At least 24 killed in separate road crashes in Pakistan

A truck lies overturned in the dry Ghalapur Bangla canal after an accident in Sargodha, Pakistan, on January 17, 2026. (Facebook/@VoiceOfSargodhaReal)
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Updated 17 January 2026
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At least 24 killed in separate road crashes in Pakistan

  • A truck carrying passengers fell into a dry canal near Sargodha at a time of low visibility to fog, killing 14 people
  • 10 others, including a young girl, were killed after a passenger bus overturned in the southwestern Balochistan province

ISLAMABAD: At least 24 people were killed in two separate road crashes in Pakistan’s Punjab and Balochistan provinces, officials and state media reported on Saturday.

In the first incident, a truck carrying passengers fell into a dry canal near Sargodha at a time of low visibility on road due to fog, according to Rescue 1122 officials.

“At least fourteen people have died in the fog-related traffic accident,” the Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported.

Nine others sustained injuries in the crash.

Dense fog is a recurring hazard on Pakistan’s highways during the winter months, particularly across Punjab and parts of Sindh, where poor visibility often leads to serious road accidents.

But fog is not the only reason behind these crashes as some of the incidents have also resulted from speeding and reckless driving, poor awareness of traffic rules, overloading and weak enforcement of laws.

In the second incident, a passenger bus en route to Jiwani from Karachi overturned near Ormara in the Balochistan province, according to Edhi rescue service

“Ten people, including a young girl, have died as a result of overturning of the passenger coach,” said Faisal Edhi, who heads the Edhi rescue service. “An Edhi mobile morgue has been dispatched to transport the bodies to Karachi.”

Fatal road accidents are common in Pakistan, where traffic rules are rarely followed while such incidents are particularly common in Pakistan’s mountainous Balochistan province where single carriage roads connect various cities while local bus drivers usually avoid traffic rules and speed limit on national highways. 

On Friday, at least five people were killed in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province after a vehicle transporting smuggled Iranian oil hit another vehicle coming from the opposite direction, a police official said. The collision occurred in the Washuk district that borders Iran.


Babar Azam dropped for scoring too slowly, says Pakistan coach Hesson

Updated 20 February 2026
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Babar Azam dropped for scoring too slowly, says Pakistan coach Hesson

  • Shaheen Shah Afridi was left out after conceding 101 runs in three matches
  • Pakistan will now face New Zealand in the opening match of the second phase

COLOMBO: Batting great Babar Azam was dropped for Pakistan’s final T20 World Cup group game against Namibia for scoring too slowly, said head coach Mike Hesson on Friday.

Azam, who is the highest run-scorer in T20 international history with 4,571 runs, was left out for the must-win game against Namibia as Pakistan racked up 199-3 and secured a place in the Super Eights by 102 runs.

The 2009 champions face New Zealand in Colombo on Saturday in the opening match of the second phase.

“I think Babar is well aware that his strike rate in the power play in the World Cup is less than 100 and that’s clearly not the role we think we need,” Hesson told reporters after Pakistan’s final practice session on Friday was washed out by rain.

Pakistan left out Azam for the same reason at last year’s Asia Cup and even after dismal showing in the Big Bash League, he was still selected for the T20 World Cup.

“We brought Babar back in for a specific role post the Asia Cup,” said Hesson.

“We’ve got plenty of other options who can come in and perform that role toward the end.

“Babar is actually the first to acknowledge that.

“He knows that he’s got a certain set of skills that the team requires and there are certain times where other players can perform that role more efficiently.”

Hesson also defended dropping pace spearhead Shaheen Shah Afridi after he conceded 101 runs in three matches, including 31 in two overs against India.

“We made a call that Salman Mirza was coming in for Shaheen, and he bowled incredibly well,” said Hesson.

“To be fair, he was probably really unlucky to not be playing the second and third games.”

Hesson was wary of Pakistan’s opponents on Saturday.

“New Zealand have played a huge amount in the subcontinent in recent times so we have to play at our best.”