • Quetta Gladiators defeat Peshawar Zalmi at home venue in last-ball exhibition match
  • Quetta last saw cricket when Pakistan beat Zimbabwe in 1997by three wickets

QUETTA: Thousands of fans cheered at the Nawab Akbar Bugti Cricket Stadium on Sunday, as Peshawar Zalmi locked horns with the Quetta Gladiators in an exhibition match in the southwestern Pakistani city of Quetta, marking the return of cricket to the city after 26 years. 

Amid tight security measures, thousands of cricket lovers, including women and children from across Pakistan's southwestern Balochistan province, thronged the stadium in the provincial capital of Quetta to catch the action live as the Gladiators faced Zalmi. 

Cricket has largely stayed away from Quetta owing to security fears as the city as the impoverished province has seen plenty of attacks and sectarian violence by separatist groups and militants. The last time the city saw a cricket match was in the same stadium 26 years ago, when Pakistan beat Zimbabwe in an ODI by three wickets on October 30, 1996.




Peshawar Zalmi fans practice ahead of their match with Quetta Gladiators at the Nawab Akbar Bugti Cricket Stadium in Quetta on February 5, 2023. (AN photo by Saadullah Akhter)

Spectators were particularly thrilled to see Zalmi skipper Babar Azam and Gladiators' captain Sarfaraz Ahmed lead the two teams onto the ground. Excited fans could hardly keep from screaming throughout the four-hour match.

Other cricket stars who performed in front of a live audience were Shahid Afridi, Wahab Riaz, Umar Akmal, Naseem Shah, Mohammad Hasnain, Iftikhar Ahmed, and others. 

Muhammad Saddam, 25, said he traveled to Quetta from Dalbandin, a remote town near the Pakistan-Iran border, to catch a glimpse of the stars. Saddam said he waited for over two hours outside the stadium in a long line of spectators to witness the action. 

“We are very happy that our national players have come to play the PSL exhibition match in Quetta,” he told Arab News.

Jahangir Khan, a cricket lover from Pakistan's northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, said he traveled to Quetta to support Peshawar Zalmi and watch Afridi, a former Pakistan captain, play.

“I came to Quetta on January 27 to support my team here. I didn’t receive the ticket [initially] but fortunately, got one yesterday for the exhibition match”, he enthused.

The provincial sports department also arranged food stalls outside the stadium, for the public to savor snacks while they enjoyed the game. One of the stalls sold the traditional Balochi Sajji as the action continued.

Azam and Afridi, both superstars in their own right, couldn't stand till the end to see their team defeat the Gladiators on their home turf. With four runs needed at the last ball after a special half-century from Muhammad Haris (53 off 35), the crowd sighed with relief as Quetta pulled off a three-run victory.




Chief Minister of Pakistan's Balochistan province Abdul Quddus Bizenjo, left, handing over the trophy to Quetta Gladiators' captain Sarfaraz Ahmed after they defeated Peshawar Zalmi in an exhibition match in Quetta on February 5, 2023. (Photo courtesy: @TeamQuetta/Twitter)

Chief Minister of Balochistan Mir Abdul Qudus Bizenjo appreciated both franchises and the chair of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) managing committee, Najam Sethi, for bringing the action to the cricket-starved city.

Bizenjo praised security forces during the prize distribution ceremony for maintaining law and order during the match. He said the “successful conclusion of Pakistan’s Super League (PSL)’s exhibition match in Quetta was a loud and clear message for our enemies”.

“This event has proven that peace has been restored in Balochistan and people will not tolerate terrorists [that are] spoiling law and order in the province,” he said.


Macroeconomic instability, inconsistent policies hinder FDI in Pakistan— economists, OICCI

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Macroeconomic instability, inconsistent policies hinder FDI in Pakistan— economists, OICCI

  • Pakistan’s foreign direct investment fell 26 percent to $748 million from $1.01 billion a year earlier — data
  • Foreign investors also avoid Pakistan due to its repeated reliance on loans from the IMF, say economists

KARACHI: Despite being the fifth-largest consumer market in the world, Pakistan has failed to attract its “due share” of foreign direct investment (FDI) due to inconsistent policies, regional conflicts and macroeconomic stability, economists and a senior official of the Overseas Investors Chamber of Commerce and Industry (OICCI) said this week. 

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has pursued economic diplomacy recently, traveling frequently to the China, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and other countries. However, these efforts have yet to translate into sustained inflows, as Pakistan has attracted a mere $3 billion in annual FDI over the past two decades, according to the SBP’s data.

Pakistan’s FDI fell 26 percent to $748 million from $1.01 billion a year earlier, extending the downward trend from $2.5 billion recorded in FY25 and $2.3 billion in FY24.

“Pakistan has not been able to attract its due share of the foreign direct investment,” OICCI Secretary General Abdul Aleem said on Friday.
 
The OICCI represents over 200 multinational companies operating in Pakistan, which have collectively reinvested $23 billion over the decade to 2023, according to the group’s website.

“One of the reasons that Pakistan has not been able to attract as much FDI as it should is also a situation in a region where there are conflicts.”

Aleem was referring to Pakistan’s recent border skirmishes with Afghanistan and its four-day military conflict with India in May this year. 

Portfolio investment has also been far from impressive, rising to $160 million in July–Oct in FY26 from $97.2 million a year earlier. Portfolio investment reflects how much money foreigners invest in or withdraw from a country’s stock market.

Last month, Karachi-based market research firm Topline Securities reported that Pakistan had lost around $4 billion in portfolio investments over the past decade.

Arab News reached out to Pakistan’s finance adviser Khurram Schehzad and Jamil Ahmad Qureshi, the secretary-general of the Special Investment Facilitation Council but they were not immediately available for comment. 

Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb told Arab News last month that Pakistan was now better positioned to seek foreign investment due to early signs of macroeconomic stabilization after a prolonged crisis.

‘GREATER CLARITY, CONTINUITY’

Sana Tawfik, head of research at Arif Habib Limited, said Pakistan could see more sustained foreign investment flows through consistent reforms and “clear policies.”

“But foreign investors look for greater clarity and continuity before committing large and long-term capital,” she noted. 

Pakistan’s former finance adviser, Khaqan Najeeb, agreed. He said macroeconomic instability and policy shifts complicate business planning.

“Infrastructure gaps and regulatory hurdles further soften investor confidence,” Najeeb said, noting that Pakistan’s net FDI was hovering around the $1.5-2 billion mark, far below the country’s potential. 

Najeeb pointed out that Islamabad’s repeated reliance on bailouts from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is also a major reason why foreign investors avoid Pakistan’s debt-burdened yet resilient economy.

Pakistan has secured at least 26 loans from the IMF since joining the organization in 1950, according to the Fund’s website. Pakistan secured a $7 billion bailout program from the global lender last year and is expecting a $1.2 billion tranche after the Executive Board’s meeting next week.

“I think chronic macroeconomic instability, currency volatility, reserves positions going down, going back to the IMF so many times have played a role in this,” he said. 

He said Pakistan’s FDI inflows had remained “modest” due to its recurring balance of payments pressures, noting that periodic IMF programs create “uncertainty for long-term investors.”

Aleem said he was working with the government to streamline Pakistan’s tax structure and ease of doing business, noting that foreign investors often had concerns about the South Asian country’s “slow” legal system.

“It is not enough to say improvements have been made internally,” he said. 

“You have to stand up internationally and at the right forums, share transparently what is good and what is not good in the country.”