Rohit Sharma to captain India in Pakistan-hosted Champions Trophy

Indian cricket captain Rohit Sharma holds the trophy as he greets fans during an open bus roadshow in Mumbai on July 4, 2024, after winning the ICC men's Twenty20 World Cup in Barbados. (AFP/File)
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Updated 08 July 2024
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Rohit Sharma to captain India in Pakistan-hosted Champions Trophy

  • Sharma, 37, helped India to their second T20 title last month after beating South Africa in final
  • ODI Champions Trophy is scheduled to be held in February and March 2025 in Pakistan

NEW DELHI: Rohit Sharma will stay on as captain of India’s Test and one-day teams, the country’s cricket board said, after he ended his T20 international career with a World Cup triumph.

Senior batsman Rohit led India to the T20 title last month, ending the cricket-mad nation’s global trophy drought since the 2013 Champions Trophy.

Rohit, 37, Virat Kohli, 35, and Ravindra Jadeja, 35, announced their T20 exit after the win over South Africa in the final in Barbados.

It was also the last match for outgoing coach Rahul Dravid.

“After this victory, the next stage is the 2025 WTC (World Test Championship) final and the Champions Trophy,” Jay Shah, secretary of the Board of Control for Cricket in India, said in a video message.

“I am truly confident that we will win both the tournaments under the leadership of Rohit Sharma.”

Shah praised the trio of veteran players, as well as Dravid.

“This was our third final in the last one year,” Shah said, referring to the ODI World Cup and the World Test Championship.

The ODI Champions Trophy is scheduled to be held in February and March 2025 in Pakistan, a nation which India has refused to tour in recent times due to political tensions.

The World Test Championship cycle will end in June 2025 with the final at Lord’s in London.

India have twice finished runners-up in the Test championship, losing the final to Australia last year.

Rohit’s India also lost the ODI final to Australia at home in 2023.

Rohit took over the captaincy of the white-ball team in 2021 and became the all-format leader a year later.


Pakistan says 41 suspected militants killed in operations in restive Balochistan province

Updated 30 January 2026
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Pakistan says 41 suspected militants killed in operations in restive Balochistan province

  • Military says intelligence-based raids carried out in Harnai and Panjgur districts
  • Islamabad repeats claim militants backed by New Delhi, an allegation India denies

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani security forces killed 41 suspected militants in two separate intelligence-based operations in the southwestern province of Balochistan, the military said on Thursday, alleging the fighters were linked to India. 

The operations were carried out in the districts of Harnai and Panjgur in Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest but least developed province and home to a long running separatist insurgency that frequently targets security personnel, government infrastructure and non-local residents.

“On 29 January 2026, 41 terrorists belonging to Indian proxy, Fitna al Khwarij and Fitna al Hindustan, were killed in two separate operations in Balochistan,” the military’s media wing, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), said in a statement.

According to the ISPR, 30 militants were killed in Harnai district following a “heavy exchange of fire,” during which security forces also destroyed a cache of recovered weapons and explosives.

In a separate intelligence-based operation in Panjgur district, the military said 11 additional suspected militants were killed after security forces raided a hideout.

“Besides weapons and ammunition, looted money from bank robbery in Panjgur on 15 December 2025 were also recovered from the killed terrorists,” the statement said.
“The terrorists were involved in numerous terrorist activities in the past.”

Pakistan’s military and government frequently use the terms “Fitna al Khwarij” and “Fitna al Hindustan” to describe militant groups it associates with the Pakistani Taliban and alleged Indian support.

The ISPR said follow-up “sanitization operations” were underway to eliminate any remaining militants in the area, describing them as “Indian-sponsored terrorists.”

Islamabad has repeatedly accused India of backing separatist groups in Balochistan to destabilize Pakistan, an allegation New Delhi denies.

Earlier this month, Pakistan’s counterterrorism police said they killed five militants planning attacks on security forces and an attempt to block the Quetta–Sibi highway, a key transport route. On Jan. 25, the military also reported killing three militants, including a local commander, in an intelligence-based operation in Panjgur.

Balochistan is strategically important due to its vast mineral resources and its role as a transit corridor for the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a multibillion-dollar infrastructure initiative linking Pakistan with China.

Separatist groups such as the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) accuse Islamabad of exploiting the province’s natural resources without fair local benefit, a claim the government rejects.