Pakistan cricket boss promises ‘good news’ about Champions Trophy amid hosting standoff

Pakistan cricket boss promises ‘good news’ about Champions Trophy amid hosting standoff
Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chairman Moshin Naqvi (left) calls on Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif in Lahore, Pakistan, on December 8, 2024. (PM Office)
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Updated 08 December 2024
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Pakistan cricket boss promises ‘good news’ about Champions Trophy amid hosting standoff

Pakistan cricket boss promises ‘good news’ about Champions Trophy amid hosting standoff
  • Doubts persist over whether tournament will take place in Pakistan after India’s refusal to send cricket team 
  • Media outlets say PCB, ICC have reached deal to adopt “hybrid” model for Champions Trophy tournament

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chairman Moshin Naqvi on Sunday promised the nation would receive “good news” about the upcoming Champions Trophy 2025 cricket tournament to be hosted by Pakistan, as a standoff with India, which has refused to send its cricket team to the country, persists. 

Pakistan is scheduled to host the Champions Trophy 2025 tournament from February to March 2025 in Lahore, Karachi and Islamabad. However, the fate of the tournament remains unclear after India refused to tour Pakistan last month due to political tensions between the two countries. 

Media outlets, however, have reported that after several rounds of discussions between the PCB and the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) and the International Cricket Council (ICC), the ICC and the PCB are believed to have reached an agreement to adopt the hybrid model for global tournaments being hosted in Pakistan or India until 2027.

Such an arrangement would allow the two to play their games at ICC tournaments being hosted by the other at a neutral venue.

“God willing, good news about the upcoming Champions Trophy will come out soon,” Naqvi said in a statement after meeting Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Sunday, as per the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO). 

Naqvi reiterated that Pakistan was “fully prepared” to host the tournament on its soil, adding that he wanted Pakistan and cricket to both win.

Sharif threw his support behind Naqvi, saying that he had represented all 240 million Pakistanis at a recent ICC meeting in Dubai regarding the Champions Trophy. 

“Pakistan’s respect comes first and then comes everything else,” Sharif was quoted as saying by the PMO. 

Political tensions between nuclear-armed neighbors India and Pakistan have restricted cultural exchanges and bilateral sports events between the two nations.

The two neighbors have fought three wars, two of them over the Muslim-majority Himalayan region of Kashmir, which they both claim in full but rule in part.

India’s national cricket team has not toured Pakistan since 2008 due to soured political relations between the two neighbors, who play each other only in global multi-team tournaments at neutral venues.

Pakistan hosted the Asia Cup last year but was forced to shift all of India’s matches to Sri Lanka under a hybrid model after India refused to send its team to Pakistan. 


Islamabad urges Tajikistan to explore new trade avenues, restore direct flights

Islamabad urges Tajikistan to explore new trade avenues, restore direct flights
Updated 04 November 2025
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Islamabad urges Tajikistan to explore new trade avenues, restore direct flights

Islamabad urges Tajikistan to explore new trade avenues, restore direct flights
  • Islamabad sees Tajikistan as gateway to Central Asia, Dushanbe views Islamabad as route to Arabian Sea
  • The two countries have lately stepped-up cooperation in trade, defense, energy and connectivity projects

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari has invited Tajikistan to explore new trade opportunities and consider restoring direct flights between the two countries, the state broadcaster reported on Monday.

The development came during President Zardari’s meeting with his Tajik counterpart Emomali Rahmon on the sidelines of the Second World Summit for Social Development in Qatar.

Islamabad sees Tajikistan as gateway to Central Asia while Dushanbe views Islamabad as a route to the Arabian Sea. Both countries have lately stepped-up cooperation in trade, defense, energy and connectivity projects such as CASA-1000.

President Zardari told his Tajik counterpart that Pakistan greatly values its multifaceted relationship with Tajikistan, rooted in shared history, culture and linguistic affinity.

“President Asif Ali Zardari has invited Tajikistan to explore new avenues of trade and connectivity through Pakistan, including the possibility of restoration of direct flights,” the Radio Pakistan broadcaster said in its report.

Zardari also welcomed the resumption of work on the CASA-1000 project, which was launched in 2016 and aims to enable Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan to export surplus electricity to Pakistan and Afghanistan during summer months.

In October, Pakistan and Tajikistan pledged early operationalization of the $1.2 billion Western-backed project to build a power line between Central Asia and South Asia. The project initially meant to allow the export of electricity to Afghanistan and Pakistan by 2020 but has been stalled for years by turmoil in Afghanistan.

Zardari also accepted President Rahmon’s invitation to visit Tajikistan.

Pakistan and Tajikistan, both members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, also concluded a joint counterterrorism exercise in August. Both countries have strengthened security cooperation in recent years to combat militancy and cross-border crime.