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Pakistan begins Asia Cup with 93-run win over Oman in Dubai

Pakistan begins Asia Cup with 93-run win over Oman in Dubai
Pakistan's Mohammad Haris plays a shot during the Asia Cup 2025 Twenty20 international cricket match between Oman and Pakistan at the Dubai International Stadium in Dubai on September 12, 2025. (AFP)
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Pakistan begins Asia Cup with 93-run win over Oman in Dubai

Pakistan begins Asia Cup with 93-run win over Oman in Dubai
  • Pakistan piled up 160-7 and bowled Oman out for 67 to seal an opening win in the Asia Cup
  • Pakistan will next faces arch-rival India on Sunday in the tournament’s marquee T20 clash

DUBAI: Pakistan thumped Oman by 93 runs to begin its Asia Cup campaign thanks to Mohammad Haris’ 66 off 43 balls at Dubai International Stadium on Friday.

Pakistan scored 160-7 after opting to bat and Oman was bundled out for 67 in 16.4 overs.

Haris struck seven fours and three sixes on his way to 50 off 32 balls.

Pakistan takes on India in the Twenty20 tournament’s most high profile clash on Sunday at the same venue.

Haris crossed the 20-run mark in T20s for the first time in 12 innings. His best in 11 innings prior was 15 against Afghanistan in the preceding tri-series. He was 107 not out in June against Bangladesh at Lahore.

Opener Shahibzada Farhan (29) and Haris put on 85 off 64 balls to drive the innings.

Saim Ayub was out for a golden duck, as was skipper Salman Agha, both falling to left-arm spinner Aamir Kaleem.

Kaleem also bowled Haris in the 13th over and finished with 3-31 in four overs — his career best against a full ICC member.

Fakhar Zaman hit 23 not out off 16 balls and Mohammad Nawaz scored 19 off 10 balls to help Pakistan pass 150. It lost its last five wickets for 56 runs in seven overs.

In a chase that never got going, Hammad Mirza top-scored for Oman with 27 off 23 balls.

Oman collapsed from 41-2 to 51-9, losing seven wickets for 10 runs across 34 deliveries. The innings ended in the 17th over, with the last pair adding 16 runs.

Spinners Saim Ayub and Suyiyan Muqeem, and medium pacer Faheem Ashraf shared six wickets across seven overs in the rout.


Karachi rare riverine floods expose unchecked urban expansion, weak planning

Karachi rare riverine floods expose unchecked urban expansion, weak planning
Updated 28 min ago

Karachi rare riverine floods expose unchecked urban expansion, weak planning

Karachi rare riverine floods expose unchecked urban expansion, weak planning
  • A surge from Thado Dam and the Kirthar range swelled the Lyari and Malir rivers, flooding Saadi Town and nearby areas
  • Experts blame illegal construction and ignored zoning laws for worsening Karachi’s vulnerability to climate-driven floods

KARACHI: Seventeen years ago, Muhammad Khalid made a decision he now regrets, as he sought to escape from the cramped confines of Pir Ilahi Buksh Colony in central Karachi by pooling his savings with his brother to buy a new residence in Saadi Town, a burgeoning housing society in Malir Cantonment.

The Rs3 million ($10,653) they spent on their small house was all they had, but they thought it was an investment in a safer, more spacious future.

That future was submerged under floodwaters just four years later in 2012 — and again this week when a rare episode of riverine flooding inundated their home.

“In 2012, when the flood struck, it felt like we were living on the bank of the Indus River,” said a weary Khalid, now 62, as he stood in a street still slick with mud two days after the waters receded.

The recent deluge, he said, has reopened old wounds.

While urban flooding from heavy rainfall is a familiar hazard for Karachi, the recent inundation in the city’s eastern part was different since it was caused by a massive surge of water in streams coming from the nearby Thado Dam and the Kirthar mountain range.

The surge also swelled the Lyari and Malir rivers to capacity, though both fortunately flowed through the city without breaking into residential areas.

In Khamisoon Goth in Gadap Town in the northeastern part of the city, seven people were swept away by the floods, while settlements near Sohrab Goth and private housing societies like Saadi Town and Saadi Garden in Malir Cantonment were among the hardest hit.

Experts described the event as a rare and dangerous consequence of unchecked urban expansion.

“The way the flooding has occurred, and the extent of people’s losses raise big questions about Karachi’s town planning,” said Yasir Husain, Director of the Climate Action Center. “Where the city wasn’t supposed to be developed, they developed it by doing encroachments. And this is illegal.”

Husain explained that while rivers naturally expand and contract, zoning laws are meant to keep floodplains clear. In Karachi, these laws have been widely ignored.

“The way the Malir Expressway is built, it sits right inside the Malir River,” he said. “Such a massive project…is literally in the middle of the river.”

For Khalid, the consequences of this unplanned growth are painfully personal.

“When the rain came and the floodwater followed, we tried hard to keep safe, but we couldn’t stop it,” he said, recalling how water inundated his house.

“Much of the wooden furniture was ruined... The entire house was covered in slippery mud, and it became almost impossible for the women to move about.”

His wife, a schoolteacher, said she even found it difficult to get to work with sewage water still standing everywhere.

“Yesterday, in this same water, my brother slipped and fell,” Khalid said, pointing toward his sibling in a wheelchair with bandages on his legs and arms.

Naseem Akhtar, another resident of the area, spent the morning cleaning mud that coated her floors and toilets.

“Water inside the house, water in the [sewage] tank, everywhere there was just water,” the 58-year-old housewife said. “When Thado Dam fills and is released, all that water comes here.”

The Sindh administration spokesperson, Sadia Javed, highlighted the complex layers of authority in Karachi, seen by many as a major reason for its chronic urban problems, when asked about the situation.

“That area is not under the jurisdiction of the Sindh government or the mayor of Karachi,” she told Arab News, adding that Saadi Town, Saadi Garden and adjacent neighborhoods were part of the Malir Cantonment.

The management of the area was not available for comment despite repeated attempts.

For other areas on the eastern side of Sohrab Goth, Javed said those housing societies were built before her party came to power 16 years ago.

Asked how the provincial authorities plan to address the problem, she said all stakeholders — government agencies and political forces — must sit down to decide on removing illegal encroachments to prevent such issues in the future.

“Tomorrow, if, as now climate change is [intensifying] and a disastrous situation is created because of weather, [and] we do not act, then it can also give birth to a human tragedy,” she added.

Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah acknowledged during a recent media interaction that encroachments along riverbeds were a “major reason for urban flooding.”

“No government has permitted construction of permanent housing societies on riverbeds, but blocking the natural course of rivers is against nature itself, and unfortunately, that has been done here,” he said.

Shah noted that his government, with the World Bank’s support, is working on a comprehensive master plan for the city while asking relevant officials to accelerate dewatering operations and find “human-centric solutions” to flooding.

But for Khalid, who has lived through this before, such promises ring hollow.

Standing in front of his home, where the third step of the staircase and the ramp outside were completely submerged just a day earlier, the memories of the 2012 flood and this week’s disaster have left him with one thought.

“Now we just want to sell [this house] and leave,” he said. “The mistake was ours that we got stuck here.”


Stolen USB leads to arrest of Karachi man accused of abusing 100 minor girls

Stolen USB leads to arrest of Karachi man accused of abusing 100 minor girls
Updated 12 September 2025

Stolen USB leads to arrest of Karachi man accused of abusing 100 minor girls

Stolen USB leads to arrest of Karachi man accused of abusing 100 minor girls
  • Abuse went unnoticed for nine years until a shopkeeper raised the alarm, according to police
  • Case has been registered against the suspect under a law that stipulates death or life sentence

KARACHI: A stolen USB drive handed to a Karachi shopkeeper by a minor girl has led police to arrest a man accused of sexually assaulting nearly 100 children over nine years, officials said Friday.

The suspect, identified as Shabbir Ahmed, was detained on Thursday after the shopkeeper discovered the device contained hundreds of videos of child sexual abuse. The girl, one of his alleged victims, had stolen the USB from him and taken it to the shop in the Qayyumabad area to copy a movie.

“When the shopkeeper checked the USB, he found nearly 200 clips of abuse, including the girl herself and a vendor he recognized,” Defense police station chief Ghulam Nabi Afridi told Arab News. “He immediately raised the alarm.”

Police arrested Ahmed shortly after the discovery, seizing further evidence including a mobile phone, and a diary containing details of victims. More than 400 clips have so far been recovered, showing abuse of nearly 100 girls, some repeatedly, Afridi said.

“The accused, who moved from Abbottabad in 2011, started abusing children in 2016 and continued this crime for nine years,” he added. “He lured girls from low-income families by offering small amounts of money and committed the abuse inside a shop with the shutter down.”

“Had this minor girl not stolen the USB and brought it for a movie transfer, God knows for how much longer these heinous crimes would have remained hidden.”

Police said the victims were between the ages of 5 and 12. A diary maintained by the suspect contained names and records, including the ethnicity of more than 85 children. The most recent assault, according to investigators, took place on Sept. 4.

According to a police complaint registered by father of one victim and seen by Arab News, the suspect has been booked under Section 376 (3) of the Pakistan Penal Code, which stipulates the death penalty or life imprisonment for raping a minor or a person with mental or physical disabilities.

Police said at least five families have so far lodged formal complaints. Medical examinations are being conducted, and further families are being contacted.

On Friday, a judicial magistrate in Karachi granted investigators five days of physical remand for the suspect, who is being interrogated.

“All evidence has been secured,” Afridi said. “Medical examinations are being arranged, and police will leave no stone unturned to ensure this criminal faces justice.”

Child sexual abuse is widespread in Pakistan and cases have been rising, according to local NGOs.

Rights group Sahil reported 3,364 incidents in 2024, including sexual assaults, abductions, missing children and child marriages. The Sustainable Social Development Organization (SSDO) documented 5,398 cases between 2019 and 2023, noting a 220 percent increase in 2023 compared with 2019.

One of the most notorious scandals was uncovered in the town of Kasur in the eastern Punjab province, where between 2006 and 2015 hundreds of videos showing the abuse of mostly male children were circulated illegally, sparking national outrage.


Police kill wanted militant in Pakistan’s northwest, exhume body after secret burial

Police kill wanted militant in Pakistan’s northwest, exhume body after secret burial
Updated 12 September 2025

Police kill wanted militant in Pakistan’s northwest, exhume body after secret burial

Police kill wanted militant in Pakistan’s northwest, exhume body after secret burial
  • TTP commander was killed in an intelligence-based operation in Lakki Marwat
  • Police say he was wanted for multiple attacks, including targeted killings, in KP

PESHAWAR: Pakistani police said on Friday they killed a highly wanted militant commander in the country’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, buried secretly by comrades after the shootout and later exhumed by authorities for identification.

Militant attacks across KP have surged since November 2022, when a fragile truce between the Pakistani Taliban, or Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), and the government collapsed.

Lakki Marwat, where the incident took place, is situated on the edge of Pakistan’s tribal belt bordering Afghanistan and has seen frequent assaults by the TTP.

“A highly wanted TTP commander Sher Alam was killed in the Wanda Panjma area of the district in an intelligence-based targeted operation,” Bannu Regional Police Officer’s spokesperson Aamir Khan told Arab News.

“Following his death in an encounter with the police, the militant was buried secretly by his colleagues,” he said. “However, police subsequently exhumed his body to identify him. Later, he was confirmed as Sher Alam.”

Khan said Alam was a native of Kichi Kamar, a rundown locality of the district, and held a significant position within the militant organization. He added that RPO Bannu, Sajjad Khan, had directed security forces to deal firmly with militants who take up arms against the state.

At least 75 policemen were killed in ambushes and targeted attacks in the province last year, according to police data.

KP police killed another suspected militant commander in September during an intelligence-based operation in Lakki Marwat. He was wanted for bomb attacks and targeted killings of policemen.

Bannu itself witnessed a major attack on a Frontier Constabulary base this month when a suicide bomber rammed an explosive-laden car into the facility, triggering a gunbattle that lasted about 12 hours and left six security personnel and six militants dead.

Islamabad has accused Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers of sheltering anti-Pakistan militants and India of backing insurgents in KP and Balochistan, allegations both Kabul and New Delhi deny.


Pakistan kills four militants in Balochistan raid, accuses India of backing them

Pakistan kills four militants in Balochistan raid, accuses India of backing them
Updated 12 September 2025

Pakistan kills four militants in Balochistan raid, accuses India of backing them

Pakistan kills four militants in Balochistan raid, accuses India of backing them
  • The intelligence-based operation was launched in Mastung district, says the military
  • Security forces also recovered weapons, ammunition and explosives from the militants

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani security forces killed four militants in an intelligence-based operation in the country’s restive southwestern Balochistan province on Friday, the military said, accusing them of having Indian backing.

Balochistan, which borders Afghanistan and Iran, is strategically important due to its mineral wealth and its role as a transit hub for the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). However, the province has long been gripped by a separatist insurgency, with groups such as the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) ramping up attacks in recent years.

Islamabad calls these outfits proxies of Indian intelligence, branding them “Fitna-e-Hindustan,” India’s mischief, though the charge is denied by New Delhi.

“On 12 Sep 2025, security forces conducted an intelligence based operation in Mastung District of Balochistan, on reported presence of terrorists belonging to Indian proxy, Fitna al Hindustan,” the military’s media wing, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), said in a statement.

“During the conduct of operation, own forces effectively engaged the terrorists’ location, and after an intense fire exchange, four Indian sponsored terrorists were sent to hell,” it continued.

The statement said weapons, ammunition and explosives were recovered from the militants, who “remained actively involved in numerous terrorist activities in the area.”

It added that a “sanitization operation” was continuing to eliminate any other militants in the district, reaffirming what it called the nation’s resolve to “wipe out the menace of Indian sponsored terrorism” and bring those responsible to justice.

Balochistan has seen a string of high-profile militant attacks this year. In March, the BLA hijacked a passenger train, and in May, a suicide bombing in Khuzdar killed several children after targeting their school bus.

Security forces, civilians and non-local workers are frequently targeted in coordinated attacks across the province. Despite the violence, the government has refrained from launching a full-scale military response, preferring intelligence-based operations instead.


Pakistan vows full-force defense of sovereignty, calls Netanyahu ‘purveyor of genocide’

Pakistan vows full-force defense of sovereignty, calls Netanyahu ‘purveyor of genocide’
Updated 12 September 2025

Pakistan vows full-force defense of sovereignty, calls Netanyahu ‘purveyor of genocide’

Pakistan vows full-force defense of sovereignty, calls Netanyahu ‘purveyor of genocide’
  • Pakistan and Israel exchanged sharp words at the UN Security Council over Israel’s strike on Qatar
  • Netanyahu defended the attack by likening it to the US raid that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Calling Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu a “purveyor of genocide,” Pakistan on Friday warned that any aggression against its sovereignty would be met with full force, hours after the two countries clashed at the United Nations Security Council over Israel’s strike on Qatar earlier this week.

Foreign Office spokesperson Shafqat Ali Khan was responding to journalists’ questions at the weekly press briefing about a recent Israeli airstrike on a residential neighborhood in Doha that killed six people and Netanyahu equating it with the US May 2011 operation in Pakistan that killed Osama bin Laden.

In a video message to mark the anniversary of the September 11, 2001, attacks on Thursday, the Israeli prime minister specifically named Pakistan, saying his country did exactly what America did when it “went after Al Qaeda terrorists in Afghanistan, and when they killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan.”

Khan reiterated Pakistan’s condemnation of Israel’s Doha attack, pointing out that the “reckless action” was yet another manifestation of Israel’s disregard for international peace and its policy of destabilizing the Middle East.

“We do not respond to statements by the purveyors of genocide,” the foreign office spokesperson said in response to a query on Netanyahu’s comment. “What is happening right now in the Middle East, which is our immediate neighborhood, we follow it very closely.”

“But let me be absolutely clear: Pakistan is fully capable of defending itself against any external threat,” he added. “Pakistan remains a responsible nuclear state and a proponent of regional peace and stability. However, any misadventure or threat to Pakistan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity will be met with a resolute response.”

Khan said Israel’s attack was a blatant violation of Qatar’s sovereignty as well as the United Nations Charter and the established norms governing interstate relations.

The strike was launched to kill a group of Hamas leaders discussing a Gaza ceasefire proposal floated by the American administration. Qatar has been a key mediator in ceasefire and hostage negotiations between Israel and Hamas, hosting the group’s political bureau as part of the process.

Pakistan and Israel also engaged in a spat at the UN Security Council when Pakistan’s Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad called out Israel for its “brazen and illegal assault” that violated Qatar’s sovereignty.

When the Israeli representative at the UN invoked the US raid that killed bin Laden, Ahmad rejected the analogy as “ludicrous,” accusing Israel of attempting to deflect attention from its occupation of Palestine.

The Pakistani envoy also urged the Council to hold Israel accountable for its aggression against Qatar.

In his weekly media briefing, the foreign office spokesperson said Pakistan would continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with the people and leadership of Qatar in defense of their security and sovereignty.

He referred to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s visit to Doha a day earlier, saying Sharif conveyed that his country was deeply disturbed by the attack, which was a serious breach of international law.

Khan said Pakistan had called for an emergency Security Council session at Qatar’s request to discuss the recent developments in the Middle East.

He also welcomed Qatar’s decision to host an Extraordinary Arab-Islamic Summit on September 15 and said Islamabad had indicated its willingness to the Organization of Islamic Cooperation to co-sponsor and co-convene the summit.

Khan added that Pakistan is working on the composition of a delegation to attend the summit.