Pakistan face Poland in Oman today for Hockey5s World Cup clash

The picture taken on January 28, 2024 shows Pakistan hockey team playing a Hockey5s World Cup match against Netherlands in Oman. (@FIH_Hockey/X)
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Updated 29 January 2024
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Pakistan face Poland in Oman today for Hockey5s World Cup clash

  • Pakistan beat Nigeria 11-5 but lost to Netherlands 5-3 in Oman on Sunday 
  • Sixteen teams are featuring in the first-ever Hockey5s World Cup in Oman 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s national field hockey team will lock horns with Poland today, Monday, for a Hockey5s World Cup clash in Oman, a day after the green shirts beat Nigeria but lost to the Netherlands. 

Pakistan started the Hockey5s World Cup tournament on a winning note on Sunday, comprehensively beating Nigeria 11-5 in a match that saw hattricks by skipper Rana Abdul Waheed Ashraf and Abdul Hanan Shahid. 

However, Pakistan’s joy was short-lived as Waheed’s men lost to the Netherlands in a closely fought encounter with a 3-5 the same day in Muscat. Dutch player Alexander Schop scored a hattrick in the match to hand his team the victory, which helped the Netherlands become the first team to qualify for the quarterfinals of the tournament. 

According to IHF’s schedule, Pakistan will face Poland on Monday at 10:30 a.m. Gulf Standard Time (11:30 a.m. Pakistan Standard Time) for their third group match.

Hockey5s, also known as Field Hockey5s, is a variation of traditional field hockey that has gained traction in many countries around the world. H5s involves five players on each team, including one goalkeeper, instead of the usual 11.

The matches, as a result, are much faster and designed to ensure hockey becomes a more exciting sport for spectators. Sixteen teams, divided into four pools are featuring in the first-ever Hockey 5s World Cup. 

Pakistan are in Pool A with Nigeria, the Netherlands, and Poland.


Pakistan transporters call off five-day strike after successful talks with Punjab government

Updated 12 December 2025
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Pakistan transporters call off five-day strike after successful talks with Punjab government

  • Transporters went on strike against heavy fines, penalties imposed by Punjab over traffic violations
  • Punjab government sets up committee to resolve transporters issues, confirms provincial minister

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani goods transporters called off their five-day-long nationwide strike on Friday after successful talks with the Punjab government, officials and transporters confirmed, as the business community warned of an impending economic crisis if the dispute stayed unresolved. 

Transporters went on a nationwide strike on Dec. 8 against stringent traffic rules and heavy fines imposed by the Punjab government over traffic violations. These penalties were included in the Motor Vehicle Ordinance 2025 last month. 

The ordinance details hefty fines ranging from Rs2000 [$7] to Rs50,000 [$178] and mentions prison sentences going up to six months for various offenses committed by drivers, such as driving on the wrong side of the road or driving in vehicles with tinted windows. 

“Yes, the strike has been called off after our meeting with Senior Minister of Punjab Marriyum Aurangzeb,” Nabeel Tariq, president of the All Pakistan Goods Transport Association (APGTA), told Arab News. 

Tariq said fines ranging from Rs1000 ($3.6) to Rs1500 ($5.4) for traffic violations have been increased to around Rs20,000 ($71.3) as per the new rules. 

He said the APGTA has agreed to accept a 100 percent or even 200 percent hike in fines. However, he said an increase of 2000 percent was not “logical.”

“Our urgent demands have been accepted and a committee has been formed to review the ordinance and come up with recommendations,” Tariq said. 

Speaking to Arab News, Aurangzeb confirmed the strike had been called off after talks with the Punjab government and that a committee has been formed to resolve the transporters’ issues. 

The committee will be headed by Aurangzeb and will include representatives of goods transporters, a statement issued by her office said. 

“The government wants to protect human lives and make things better for all citizens,” the statement said. “We will resolve the issues (with transporters) amicably.” 

‘UNPRECEDENTED CRISIS’

Pakistan’s business and industrial community, meanwhile, warned of an impending crisis if the disputed was not resolved. 

The All Pakistan Textile Mills Association (APTMA) and the Karachi Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) have both appealed for immediate government intervention.

Imdad Hussain Naqvi, president of the Grand Transport Alliance Pakistan (GTAP), told Arab News that over 400,000 goods carriers had been stranded across Pakistan due to the strike, affecting supplies to millions of consumers.

Earlier, in a letter to Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz, APTMA Chairman Kamran Arshad said the strike has “critically impacted import and export operations which are backbone of the country’s economy.”

He said hundreds of cargo vehicles remain stranded across Punjab, creating “abnormal delays” in goods movement and triggering heavy demurrage, detention charges, missed vessels and production shutdowns due to the non-availability of raw materials.

Arshad warned the disruption poses “a serious risk of order cancelation of export orders by international buyers, which would have far-reaching consequences for Pakistan’s foreign exchange earnings.”

Meanwhile in Pakistan’s commercial hub Karachi, KCCI President Rehan Hanif issued an even stronger warning, saying the nationwide strike threatens to paralyze Pakistan’s economic lifeline. 

“The complete suspension of cargo movement is pushing Pakistan toward an unprecedented trade and industrial crisis,” Hanif said in a statement. 

He added that import and export consignments are now stranded at the city’s ports, highways and industrial zones.