Azam vows to make Pakistan world-beaters after regaining T20 captaincy

Pakistan's captain Babar Azam speaks during captain's press conference on the eve of ICC Men's Cricket World Cup in Ahmedabad, India, on October 4, 2023. (AP/File)
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Updated 01 April 2024
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Azam vows to make Pakistan world-beaters after regaining T20 captaincy

  • Pakistan Cricket Board reappointed Babar Azam as white-ball skipper on Sunday, months before T20 World Cup 2024
  • Pacer Shaheen Shah Afridi, who has been replaced by Azam as T20I skipper, vows to help Azam “on and off the field”

KARACHI: Reappointed captain Babar Azam vowed to transform Pakistan into the best team in the world after replacing under-fire Shaheen Shah Afridi at the Twenty20 helm on Sunday.

Azam only stepped down as skipper in all formats in November after Pakistan crashed out of the 50-over World Cup in the first round in India.

However, Shaheen’s tenure as T20 captain was short-lived after overseeing a dispiriting 4-1 series loss to New Zealand in January.

“Our joint aim is to make this team the best in the world,” said Azam, who will seek out fast bowler Shaheen’s advice on the best way forward for the squad.

“As a captain, I have always valued his input and I will keep consulting him for important decisions.

We must take advantage of his strategic understanding of the game.”

Shaheen said he stood firmly behind the experienced Azam.

“As a team player, it is my duty to back our captain, Babar Azam. I have played under his captaincy and have nothing but respect for him,” he said.

“I will try to help him both on and off the field. We are all one. Our aim is the same, to help Pakistan become the best team in the world.”

Following Azam’s decision to relinquish the captaincy last year, he was replaced by Shan Masood as Test skipper and by Shaheen in T20Is.

Former head coach Mickey Arthur was also replaced after the World Cup disaster by team director Mohammad Hafeez, under whom Pakistan suffered a 3-0 Test whitewash in Australia and the T20I series loss in New Zealand.

Pakistan will play five T20Is against New Zealand at home, followed by three in Ireland and four in England, before the World Cup in the United States and the West Indies in June.

Mohsin Naqvi, the new Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman, announced changes to the board’s selection process this month in an effort to improve results before the tournament, making the captain and head coach part of the process.

“We have reorganized the selection committee with seven members but the different thing is that there will be no chairman,” Naqvi told a news conference, with each member to have “equal powers.”

Fast bowler Mohammad Amir has announced he will come out of retirement and all-rounder Imad Wasim has also reversed his decision to quit four months ago.

The squad is currently on a two-week training camp at an army base in Kakul.

Azam won 42 of his 71 T20Is as skipper from 2019, with 23 losses with six no-results, but was accused of favoring friends in team selection.

“We will have to see how this decision impacts Pakistan team’s performance, but I think Azam should be given the long-term captaincy,” former wicketkeeper-batsman Kamran Akmal told AFP.
“Azam is a serious captain, so I don’t think there will be any rift in the team.”

Former Pakistan skipper Shahid Afridi, whose daughter is married to Shaheen, was surprised at Azam’s return.

“I believe that if change was necessary, then (Mohammad) Rizwan was the best choice,” said Afridi on X.

“But since the decision has now been made, I offer my full support and best wishes to Team Pakistan and Babar Azam.”


Pakistan Senate committee approves draft law paving way for legal crypto trade 

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Pakistan Senate committee approves draft law paving way for legal crypto trade 

  • Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority to grant licenses to issue crypto coins, regulate crypto exchange under new law, says senator
  • Major cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP expected to be traded legally in Pakistan within weeks, says lawmaker

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani Senate committee approved a draft bill to regulate virtual assets on Wednesday, paving the way for cryptocurrency trading to become legal in the country.

Pakistan has been undertaking efforts over the past couple of months in drafting rules to regulate the fast-expanding market for digital coins and tokens, requiring virtual-asset service providers to obtain government approval. Islamabad’s moves to adopt digital currency is a significant shift in policy, considering it had previously banned cryptocurrency transactions in 2018 citing financial risks and lack of regulation.

Last month, Pakistan signed a memorandum of understanding with a company affiliated with the World Liberty Financial, a crypto-based finance platform launched in September 2024 and linked to US President Donald Trump’s family. The agreement explores the use of a dollar-linked stablecoin for cross-border payments. 

Pakistan Senate’s Standing Committee on Cabinet approved the draft “Virtual Asset Act 2026” during a meeting on Wednesday. The bill relates to the Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority’s mandate (PVARA) and its power to issue licenses. 

“So under the new law, what will happen is that there will be an authority which already exists, the Pakistan Virtual Asset Regulatory Authority (PVARA), that will have the power to give licenses in which crypto coins can be issued, in which mining can be done, and they will be able to regulate the whole (crypto) market,“” Senator Dr. Afnan Ullah Khan, a member of the committee, told Arab News.

He said under the new law, PVARA will be able to check which company has the license to issue crypto coins and which ones can raise funds for this purpose.

When asked whether crypto trading will be legal in Pakistan after the bill passes in parliament, Dr. Afnan said the draft law will first be presented in the Senate and National Assembly for approval. After that, he said the president will sign it into law. 

“Then it will become legal,” Dr. Afnan said. “It will not take a few weeks, it will take maybe like a week.”

He added that major crypto coins such as Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP will be traded in Pakistan through crypto exchanges.

Dr. Afnan said the bill was analyzed by committee members, adding that the final draft was approved with the consent of all parties.

He said the law also caters to concerns on the use of cryptocurrency for money laundering and illegal purposes, adding that it also proposes fines for violations by licensees.

PVARA last year issued No Objection Certificates (NOCs) to two global crypto exchanges HTX and Binance. 

PVARA said the NOCs allow Binance and HTX to conduct preparatory and engagement activities within Pakistan under “defined regulatory oversight,” clarifying that it does not constitute a “full operating license.”