Pakistan beefs up security, puts hospitals on alert as New Zealand team arrives in Islamabad

Policemen stand guard outside the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium in Rawalpindi on September 17, 2021. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 19 April 2023
Follow

Pakistan beefs up security, puts hospitals on alert as New Zealand team arrives in Islamabad

  • The Black Caps are visiting Pakistan to make up for the series they abandoned in 2021 while citing security reasons
  • The visiting team arrived in the eastern Lahore city on April 11 and played three T20 matches against the home side

ISLAMABAD: The government beefed up security and placed hospitals on “high alert” after the New Zealand cricket team arrived in the federal capital, Islamabad, on Tuesday, according to a notification issued by the administration of the city.

The tour comes as compensation by New Zealand who pulled out of their visit to Pakistan on the day of their first match in September 2021 while citing security concerns.

The Black Caps played two Tests and three One-Day Internationals (ODIs) in Pakistan just three months ago.

“In order to meet any emergency situation during the visit of the New Zealand Cricket Team from 18th to 27th April 2023, in the federal capital, it is requested that all hospitals in Islamabad may be kept at high alert and availability of ambulances along with paramedical staff may please be ensured,” the city’s administration said in the notification.

The New Zealand squad arrived in Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore on April 11 and played three Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is) against the home team on April 14, 15, and 17. The team will now play the remaining matches in Rawalpindi on April 20 and April 24.

At the conclusion of the five-match T20 series, the two teams will face each other in a five-match ODI series. The first two ODI matches will be played in Rawalpindi, while the teams will travel to Karachi for the remaining three matches in May.

New Zealand squads

T20I: Tom Latham (c), Mark Chapman, Matt Henry, Cole McConchie, Daryl Mitchell, Rachin Ravindra, Ish Sodhi, Will Young, Chad Bowes, Dane Cleaver, Ben Lister, Adam Milne, James Neesham, Henry Shipley, Blair Tickner

ODI: Tom Latham (c), Henry Nicholls, Tom Blundell, Cole McConchie, Daryl Mitchell, Rachin Ravindra, Ish Sodhi, Will Young, Chad Bowes, Ben Lister, Adam Milne, James Neesham, Henry Shipley, Blair Tickner

Pakistan squads

T20I: Babar Azam (captain), Shadab Khan (vice-captain), Faheem Ashraf, Fakhar Zaman, Haris Rauf, Iftikhar Ahmed, Ihsanullah, Imad Wasim, Mohammad Haris, Mohammad Nawaz, Mohammad Rizwan, Naseem Shah, Saim Ayub, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Shan Masood, and Zaman Khan

ODI: Babar Azam (captain), Shadab Khan (vice-captain), Abdullah Shafique, Fakhar Zaman, Haris Rauf, Haris Sohail, Ihsanullah, Imam-ul-Haq, Mohammad Nawaz, Mohammad Rizwan, Mohammad Wasim Jr., Naseem Shah, Salman Ali Agha, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Shan Masood and Usama Mir. Reserves: Abbas Afridi, Abrar Ahmed, and Tayyab Tahir


Bangladesh refuse to go to India for T20 World Cup

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Bangladesh refuse to go to India for T20 World Cup

  • Bangladesh board’s response comes a day after ICC rejected its demand to shift World Cup matches from India to Sri Lanka
  • Row erupted in January when India’s cricket board asked IPL franchise to drop Bangladesh player amid political tensions

DHAKA, Bangladesh: Bangladesh will not travel to India to play in next month’s T20 World Cup, its cricket board said on Thursday, effectively ruling the country out of the tournament.

“Our only demand is to play the World Cup — but not in India,” Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) President Aminul Islam Bulbul told reporters.

The refusal came a day after cricket’s governing body rejected Bangladesh’s plea to play its games in Sri Lanka instead.

“There is no scope for changing our decision,” said Asif Nazrul, an adviser for youth and sports issues in Bangladesh’s interim government.

The T20 World Cup begins on February 7, with Bangladesh scheduled to play their four group matches in the Indian cities of Kolkata and Mumbai.

The row between the neighboring nations erupted on January 3 when the Indian cricket board ordered the Indian Premier League (IPL) franchise Kolkata Knight Riders to release Bangladesh fast bowler Mustafizur Rahman.

Mustafizur’s removal from the IPL followed online outrage by right-wing Indian Hindus who invoked alleged attacks on a fellow community in Muslim-majority Bangladesh.

Dhaka maintains that Indian media had exaggerated the scale of the violence.

The sport’s global governing body said on Wednesday it had “engaged with the BCB in sustained and constructive dialogue” to ensure Bangladesh could participate in the tournament, but added that those efforts had been “rebuffed.”

The International Cricket Council (ICC) said “independent security assessments, comprehensive venue-level security plans and formal assurances from the host authorities” found there was “no credible or verifiable threat to the safety” of the Bangladesh team.

‘LOSE A HUGE AUDIENCE’

However, Nazrul said Bangladesh’s security concerns “did not arise from speculation or theoretical analysis.”

“They arose from a real incident — where one of our country’s top players was forced to bow to extremists, and the Indian cricket board asked him to leave India,” he said.

Bangladesh will hold elections during the World Cup, its first since a mass uprising in 2024 toppled then-prime minister Sheikh Hasina, a close ally of New Delhi.

Political relations have since soured between Bangladesh and India, where Hasina fled after she was ousted.

There are wider issues for India, which is preparing to host the 2030 Commonwealth Games that are seen as a stepping stone for its ambitions to host the 2036 Olympics.

“Bangladesh is a cricket-loving nation. If a country of nearly 200 million people misses the World Cup, the ICC will lose a huge audience,” the BCB’s Bulbul said.

“Cricket is entering the Olympics in 2028, Brisbane in 2032, India is bidding for 2036. Excluding a major cricket-loving country like Bangladesh would be a failure.”

Bangladesh’s appeal to the ICC was not without precedent, with India’s arch-enemy Pakistan to play all its games in Sri Lanka.

That deal was struck after India, a financial and administrative powerhouse within cricket, refused to travel to Pakistan for the 2025 Champions Trophy and played its matches in Dubai instead.

However, the ICC said a year later a similar shift was impossible for Bangladesh.

“There are many precedents worldwide where matches have been moved to other venues due to security risks,” Bangladesh’s Nazrul said.

ICC sources told AFP this week that Bangladesh could be replaced by Scotland, the highest-ranked team that did not qualify outright for the World Cup.