Nawaz hat-trick helps Pakistan down Afghanistan in tri-series final in Sharjah

Nawaz hat-trick helps Pakistan down Afghanistan in tri-series final in Sharjah
Pakistan’s team pose with the trophy after winning the T20 international cricket match against Afghanistan in Sharjah, UAE, on September 7, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 07 September 2025
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Nawaz hat-trick helps Pakistan down Afghanistan in tri-series final in Sharjah

Nawaz hat-trick helps Pakistan down Afghanistan in tri-series final in Sharjah
  • Afghan captain Rashid Khan took three wickets to help restrict Pakistan to 141-8, with Fakhar Zaman top-scoring with 27
  • Nawaz picked up 5-19 in total, his best figures in T20Is, as Pakistan skittled Afghanistan out for just 66 in 15.5 overs

SHARJAH: Pakistan laid down a marker ahead of the Asia Cup as Mohammad Nawaz took a hat-trick in a 75-run win over Afghanistan in their tri-series final in Sharjah on Sunday.

Nawaz picked up 5-19 in total — his best figures in T20 internationals — as Pakistan skittled Afghanistan out for 66 in 15.5 overs while defending a modest 142-run target on a tricky pitch.

Afghan captain Rashid Khan took three wickets to help restrict Pakistan to 141-8, with Fakhar Zaman top-scoring with 27.

Nawaz dismissed Darwish Rasooli and Azmatullah Omarzai off successive deliveries for ducks and then removed Ibrahim Zadran for nine off the first ball of his next over to complete a hat-trick.




Pakistan’s players celebrate after taking the wicket of Afghanistan’s Ibrahim Zadran during the T20 international cricket match against Afghanistan in Sharjah, UAE, on September 7, 2025. (AFP)

Nawaz became the third Pakistani bowler after Faheem Ashraf and Mohammad Hasnain to achieve the feat in T20Is.

Rashid (17) and Sediqullah Atal (13) were the only batters to reach double figures as Afghanistan recorded their second lowest total in T20Is, behind their 56 all out against South Africa in last year’s World Cup semifinals.

Earlier, Pakistan, who won the toss and batted, also struggled against spin.




Pakistan’s Fakhar Zaman plays a shot during the T20 international cricket match against Afghanistan in Sharjah, UAE, on September 7, 2025. (AFP)

Nawaz made a 21-ball 25 with two sixes while skipper Salman Agha labored to a 27-ball 24.

Zaman added 49 for the second wicket with Saim Ayub (17) after opener Sahibzada Farhan fell off the third ball of the match for a duck.

Rashid dismissed Zaman in his first over and then accounted for Hasan Nawaz (15) and Agha, but only after his opposite number struck him for two sixes.




Afghanistan’s Rashid Khan (center) celebrate after taking the wicket of Pakistan’s Fakhar Zaman during the T20 international cricket match against Pakistan in Sharjah, UAE, on September 7, 2025. (AFP)

Afghanistan next open their Asia Cup campaign on Tuesday against Hong Kong in a Group B clash in Abu Dhabi.

Sri Lanka and Bangladesh are the other two teams in their group. Pakistan will face arch-rivals India, Oman and the United Arab Emirates in Group A.


Pakistan deputy PM says will soon table 27th constitutional amendment in parliament

Pakistan deputy PM says will soon table 27th constitutional amendment in parliament
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Pakistan deputy PM says will soon table 27th constitutional amendment in parliament

Pakistan deputy PM says will soon table 27th constitutional amendment in parliament
  • Key proposals include creating constitutional courts, removing protection for provinces’ share in federal resources, and returning education and population to center
  • Analysts say the Pakistan Peoples Party, a key coalition partner in the federal government that has voiced its opposition to the 27th amendment, has little choice but to back it

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said on Tuesday that the government will soon table the much-discussed 27th constitutional amendment in parliament, amid concerns that it could undermine provincial autonomy.

Constitutional amendments in Pakistan require a two-third majority in both houses of parliament and have historically been used to redefine the balance of power between the legislature, judiciary and provinces. The proposed 27th amendment follows the 26th amendment passed in October 2024, which empowered parliament to appoint the Supreme Court chief justice for a fixed term and created a panel of senior judges to hear constitutional cases, a move critics said weakened judicial independence.

Pakistan’s constitution, adopted in 1973, has been amended more than two dozen times, often reflecting the country’s shifting balance among civilian governments, the military and the judiciary. Provisions such as the National Finance

Commission (NFC) award, which governs how federal revenue is shared among provinces, are especially sensitive because they underpin Pakistan’s federal structure and provincial autonomy.

In a post on X on Monday, Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, a major coalition partner, said Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) had approached his party, seeking support in passing the amendment. He said the proposals included creating constitutional courts, restoring executive magistrates, amending Article 243, which defines the command and control of the armed forces, removing protection for provinces’ share in the NFC award and returning education and population planning to the federation.

“Of course, the government is bringing it and will bring it... the 27th amendment will arrive... We will try that it be tabled in accordance with principles, laws and the Constitution,” Dar said in the Senate, the upper house of parliament, adding that the draft amendment would undergo robust debate.

“The government does not have reservations on anything. It is not the case that the amendment is tabled and there is voting on it in a haphazard, ad hoc manner; this will not happen.”

The PPP, a key coalition partner in the federal government that has long claimed credit for spearheading the 18th amendment in 2010, considers it one of its signature democratic achievements. That amendment had significantly strengthened provincial autonomy, devolved several ministries and given provinces a larger share in national resources.

Senator Raza Rabbani, a senior PPP member and one of the architects of the 18th amendment, warned that any attempt to revisit the provincial autonomy will “cast deep shadows over the federation.”

He said the proposed amendment amounted to “a rollback of the 18th amendment” and could reignite divisive nationalist sentiments, arguing that reviving devolved ministries would place an unnecessary financial burden on the federal government that is already struggling to manage its fiscal affairs.

“If Islamabad cannot manage its finances, then let the provinces collect taxes and contribute to federal expenditures through the Council of Common Interests,” he said, cautioning that undoing fiscal devolution would be “counter to the principle of participatory federalism.”

PPP UNLIKELY TO ‘RESIST’ AMENDMENT

Political observers remain skeptical about the PPP’s ability to oppose the amendment.

Lahore-based analyst Salman Ghani said that while the party may protest publicly, it is unlikely to “resist” the amendment in parliament.

“This is happening with 100 percent consent,” he said, adding the PPP was not in a position to say “no” to the amendment which gives more powers to the center.

“During the 18th amendment, the PPP was strong and confident. Today, the balance of power is different. The center needs more resources, and the PPP is in no position to challenge it.”

Ghani believed that the amendment would pass easily in the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament, wherein the ruling PML-N already has the required numbers. “But in the Senate, the government, will need support from the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam–Fazl,” he said. “In the end, the PPP will accept the bitter pill because they are part of this system and cannot afford confrontation.”

Fazil Jamili, a Karachi-based analyst, agreed with Ghani, saying that political parties were not in a position to “resist.”

Calling the proposal “detrimental to democracy,” Jamili said the 27th amendment, as outlined by Bhutto-Zardari, would “certainly roll back the 18th amendment” and erode provincial autonomy and public trust.

“Around the world, federal governments are devolving powers. We are doing the opposite,” he said. “That’s not healthy for democracy in the long run.”