Cricket World Cup for blind women helps change attitudes

Pakistan's captain Nimra Rafique (right) plays a shot during the Women’s Blind Twenty20 World Cup 2025 match between India and Pakistan at the BOI Cricket Stadium in Katunayake on November 16, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 22 November 2025
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Cricket World Cup for blind women helps change attitudes

  • The semifinals are on Saturday between India and Australia and Pakistan and Nepal, followed by the final on Sunday
  • Chaminda Karunaratne, a blind Sri Lankan player, says cricket is a way to prove blindness cannot impede his ambitions

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka: On a lush cricket ground outside Colombo the sharp jingling of a ball cuts through the afternoon air. Every rattle is a pushback against the stigma of disability.

Sri Lanka and India are co-hosting the first T20 World Cup for visually impaired women.

The semifinals are on Saturday between India and Australia and Pakistan and Nepal, followed by the final on Sunday.
India manager Shika Shetty told AFP that the sport has transformed lives and helped change attitudes.

“I think this (world cup) is one of the biggest opportunities for our visually impaired girls,” said Shetty, who is not blind.
India captain T.C. Deepika recalled the disbelief she faced when she first picked up the bat.

“People were saying, ‘How do they do it? They must be lying,’” she said in a video posted by the Cricket Association for the Blind in India.

“(Later) they realized I can do something. People began to see that I have ability,” Deepika added.

PLAYING BY THE EAR

While able-bodied cricket requires players to keep an eye on the ball at all times, blind players must have sharp ears.

The white plastic ball, the size of a tennis ball, is packed with ball bearings that rattle as it rolls.

The bowler must ask the striker if he or she is ready and then yell “play” as the jingling ball is delivered underarm with at least one bounce.

Like a regular cricket match, each side has 11 players, but at least four must be totally blind. They are required to wear blindfolds for fairness.

Fielders clap once to reveal their positions.

Others are partially sighted, classified by how far they can see — two meters for B2 players, six for B3.

Each team can have up to eight B1, or totally blind, players. Any run scored by a B1 player is counted as two.

‘LIBERATING’

Chaminda Karunaratne says cricket has been both a refuge and a way to prove that blindness cannot impede his sporting ambitions.

The blind 40-year-old Sri Lankan school teacher has represented his country in international tournaments and now wants women to share that space.

“Cricket has done wonders, especially for my mental health,” Karunaratne said as the Indian and Pakistan women’s teams battled it out on the ground.

“When you get into a sport like this it boosts your self-confidence, you can move more freely and you tend to take part in community activities,” he said.

“That is liberating.”

Karunaratne, a key member of the Sri Lanka Cricket Association for the Visually Handicapped, added: “I appeal to parents to send their blind girls to take up cricket. It is an opportunity to interact with others.”

“You can show that you are not helpless, not dependent,” he said.

Association president Sudesh Tharanga admitted forming a women’s team had been a challenge, although nearly a million Sri Lankans are estimated to have some form of visual impediment.

“We started assembling a team only after we were asked in September if we could co-host the T20 tournament in November,” Tharanga told AFP.

Despite limited preparations Sri Lanka managed to field one of the tournament’s youngest squads.
 


On Qatar’s National Day, Pakistan hails Doha as global ‘emissary of peace’

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On Qatar’s National Day, Pakistan hails Doha as global ‘emissary of peace’

  • PM says Pakistan stood with Qatar after Israeli airstrike, notes Doha backed Islamabad during May conflict with India
  • Doha has recently facilitated de-escalation talks between Pakistan and Afghanistan after border clashes this year

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday praised Qatar as one of the region’s most active diplomatic mediators, calling Doha an “emissary of peace” during an address at a ceremony to mark Qatar’s National Day in Islamabad.

Sharif’s remarks come after Qatar led negotiations aimed at easing the Gaza conflict, working with nations like the United States to reach a ceasefire and secure humanitarian pauses and prisoner exchanges. Doha also facilitated de-escalation talks between Pakistan and Afghanistan after border clashes earlier this year, underscoring its growing role as a crisis mediator across the region.

Pakistan has also aligned closely with Qatar in recent months. Sharif visited Doha in a show of solidarity after Israel’s airstrikes on the country in September, while Qatar publicly supported Pakistan during a brief military conflict with India in May, which Islamabad has highlighted as evidence of a deepening two-way partnership.

“Pakistan deeply appreciates Qatar’s distinguished and long-standing role as the emissary of peace, a nation that has repeatedly opened doors for dialogue, helped defuse tensions, and encouraged reconciliation with the noble aim of fostering peace and stability in the region and beyond,” Sharif said during his National Day address. 

He described Qatar as a “brotherly country of Pakistan” with “very strong fraternal and friendly relations,” noting that bilateral engagement spans energy security, defense cooperation, trade and investment. More than 150,000 Pakistanis live and work in Qatar, contributing to its economy and remitting income back home, while Qatari investments in Pakistan’s real estate, infrastructure and renewable energy sectors have expanded.

Sharif said he had traveled to Doha twice this year, first to convey Pakistan’s solidarity after the Israeli airstrike on Doha on September 9, 2025, and again for the Arab-Islamic Summit, and stressed that Islamabad stands “shoulder-to-shoulder” with Doha in pursuit of regional stability.