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Pakistan gearing up for India rematch, says captain Salman Agha

Pakistan gearing up for India rematch, says captain Salman Agha
India's (left) and Pakistan's players stand for their national anthems before the start of the Asia Cup 2025 Twenty20 international cricket match between India and Pakistan at the Dubai International Stadium in Dubai on September 14, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 14 min 25 sec ago

Pakistan gearing up for India rematch, says captain Salman Agha

Pakistan gearing up for India rematch, says captain Salman Agha
  • Pakistani skipper says players need to improve batting in the middle order
  • Indian team cruised to a seven-wicket victory over Pakistan last weekend

DUBAI: Pakistan captain Salman Agha said his team were ready to face India in the next round of the Asia Cup on Sunday after last week’s group-stage match between the arch-rivals ended in acrimony when the Indian side refused to shake hands.

Pakistan beat United Arab Emirates in their final Group A game on Wednesday to advance to the Super Fours stage, where they will also play two teams from Group B in a round robin format.

Bilateral cricket between India and Pakistan has been suspended since 2013 and they play each other only in multi-team tournaments.

“We are ready, we are ready for any challenge,” Salman said after their 41-run victory against UAE.

“We just want to play good cricket. If we play good cricket, like we have played in the last few months, I think we’ll be good against any side.”

Fakhar Zaman made 50 but Pakistan’s frontline batters disappointed against UAE’s modest attack with opener Saim Ayub falling for his third successive duck in the tournament.

Salman acknowledged they had to bat better.

“We got the job done but we still need to improve our batting in the middle order,” Salman said.

“That’s been a concern and something we need to work on.”

India had cruised to a seven-wicket victory over Pakistan last weekend in the first cricket match between the sides since a four-day military conflict between the nuclear-armed neighbors in May.

While the match itself passed without incident, there was no shaking of hands between the captains at the toss or among the players at the end. India skipper Suryakumar Yadav dedicated their victory to the armed forces back home.

The Pakistan Cricket Board called for match referee Andy Pycroft’s immediate removal for a code of conduct “violation” and considered withdrawing from the tournament before going ahead with Wednesday’s match.

India and Pakistan could meet for a third time at the tournament if they both reach the September 28 final.


Pakistan gets Chinese approval for $2 billion rail upgrade to transport mine exports — minister

Pakistan gets Chinese approval for $2 billion rail upgrade to transport mine exports — minister
Updated 55 min 55 sec ago

Pakistan gets Chinese approval for $2 billion rail upgrade to transport mine exports — minister

Pakistan gets Chinese approval for $2 billion rail upgrade to transport mine exports — minister
  • Railways minister says Beijing has consented to Asian Development Bank financing of Karachi-Rohri section
  • Project seen as critical to transporting copper from Reko Diq mine, with groundwork eyed for 2026

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has secured Chinese approval to proceed with a $2 billion Asian Development Bank (ADB)-financed upgrade of the Karachi–Rohri railway line, a critical link needed to transport copper and gold from the giant Reko Diq mine to export hubs, Railways Minister Hanif Abbasi told Arab News this week. 

Abbasi’s remarks confirm details of a financing arrangement earlier announced by Islamabad and Beijing as part of a wider $7 billion consortium for the Main Line-1 (ML-1) project, covering Pakistan’s 1,726-kilometer colonial-era railway from Karachi to Peshawar.

The ML-1 upgrade is the largest infrastructure scheme under the over $60 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), itself part of President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road Initiative. China originally pledged $6.67 billion for the project in 2016, but financing has stalled for nearly a decade.

On Sept. 8, Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal said Pakistan and China had agreed to form a consortium including ADB, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), and the two governments to fund ML-1. Reuters separately reported last month, citing unnamed sources, that ADB was in advanced talks to lead a $2 billion Karachi–Rohri upgrade after prolonged Chinese delays.

Speaking to Arab News, Abbasi confirmed that Beijing had given its consent for Pakistan to move forward with ADB financing for the Karachi–Rohri section, a key artery for transporting copper and gold from the Reko Diq mine in the southwestern Balochistan province to the main Port Qasim in Karachi. 

“Yes, of course. Chinese are our brothers. We could not have moved forward without asking the Chinese first,” Abbasi said. “So, we took permission from the Chinese and then we proceeded with this, that we are going to do it with Asian Development Bank [funding].”

Abbasi said that regardless of where financing comes from, China would ultimately execute the project, arguing that no other country matched its expertise in railway and track construction.

Abbasi stressed that China had not withdrawn from ML-1 but that Pakistan would seek approval on a section-by-section basis as alternative funding was secured.

“We have just taken their permission for one part of ML-1. As we get more funding, we will keep taking permission [for more sections]. And we have no problem in seeking permission from them, they are our brothers.”

KARACHI-ROHRI UPGRADE AND REKO DIQ 

The 500-kilometer Karachi–Rohri section is seen as essential to the Reko Diq venture, a joint project between Canada’s Barrick Gold and Pakistan, that could generate tens of billions of dollars in exports over coming decades. 

The railways minister described the Karachi–Rohri stretch as “the main artery of Pakistan Railways,” currently in a “very pathetic condition” with trains crawling at 40 km/h.

The upgrade will allow speeds of up to 120 km/h.

He said talks with ADB were in the final stages, with feasibility studies to be completed by December this year and groundbreaking targeted for mid-2026.

“The prime minister wants the groundbreaking to be in June 2026. They [ADB] want to do it in December 2026. So, this difference will also be worked out,” Abbasi said.

Financing terms were still under discussion, but Abbasi said the interest rate would be “minor,” declining to compare it with past Chinese loans.

“No matter wherever the funding comes from, it is the Chinese who will do it,” he repeated.

Abbasi also disclosed that the Reko Diq Mining Company (RDMC), a joint venture between Canada’s Barrick Gold and Pakistan’s federal and Balochistan governments, had agreed to provide $390 million bridge financing for a 780-km stretch from Rohri to Nokundi in Balochistan.

“I hope that it [the agreement] will be signed with them by Oct. 10,” he said, adding that the project would transport one million tons of copper annually, which otherwise would require over 28,000 truckloads each year.

Abbasi acknowledged the security risks in Baluchistan, where separatist and religiously motivated militants frequently attack infrastructure, foreigners and security forces.

In March, militants hijacked the Jaffar Express passenger train in Balochistan, killing at least 25 people before security forces retook control.

“If we are doing it [providing security] for Jaffar Express, we will do it for that [trains carrying minerals] as well,” Abbasi said.

“As far as the security is concerned, we have an agreement with RDMC as well. Track security will be the responsibility of the state. The [promilitary] Federal Constabulary will be deployed on these trains.”

REGIONAL CONNECTIVITY

Abbasi said Pakistan also planned to restore international rail links, including the Islamabad–Tehran–Istanbul (ITI) freight service, set to resume in December after being suspended in 2019. The service had previously been used to export rice and pink salt to Turkiye and Europe.

“We already have the track for this service. We have taken the decision to restore it,” he confirmed.

Additionally, Pakistan is pushing ahead with the proposed Uzbekistan–Afghanistan–Pakistan (UAP) railway project, valued at around $10 billion, to connect Termez in Uzbekistan with Kabul and Pakistan’s Kurram district, the railways minister said. 

Local media have reported that China may finance the 640-km line.

“If we succeed in doing this, then [we will get market access] for the whole of Europe, for the whole of Russia, for Central Asia,” Abbasi said.

“And the landlocked countries, like Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, they will get access to the port.” 


Pakistan, IAEA sign five-year plan to expand peaceful nuclear cooperation in food, health and energy

Pakistan, IAEA sign five-year plan to expand peaceful nuclear cooperation in food, health and energy
Updated 18 September 2025

Pakistan, IAEA sign five-year plan to expand peaceful nuclear cooperation in food, health and energy

Pakistan, IAEA sign five-year plan to expand peaceful nuclear cooperation in food, health and energy
  • The partnership plan aims to support Pakistan’s development agenda through peaceful nuclear science
  • Pakistan says the pact will help fight hunger, improve cancer treatment and boost clean power generation

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) signed a new five-year cooperation plan on Wednesday to scale up the peaceful uses of nuclear technology in agriculture, health care, clean energy and environmental protection, reported the state-owned media.

The 2026–31 Country Programme Framework (CPF), signed on the sidelines of the IAEA General Conference in Vienna, is designed to use nuclear science to support Pakistan’s development agenda and the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

Covering three IAEA technical cooperation cycles, the framework identifies priorities from boosting crop yields and food safety to expanding cancer treatment and strengthening nuclear safety and climate resilience.

“The signing of this Country Programme Framework reaffirms Pakistan’s unwavering commitment to the peaceful applications of nuclear science and technology,” said Dr. Raja Ali Raza Anwar, chairman of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission, according to the Associated Press of Pakistan news agency.

“With the support of the IAEA, Pakistan will continue to harness these tools to address food security, improve health care, strengthen energy security and safeguard our environment,” he added.

Under the plan, Pakistan will apply nuclear techniques such as isotope hydrology to monitor water resources and counter climate change, while advancing nuclear medicine and radiopharmaceuticals to meet rising cancer and chronic disease needs.

The country will also work on plant life management and safe decommissioning of nuclear power facilities, building on six operating plants and one under construction that already supply over 18 percent of its electricity.

The CPF also underscores gender equality and commits to training more women in nuclear sciences.

APP reported an IAEA deputy director general, Hua Liu, hailed the agreement as a “shared vision for sustainable development through peaceful nuclear cooperation.”


Pakistan tells UN over 60 militant camps in Afghanistan threaten national security, urges aid for Afghans

Pakistan tells UN over 60 militant camps in Afghanistan threaten national security, urges aid for Afghans
Updated 18 September 2025

Pakistan tells UN over 60 militant camps in Afghanistan threaten national security, urges aid for Afghans

Pakistan tells UN over 60 militant camps in Afghanistan threaten national security, urges aid for Afghans
  • Pakistan says a number of militant groups are based in Afghanistan and collaborating with each other in multiple ways
  • It’s UN envoy calls for more humanitarian and economic support for Afghanistan while warning of deepening instability

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan told the UN Security Council on Wednesday more than 60 militant camps operate inside Afghanistan, serving as launch pads for cross-border attacks that target civilians and security forces while urging the international community to improve the dire humanitarian situation facing ordinary Afghans.

Pakistan has witnessed a surge in militant violence in its western provinces bordering Afghanistan and blames the Afghan Taliban for enabling their strikes, a charge that Kabul denies. Islamabad began deporting illegal immigrants, mostly Afghan nationals, two years ago citing these security concerns.

Addressing a Council debate on Afghanistan, Pakistan’s UN ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmed raised noted the Taliban have been in power for more than four years – ending civil war for the first time in four decades – yet the country’s political and economic situation “remains deeply worrying.”

“The Taliban authorities must fulfill their international obligations on counter terrorism,” Ahmed said. “Terrorism emanating from Afghanistan remains the gravest threat to Pakistan’s national security. Terrorist entities including ISIL-K [Islamic State Khorasan], Al-Qaeda, TTP [Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan], ETIM [East Turkestan Islamic Movement], BLA [Baloch Liberation Army] and the Majeed Brigade operate from Afghan sanctuaries, with more than 60 such terrorist camps serving as hubs for enabling cross-border infiltration and attacks.”

He added Pakistan had “credible evidence of collaboration among these terrorist groups through joint training, illicit weapons trade, refuge to terrorists and coordinated attacks, all aimed at targeting civilian and law enforcement agencies and disrupting and sabotaging infrastructure and development projects in Pakistan.”

Ahmed also painted a bleak picture of Afghanistan’s economy, pointing to a collapsed banking system, persistent poverty and human rights concerns.

He said the 2025 Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan had received only 27 percent of the required $2.42 billion and called on the world to “close this gap and ease the suffering of ordinary Afghans caught in a political impasse and divergent policies.”

The Pakistani diplomat emphasized stabilizing Afghanistan’s economy, reviving its banking sector, preventing poppy cultivation and unfreezing the country’s financial assets were crucial steps.

“No country desires peace and stability in Afghanistan more than Pakistan,” Ahmad added. “And no country has suffered from the consequences of decades of conflict in Afghanistan, more than Pakistan. We therefore remain committed to supporting a peaceful, prosperous Afghanistan, for the sake of our region and in the best interest of the world.”


Pakistan survive UAE scare to qualify for Asia Cup Super Four stage

Pakistan survive UAE scare to qualify for Asia Cup Super Four stage
Updated 17 September 2025

Pakistan survive UAE scare to qualify for Asia Cup Super Four stage

Pakistan survive UAE scare to qualify for Asia Cup Super Four stage
  • Pakistan handed UAE a 147-run target from 20 overs in knockout match at Dubai 
  • Crucial win helps Pakistan qualify for Super Four stage, set up another India clash  

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan cricket team survived a scare from minnows UAE on Wednesday, beating them by 41 runs at Dubai to qualify for the Super Four stage of the Asia Cup 2025 tournament. 

Pakistan batted first but suffered early blows, losing both openers in the powerplay overs when the team's score was just nine. Fakhar Zaman and skipper Salman Ali Agha put in a 61-run partnership to bring some stability to the side before more wickets tumbled. 

Zaman scored 50 off 36 balls while Agha made 20 runs and Mohammad Haris scored 18 runs off 14 balls. Pakistan were in deep trouble at 110-7 before bowler Shaheen Shah Afridi stepped to the crease. Afridi smashed 29 runs from 14 balls to ensure Pakistan finished at 146-9 after 20 overs. 

"Pakistan defeat UAE by 41 runs and progress to the Super 4s in the ACC Men’s T20 Asia Cup 2025," the PCB wrote on X. 

UAE, in response, were bundled out for 105 runs in 17.4 overs. Afridi, Rauf and leg-spinner Abrar Ahmed each took two wickets while all-rounder Saim Ayub and Agha each picked up a single wicket. 

Rahul Chopra and Dhruv Parashar scored 35 and 20, respectively, to give the UAE a fighting chance before Pakistani bowlers dismissed them. 

Pakistan and India become the only teams to advance to the Super Four stage of the tournament from their group. This means the two arch-rivals will clash once again in the next stage of the tournament. 


Pakistan’s ABHI partners with Saudi platform to offer early wage access in Kingdom

Pakistan’s ABHI partners with Saudi platform to offer early wage access in Kingdom
Updated 17 September 2025

Pakistan’s ABHI partners with Saudi platform to offer early wage access in Kingdom

Pakistan’s ABHI partners with Saudi platform to offer early wage access in Kingdom
  • Earned Wage Access services let employees draw part of their salaries before the payday
  • ABHI’s EWA technology will be offered in restaurants, cafés, and cloud kitchens in Kingdom

KARACHI: Pakistani fintech startup ABHI this week announced it has partnered with Ƶ’s cloud-based Point of Sale (POS) platform to launch the Earned Wage Access (EWA) service in the Kingdom, saying the move would promote financial inclusion. 

EWA is a financial solution allowing employees to withdraw a portion of their earned salary anytime before payday, eliminating the need to wait until the end of the month. 

The partnership entails integrating ABHI’s EWA technology into TRAY’s enterprise POS ecosystem, restaurants, cafés, and cloud kitchens across the Kingdom, allowing them to provide staff with on-demand salary access. ABHI said the move would financially empower employees, reduce turnover and strengthen retention in one of the most dynamic industries in Ƶ, food and beverage. 

“Partnering with TRAY enables ABHI to bring Earned Wage Access directly into the heart of Ƶ’s hospitality sector,” Omair Ansari, ABHI co-founder and chief executive officer, said in a statement on Wednesday. 

“By integrating our solution into TRAY’s platform, we provide SMEs with a tool to improve workforce retention while advancing financial inclusion across the Kingdom.”

ABHI said with the help of TRAY, which already supports payments, financing and delivery integrations, the Pakistani fintech’s EWA services will be offered as an embedded feature, making it easier than ever for businesses to adopt and provide employees with financial flexibility.

It said the collaboration is designed to support Ƶ’s Vision 2030 goals of financial inclusion, workforce empowerment and growth of small and medium businesses. 

ABHI, founded in 2021, has been serving customers in Pakistan, UAE, Ƶ and Oman through its credit-bridging products. The company says it offers, apart from EWA, services such as invoice factoring, SME working capital and revenue-based financing and payroll solutions.

The fintech says it has served more than 1,000,000 users since entering the market, spanning industries from textiles and manufacturing to health care and technology. 

ABHI says it is backed by leading investors, including Y Combinator, VEF, SpeedInvest, Venture Souq, Global Ventures, and Zayn Capital.