Pakistan say aiming to finish ICC Test Championship 2023-25 on ‘winning note’

Pakistan’s Test captain, Shan Masood, is addressing a pre-match press conference between Pakistan and West Indies in Multan on January 16, 2025. (Pakistan Cricket Board)
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Updated 16 January 2025
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Pakistan say aiming to finish ICC Test Championship 2023-25 on ‘winning note’

  • West Indies will play a Test match in Pakistan for first time since December 2006
  • They are currently positioned at bottom of the ICC World Test Championship table

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will aim to finish the ICC World Test Championship 2023-25 on a winning note when they face West Indies in the two-match Test series commencing at the Multan Cricket Stadium from Jan. 17, the Pakistan Cricket Board said on Thursday. 

West Indies, who will play a Test match in Pakistan for the first time since December 2006, are currently positioned at the bottom of the ICC World Test Championship table. In the last Test series between the two sides on Pakistan soil, PCB Hall of Famer Inzamam-ul-Haq led the home side to a 2-0 win in three-match Test series.

Pakistan and West Indies last faced each other in the red-ball format in 2021 in West Indies, where the two-match series was levelled 1-1.

Pakistan under the leadership of Shan Masood will be looking to win their second consecutive home series after they defeated England 2-1 in October last year.

“This is our last Test series in the current ICC World Test Championship cycle, and we would like to finish it on a winning note. Every match in this format holds great importance, and we are committed to giving it our all to end the campaign with a memorable series win,” Shan Masood, Pakistan’s Test captain, said. 

“West Indies are a decent side with a lot of talented players. They bring a unique style to the game, and we know they will push us hard. Test cricket is about adapting to challenges, and as a team, we are prepared to respond to whatever comes our way.

“The series win against England at home has given us a lot of confidence and momentum. We are fully focused on putting in strong performances and carrying forward that winning attitude.”

West Indies’ Test Captain Kraigg Brathwaite said the team was a “very excited” to be in Pakistan. 

“I personally had never come to Pakistan before and probably the majority of players are also touring for the first time and we are really looking forward to doing well in the series. Pakistan are a strong side at home, so we look forward to doing well in these conditions,” Brathwaite was quoted as saying in a statement shared by PCB.

“Our team’s performance will be quite crucial here, and obviously putting runs on the board is important but taking 20 wickets will be the key to win the Test match.

“Our preparations are going well, we had few days in Islamabad where we played a practice game which went quite good for us as a group and we had our sessions here in Multan which were helpful as well.”

Pakistan’s 15-member squad has undergone three days of extensive training, while the Brathwaite-led side practiced for two days at the Multan Cricket Stadium. The touring side also featured in a three-day warm-up game against Pakistan Shaheens at the Islamabad Club in Islamabad last week.

The home side squad comprises of three uncapped players – Kashif Ali (right-arm fast bowler), Mohammad Huraira (right-handed batter) and Rohail Nazir (wicketkeeper-batter), while Abrar Ahmed, Imam-ul-Haq, Mohammad Ali and Sajid Khan have been recalled to the side.

Abrar and Sajid require 11 and six wickets, respectively to complete their 50 Test wickets each.

Pakistan squad:

Shan Masood (captain), Saud Shakeel (vice-captain), Abrar Ahmed, Babar Azam, Imam-ul-Haq, Kamran Ghulam, Kashif Ali, Khurram Shahzad, Mohammad Ali, Mohammad Huraira, Mohammad Rizwan (wicketkeeper/batter), Noman Ali, Rohail Nazir (wicketkeeper/batter), Sajid Khan, and Salman Ali Agha.

West Indies 12 for the 1st Test:

Kraigg Brathwaite (captain), Alick Athanaze, Amir Jangoo (wicket-keeper), Gudakesh Motie, Jayden Seales, Jomel Warrican, Justin Greaves, Kavem Hodge, Keacy Carty, Kevin Sinclair, Mikyle Louis and Tevin Imlach

Also, part of the squad but not considered for selection in the first Test:

Anderson Phillip, Joshua Da Silva (vice-captain) and Kemar Roach


Firefighter killed in Karachi blaze leaves family to mourn second generation lost in line of duty

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Firefighter killed in Karachi blaze leaves family to mourn second generation lost in line of duty

  • Father of fallen firefighter also died in service years earlier, leaving family to mourn second line-of-duty death
  • Chronic shortages of fire engines, protective gear and trained staff strain Karachi’s emergency response

KARACHI: When flames tore through Karachi’s Gul Plaza last weekend, 29-year-old firefighter Furqan Shaukat moved deeper into the burning building as its structure weakened, responding to calls for help from inside moments before the plaza collapsed.

The category-three fire gutted around 1,200 shops in one of Karachi’s busiest commercial districts, killed scores of people and left dozens missing. It also exposed, once again, the extreme risks faced by firefighters in Pakistan’s largest city, particularly when battling intense blazes inside sealed commercial structures built with little regard for safety standards.

Karachi, home to more than 20 million people, operates with just over 20 fire stations and an estimated 120–140 fire tenders, many of them aging or partially functional, according to figures cited by the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation and provincial officials over the years. The city’s fire brigade is believed to have fewer than 2,000 firefighters, far below international benchmarks for a megacity of its size, with no citywide hydrant system and chronic shortages of modern protective gear.

“We are told that someone shouted from inside [the building], saying, ‘Save me,’” Shaukat’s brother Muhammad Nauman told Arab News. “Many people were standing outside, but it was him who said, ‘No, I have to save this man.’”

For Shaukat’s family, the loss is not a single tragedy, but the second in a line of service stretching across generations.

Born into a household tied to Karachi’s Fire Brigade, Shaukat followed his father into a profession defined by danger and limited protection. His father served for 35 years, was paralyzed on duty, and later died while still in service in 2018.

“Furqan was my youngest brother,” his sister Shumaila Shaukat said, struggling to contain her grief. “He was very talented, good and intelligent.”

“Since childhood, he had a passion for helping people,” she added. “We didn’t know that our brother would pass away so soon.”

Shaukat had joined the Karachi Fire Brigade just three years ago and was the youngest member of his team. He leaves behind a young widow and an infant son, Muhammad Rahim.

“Furqan wanted to make him [Rahim] a lawyer,” Shumaila said. “I will teach him law.”

SEALED INFERNOS

Fires inside enclosed commercial buildings like Gul Plaza are among the most dangerous scenarios firefighters face anywhere in the world. In Karachi, those dangers are magnified by overcrowded markets, illegal structural modifications, poor access routes and the absence of sprinkler systems, fire exits and heat-resistant materials.

Compounding those risks is the lack of equipment. Fire officials and court submissions have repeatedly pointed to shortages of breathing apparatus, fire-resistant suits, thermal imaging cameras and high-rise rescue training, leaving firefighters to confront extreme heat and toxic smoke with minimal protection.

On the night of the fire, Shaukat’s family remained awake, tracking updates and waiting anxiously.

“We were all restless that night,” Nauman recalled. “We knew he was in the fire, and we were all worried.”

Veteran fire officer Wajid Ali, who was working alongside Shaukat, said he spoke to him shortly before the collapse.

“He told me to be careful … I told him, ‘You do the same as you are young and a newcomer,’” Ali said.

As the blaze intensified and the building’s integrity failed, Ali said Shaukat attempted to retreat.

“When the building collapsed his team ran away,” he said. “Furqan also tried to run but stumbled and fell. The debris fell all over him and he died because of that.”

His injuries reflected both the intensity of the fire and the lack of protective equipment.

“His entire back was burned. His face was burned. His hands were burned. His entire body was burned,” Nauman said, rejecting claims circulating online that firefighters had been idle during the operation.

Nauman said Shaukat and his colleagues were confronting a modern, high-risk blaze without the gear such conditions demand.

“Firefighters must care about their safety,” he said. “As I told you they should get a [protective] suit as we saw Furqan going inside in a uniform only.”

“What safety did he have,” he asked. “Furqan would not have burned so badly if he had some safety. Give them the equipment they need.”

Ali said fires like Gul Plaza increasingly fall into the most dangerous category, requiring specialized training, protective suits and breathing equipment, resources firefighters in Pakistan often lack.

Karachi Chief Fire Officer Muhammad Humayun Khan said negligence in basic fire-safety measures continues to fuel deadly blazes across the city.

“If you are doing a business, then try to get a fire extinguisher or get some consultancy, there is no harm in that,” he said.

For Shaukat’s family, however, the policy failures and structural weaknesses translate into something deeply personal.

“We lost our little hero,” Shumaila said. “He left the world, but he will always be with us.”