Just not cricket: how India-Pakistan tensions spill onto the pitch

India's Abhishek Sharma plays a shot during the Asia Cup cricket match between India and Pakistan at Dubai International Cricket Stadium, United Arab Emirates, on September 21, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 22 September 2025
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Just not cricket: how India-Pakistan tensions spill onto the pitch

  • Asia Cup tournament marks first meeting of cricket giants since their armies clashed in May this year
  • Cricketers from both countries exchanged heated words during latest India-Pakistan Super Four contest

NEW DELHI, India: India and Pakistan’s refusal to shake hands during their Asia Cup cricket matches bent the code of the so-called “gentleman’s game,” as sport once again served as a proxy battlefield.

The tournament marks the first meeting between the nuclear-armed neighbors since their armies clashed in May — a four-day exchange of artillery, drones and missiles that killed more than 70 people.

The sporting rivals do not play bilateral matches, meeting only at neutral venues during international tournaments.

The handshake snub is the latest example of how cricket mirrors politics between the two countries.

EYES DOWN

The cricket-mad neighbors have already met twice in the Asia Cup T20 tournament this month, played in the United Arab Emirates as a neutral venue.

On September 14, India captain Suryakumar Yadav said his refusal to shake hands with his Pakistani counterpart was “aligned with the government” — a move Pakistan said had “disappointed” them.

When they met again on September 21, neither side offered the traditional handshake. Both skippers kept their eyes and hands down after the toss.

The hostility did not stop there. Pakistan’s Sahibzada Farhan celebrated his half-century by using his bat like a gun, while his teammate Haris Rauf taunted the crowd by seemingly mimicking a plane crashing, an apparent reference to the Indian fighter jets that Pakistan said they shot down in May.

India won both games.

If both sides progress, they may meet in the September 28 final — and again in October when India co-hosts the Women’s World Cup, with that game played in Sri Lanka.

‘CRICKET FOR PEACE’

A love of cricket is one thing the two sides can agree on.

In 1987, Pakistan’s then military ruler Ziaul Haq stunned India with a surprise visit to a Test match in Jaipur.

The hastily arranged trip, dubbed “cricket for peace,” helped defuse a tense border standoff and saw Zia charm both fans and Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi.

In 2005, a match in New Delhi brought Pakistan’s then president Pervez Musharraf face-to-face with Indian leader Manmohan Singh.

PITCH GARDENING

In 1991, spade-wielding activists from India’s Hindu right-wing Shiv Sena party dug up the pitch at Mumbai’s Wankhede Stadium to prevent Pakistan’s cricket tour.

The scheduled one-day series was canceled.

Security fears forced Pakistan to call off two more tours in 1993 and 1994 before returning for the 1996 World Cup.

In 1999, Shiv Sena struck again, damaging the pitch at New Delhi’s Feroz Shah Kotla stadium ahead of a Test match, but authorities repaired it in time.

FANS EVICTED

A 1999 Test in Kolkata’s Eden Gardens descended into chaos after India’s Sachin Tendulkar was controversially run out following a collision with Pakistan’s Shoaib Akhtar.

Crowds erupted, chanting “cheat, cheat” and hurled water bottles at Akhtar, forcing officials to halt play.

Tendulkar’s pleas failed to calm the stands, thousands of fans were evicted, and Pakistan sealed victory in front of empty stands.

PAKISTAN BAN

Pakistani stars were a major draw in the Indian Premier League’s 2008 debut season, with Sohail Tanvir topping the wicket charts.

But after the Mumbai terror attacks that same year, carried out by Pakistan-based militants, Indian authorities barred players from across the border.

The ban remains in place, depriving Pakistan cricketers of the chance to play in the world’s most lucrative T20 league.


Justice Amin-Ud-Din Khan appointed Pakistan’s first Constitutional Court chief justice

Updated 13 November 2025
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Justice Amin-Ud-Din Khan appointed Pakistan’s first Constitutional Court chief justice

  • Federal Constitutional Court will now decide cases involving Pakistan’s constitution, instead of the Supreme Court
  • A top court judge since 2019, Justice Khan has decided thousands of civil cases relating to inheritance, property

ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari appointed top court judge Justice Amin-Ud-Din Khan as the first chief justice of the Federal Constitutional Court (FCC) on Thursday, a notification from the law ministry said. 

The FCC was formed after the government made sweeping changes to the military and judicial command structure via the 27th constitutional amendment. The new amendment shifts constitutional cases from the Supreme Court to the FCC while it grants expanded powers to Pakistan’s army chief. 

 “The President of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan is pleased to appoint Mr. Justice Amin-Ud-Din Khan as Chief Justice of the Federal Constitutional Court of Pakistan with effect from the date he makes oath of his office,” a notification from the law ministry read. 

According to the Supreme Court’s website, Justice Khan was born on Dec. 1, 1960 in the eastern city of Multan where he received his education from Kindergarten Muslim School. He completed his secondary education from the Government Muslim High School in 1977. 

He secured his bachelor’s degree in Philosophy in 1981 and completed his L.L.B degree from the University Law College in Multan in 1984 and also secured a diploma in Taxation Law.

Justice Khan obtained the license to practice in Pakistan’s lower courts in 1985 before enrolling as an advocate of the Lahore High Court in 1987. He was later enrolled as an advocate of the Supreme Court of Pakistan in 2001.

He was involved there in mostly civil cases relating to property, preemption and matters of inheritance. 

Justice Khan was elevated to the bench in 2011 and during his stint as judge, he decided thousands of civil cases the Bahawalpur Bench and Multan Bench of the Lahore High Court. 

He was elevated as a judge of the Supreme Court in 2019. 

His appointment to the post takes place hours after two Supreme Court judges, Justice Athar Minallah and Justice Mansoor Ali Shah, resigned in protest. 

The judges took exception to the 27th constitutional amendment, with Justice Shah describing it as a “grave assault” on the constitution. 

The FCC was set up after years of clashes between the executive and the judiciary. Verdicts issued by the top courts over the years ousted prime ministers from office and put the judiciary on a confrontational path with the governments at the time.