Tajikistan thrash Pakistan 3-0 in FIFA World Cup qualifier 

Tajikistan's Kamolov Amadoni (L) controls a ball during the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualifier football match between Pakistan and Tajikistan at the Jinnah Sports stadium in Islamabad on November 21, 2023.
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Updated 11 June 2024
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Tajikistan thrash Pakistan 3-0 in FIFA World Cup qualifier 

  • Flight delays meant Pakistan’s football team reached Dushanbe hours before kick off
  • Mabateshoev Shervoni, Safarov Manuche and Vahdat Hanonov score for Tajikistan

ISLAMABAD: Tajikistan beat Pakistan 3-0 when the two sides met in the second round of the FIFA football World Cup qualifiers in Dushanbe on Tuesday, putting an end to a disappointing campaign by the green shirts. 

The South Asian team lost to the Saudi football team 4-0 in the first leg of the qualifying matches when they faced off in Al Ahsa in November 2023. Later, Pakistan suffered another setback in round one of the qualifiers when they lost 6-1 to Tajikistan in Islamabad days after losing to Saudi Arabia. 

On June 6, Saudi Arabia beat Pakistan 3-0 at the Jinnah Football Stadium in Islamabad in second round of the qualifiers. 

“Tajikistan has defeated Pakistan 3-0 in Pakistan’s last away match,” the PFF said in a statement. 

Tajik footballer Mabateshoev Shervoni drew first blood in the 35th minute of the match when he netted a goal. Safarov Manuche made it 2-0 for Tajikistan in the 65th minute before Vahdat Hanonov made all chances of a Pakistan comeback futile in the 70th minute by netting a third. 

Pakistan are bottom-placed in Group G of the FIFA World Cup qualifiers and already out of the race to qualify for the third round of the FIFA World Cup qualifying matches after losing four matches on the trot.

Apart from Saudi Arabia, the other two teams with Pakistan in Group G are Jordan and Tajikistan. In the second round of the qualifiers, a total of 36 football squads have been split into nine groups with four teams each. The winners and runners-up from each group would go through to the third round.

Pakistan’s football team arrived in Tajikistan via a special air force flight on Tuesday afternoon due to flight delays, hours before the match was due to begin. 

The team’s earlier scheduled flight for Tajikistan was halted “due to technical issues,” the Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) had said on Monday.

Pakistan squad:

Goalkeepers: Yousuf Butt (D), Saqib Hanif and Hassan Ali

Defenders: Abdullah Iqbal (D), Mohammad Fazal (D), Haseeb Khan, Rao Omer Hayat, Mamoon Moosa, Mohammad Saddam, Waqar Ihtisham, Moin Ahmed and Abdul Rehman

Midfielders: Rahis Nabi (D), Otis Khan (D), Ali Uzair, Umair Ali, Toqeer ul Hassan, Alamgir Ghazi and Ali Zafar

Forwards: Imran Kayani (D), McKeal Abdulah, Fareedulah, Adeel Younas and Shayak Dost


Pakistan’s top military commander hails Saudi defense pact as ‘historic’ at scholars’ conference

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Pakistan’s top military commander hails Saudi defense pact as ‘historic’ at scholars’ conference

  • Asim Munir says Pakistan has a unique bond with the Kingdom, citing the ‘honor’ of helping safeguard the holy sites
  • He says only the state can declare jihad, urging religious scholars to counter extremist narratives and promote unity

ISLAMABAD: Chief of Defense Staff Field Marshal Asim Munir on Wednesday described the country’s joint security pact with Saudi Arabia as a “historic” milestone, telling a gathering of religious scholars that Pakistan and the kingdom share a deep strategic relationship.

Signed in September, the Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement has solidified decades of Saudi–Pakistan defense cooperation, covering intelligence-sharing, counterterrorism and regional stability.

The two nations have long coordinated on defense matters, with Pakistani military personnel deployed in the Kingdom.

“The defense agreement [with Saudi Arabia] is historic,” he said in an address to the conference in the federal capital.

The top military commander said Pakistan regarded its connection with the Kingdom as unique.

“Among all Muslim countries, Allah has given Pakistan the honor of helping safeguard the Haramain,” he continued, referring to the two holiest sites of Islam in Makkah and Madinah.

Munir used his speech to warn against extremism, saying that under the Islamic framework, only the state could declare jihad, a pointed reference to groups such as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which claims to act in the name of religion while carrying out attacks on civilians and security forces.

“When nations abandon knowledge and the pen, disorder takes hold,” he said, urging the religious scholars to help keep society unified and to “broaden the nation’s vision.”

Munir also criticized India, describing “terrorism” as “India’s habit, not Pakistan’s.”

His remarks came months after a four-day military confrontation in May, during which the two nuclear-armed neighbors exchanged artillery and missile fire and deployed drones and fighter jets.

India blamed Pakistan for a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir before launching a missile attack. Islamabad denied involvement and called for an international probe.

Pakistan claimed it had shot down six Indian fighter jets before a US-brokered ceasefire took effect.

“We do not hide when confronting the enemy,” Munir said. “We challenge openly.”