Akram criticizes Pakistan’s cricket body for leaving Imran Khan out of Independence Day video

In this photo, taken on December 23, 2022, Pakistan's former cricketer Wasim Akram speaks during an event in Colombo. (AFP/File)
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Updated 16 August 2023
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Akram criticizes Pakistan’s cricket body for leaving Imran Khan out of Independence Day video

  • Imran Khan, counted among Pakistan’s greatest cricketers, was left out of an Independence Day video by PCB
  • In a post on X, Khan’s former teammate Akram urges PCB to delete video, apologize to the former cricket captain

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Cricket Board has received severe backlash for leaving World Cup-winning captain and former prime minister Imran Khan out of a video it released on the country’s Independence Day, with former captain Wasim Akram urging the board to delete it and apologize.

In the video released Aug. 14 on X, formerly known as Twitter, to show Pakistan’s cricketing achievements, stars such as Akram, Javed Miandad, and Salim Malik were seen celebrating the 1992 World Cup win. Khan, who led the team to the title by beating England in the final, was left out, however.

“After long flights and hours of transit before reaching Sri Lanka, I got the shock of my life when I watched PCB’s short clip on the history of Pakistan cricket minus the great Imran Khan,” Akram wrote on his X account on Wednesday.

“Political differences apart but Imran Khan is an icon of world cricket and developed Pakistan into a strong unit in his time and gave us a pathway... PCB should delete the video and apologize.”

Legal and political drama surrounds Khan. He was ousted as prime minister in a no-confidence vote in April 2022 but remains the country’s most popular opposition leader.

Khan is currently in a high-security prison after his arrest earlier this month on corruption charges. He was previously arrested in May on a different set of corruption charges.

Pakistan’s Supreme Court ordered his release days later, saying his arrest was illegal. Khan has been slapped with about 150 legal cases since his ouster, and insists his removal was a conspiracy by Washington, former Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and the Pakistani military — accusations all three have denied.

Pakistan’s former women’s cricket team captain, Urooj Mumtaz, also criticized the PCB for not mentioning Khan while counting the number of images the cricket board used in the more than two minute video.

“Reminiscing in Pakistan cricket’s history, 11 images of the 1992 World Cup win and not one pic or mention of the greatest that ever played the game for the country!,” Mumtaz said on X. “Imran Khan will go down in history as one of the greats of the global game!”


UK says Pakistan regulatory overhaul to yield £1 billion a year as Islamabad launches reform drive

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UK says Pakistan regulatory overhaul to yield £1 billion a year as Islamabad launches reform drive

  • Britain says it worked with Pakistan on 472 proposed reforms to streamline business rules across key sectors
  • PM Shehbaz Sharif says Pakistan has stabilized economy and now aims to attract investment by cutting red tape

ISLAMABAD: Britain’s development minister Jenny Chapman said on Saturday Pakistan’s sweeping new regulatory overhaul could generate economic gains of nearly £1 billion a year, as Islamabad formally launched the reform package aimed at cutting red tape and attracting foreign investment.

The initiative, driven by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government and the Board of Investment, aims to introduce legislative changes and procedural reforms designed to streamline approvals, digitize documentation and remove outdated business regulations.

Chapman said the UK had worked with Pakistan on 472 reform proposals as part of its support to help the country shift from economic stabilization to sustained growth.

“These reforms will break down barriers to investment, eliminate more than 600,000 paper documents, and save over 23,000 hours of labor every year for commercial approvals,” Chapman said at the launch ceremony in the presence of Sharif and his team. “The first two packages alone could have an economic impact of up to 300 billion Pakistani rupees annually — nearly one billion pounds — with more benefits to come.”

Addressing the ceremony, the prime minister said the reforms were central to Pakistan’s effort to rebuild investor confidence after the country narrowly avoided financial default in recent years.

“Our economy was in a very difficult situation when we took office,” he said. “But we did not lose hope, and today Pakistan is economically out of the woods. Now we are focused on growing our economy and attracting foreign investment.”

He described the new regulatory framework as a “quantum jump” that would reduce corruption, speed up approvals and remove longstanding procedural hurdles that have discouraged businesses.

Chapman told the audience that more than 200 British companies operate in Pakistan, with the largest six contributing around one percent of Pakistan’s GDP.

She said the UK saw Pakistan as a partner rather than a recipient of aid.

“Modern partners work together not as donors but as investors, bringing all our strengths to the table,” she said, adding that the reforms would make Pakistani exports more competitive and encourage UK firms to expand their footprint.

Sharif highlighted the role of the British Pakistani diaspora and said Pakistan hoped to unlock more private capital by engaging diaspora entrepreneurs and financial institutions in the UK.