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  • The Hundred draft: Hasan Ali and Naseem Shah most expensive Pakistani players

    The Hundred draft: Hasan Ali and Naseem Shah most expensive Pakistani players

    Hassan Ali and Naseem Shah have become Pakistan’s most expensive players with the reserve price of GBP 100,000 in the British league’s draft ‘The Hundred’.

    65 Pakistani players have been registered in the players’ draft held on March 20 for the fourth edition of ‘The Hundred’, including 60 men and five women while only two Pakistani players have been retained by their teams in the squad. Manchester Original have Usama Mir and Welsh Fire have retained Haris Rauf.

    Among Pakistani players, the reserve price of Shadab Khan and Iftikhar Ahmed is GBP 75,000, the base price of Muhammad Amir, Saim Ayub, Aamir Jamal and Abdullah Shafiq is GBP 60,000, while the reserve price of Fakhar Zaman, Muhammad Haris and Imad Wasim in the draft is GBP 50,000.

    Pakistani players Mir Hamza, Muhammad Hasnain and Azam Khan were registered with a reserve price of GBP 40,000, while the other 46 Pakistani players registered for the Men’s Hundred are included without a reserve price.

    Among the players registered without reserve price are Salman Ali Agha, Abrar Ahmed, Umar Akmal, Asif Ali, Haider Ali, Umar Amin, Faheem Ashraf and Shahnawaz Dahani.

    The names of Zaman Khan, Shaan Masood, Mohammad Nawaz, Ruman Raees, Saud Shakeel, Haneen Shah and Wasim Junior are also included in the list of unreserved Pakistani players.

    Among women, Iram Javed, Nida Dar and Fatima Sana are registered with a reserve price of GBP 17,500, while Alia Riaz and Jawaria Rauf are included in the draft without a reserve price.

    The fourth edition of The Hundred will start in July this year featuring eight teams each of men and women. The first match of the event will be played between Birmingham Phoenix and Oval Invincibles at Lord’s Cricket Ground on July 23.

  • India arrests BJP worker for chanting ‘Pakistan Zindabad’ one year ago

    India arrests BJP worker for chanting ‘Pakistan Zindabad’ one year ago

    The police in the Indian state of Karnataka has arrested a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) worker for raising ‘Pakistan Zindabad’ slogans over a year ago. The man was taken into custody one day after the arrest of three Congress workers on similar charges, reports Indian media.

    The BJP worker, identified as Ravi, 40, in a case registered against him for raising a pro-Pakistan slogan during a December 2022 protest, when the BJP was in government in the state.

    BJP and JD(S) MLCs protest over the alleged sloganeering of ‘Pakistan Zindabad’ after Congress leader Naseer Hussain won the Rajya Sabha election, in Council hall during the Budget session of Karnataka Assembly, in Bengaluru. (PTI)

    The Indian Express has reported that the BJP protest was called against the remarks of the then Pakistani foreign minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari against Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. While at the United Nations, Bilawal had called Modi the ‘Butcher of Gujarat’ – a reference to 2002 killing of Muslims when he was Chief Minister of the state. A video of the protest showed Ravi saying “Pakistan Zindabad” even as another person behind him attempted to close his mouth, it added. However, the local chapter of the BJP criticised Ravi’s arrest as “political vendetta”.

    The president of BJP’s Mandya district unit was quoted by the Indian Express as saying that Ravi was a farmer and he did not know any language other than his native Kannada and did not know the meaning of the words he spoke.

    The arrest came a day after three Congress workers were arrested for raising pro-Pakistan slogans in the Karnataka assembly on February 27 when party candidate Syed Naseer Hussain was elected to the Rajya Sabha. In a video shared by India Today, many congress leaders in the assembly have claimed that the exact words were actually Nasir Hussain Zindabad and not Pakistan Zindabad.

    Karnataka Home Minister G. Parameshwara said on Tuesday that pro-Pakistan slogans were raised twice. “We identified the suspects and arrested them. The law will take its course,” he said, according to the Indian Express report.

    The police said that the three Congress workers have been identified as Iltaz, from Delhi, Mohammad Nashipuri, a native of Haveri district of Karnataka and Munnawar, a resident of the state capital of Bengaluru on Monday. They remain in police custody, they added.

  • Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto was not given a fair trial: Supreme Court

    Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto was not given a fair trial: Supreme Court

    A nine-member bench of the Supreme Court has reserved its verdict on the murder trial of PPP founder and former Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto.

    The Chief Justice of Pakistan, Qazi Faez Isa, has said on Wednesday, “The proceedings of the Lahore High Court and of the appeal by the Supreme Court of Pakistan don’t meet the requirement of the fundamental right to fair trial and due process enshrined in the articles 4 and 9 of the constitution.”

    “This court can’t reappraise the evidence and undo the decision of the case. However, in a detailed reason, we shall identify the major Constitutional and legal lapses that occurred with regard to fair trial and due process.”

    Talking to media outside the court, Bhutto’s grandson, PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari said that the court has acknowledged that his grandfather was not given a fair trial.

    What is the Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto case?

    Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, the leader who saw his elected government toppled by General Zia-ul-Haq in 1977, faced a controversial trial resulting in his execution.
    Former president Asif Ali Zardari brought back the long-dormant presidential reference on the death sentence of the late Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.

    The reference, filed in 2011 under Article 186 of the Constitution of Pakistan, resurfaced as a 9-member Supreme Court bench, led by Chief Justice Qazi Faez Isa, took up the case on December 12.

    The reference is based on the assertion by former Supreme Court Chief Justice Naseem Hasan Shah that the trial bench was influenced by the Zia-ul-Haq government.

    It also questions the constitutionality of conducting the murder case in the Lahore High Court instead of the Sessions Court.

    Article 186 and the President’s right

    Article 186 of the National Constitution empowers the President to seek the Supreme Court’s opinion on matters of public importance.

    The current hearing revolves around five crucial questions posed by Asif Zardari, aiming to address issues related to human rights, judicial precedent, fairness of the death sentence, adherence to Quranic orders, and the sufficiency of evidence.
    Questions from presidential reference

    Asif Ali Zardari’s reference poses pivotal questions, challenging the legality and fairness of Bhutto’s trial:

    1. Were Bhutto’s human rights, as enshrined in the constitution, respected during the trial?
    2. Will the Supreme Court’s decision set a precedent for all high courts, as per Article 189?
    3. Was the death sentence impartial and free from bias?
    4. Does the death penalty align with Quranic principles?
    5. Was the evidence and testimony presented during the trial sufficient for conviction?

    What was the case?

    Bhutto, who served as President of Pakistan from 1971 to 1973 and later as Prime Minister until 1977, was at the center of a storm of controversy that ultimately cost him his life.

    The narrative begins with the fall of Dhaka in December 1971, which marked a significant turning point in Pakistan’s history. Following this, Bhutto rose to power, first as President and later as Prime Minister under the newly established 1973 Constitution.

    However, his reign was short-lived as General Zia-ul-Haq seized control through a martial law imposition on July 5, 1977.

    Bhutto’s troubles escalated when he was arrested on September 3, 1977, in connection with the murder of political opponent Nawab Muhammad Ahmad Khan Kasuri in March 1974.

    Despite being released just ten days later due to “contradictory and incomplete” charges, Bhutto found himself back behind bars, this time under martial law. His trial commenced on October 24, 1977, with allegations of conspiracy to murder hanging over his head.

    Masood Mahmood, the Director General of the Federal Investigation Agency, testified against Bhutto, claiming he had ordered Kasuri’s assassination.

    The trial was marred by interruptions and allegations of bias, culminating in Bhutto’s conviction for murder on March 18, 1978. Despite appeals and pleas for clemency, Bhutto’s fate was sealed when the Supreme Court upheld the verdict on February 6, 1979.

    The final blow came on March 24, 1979, when the Supreme Court dismissed Bhutto’s appeal, clearing the way for his execution. Bhutto’s appeal in the Supreme Court in front of a seven-member bench was dismissed with a 4-3 verdict against him in February 1979.

    General Zia-ul-Haq, who had been calling Bhutto a murderer throughout the trial, ordered his hanging on April 4, 1979, sparking widespread condemnation and accusations of judicial misconduct.

  • Trump backs Israel’s military operations in Gaza

    Trump backs Israel’s military operations in Gaza

    Washington (AFP) – Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump expressed his support for Israel’s military operations in Gaza Tuesday, in his most explicit comments yet on the fighting, as international pressure grows on the United States to rein in its ally.

    “Yes,” Trump responded, when asked during an interview on Fox News if he was “in Israel’s camp.”

    The interviewer then asked if the former president was “on board” with the way Israel was executing its offensive in Gaza.

    “You’ve got to finish the problem,” Trump responded.

    President Joe Biden, whom Trump is set to challenge for the White House in November, has come under increasing fire both internationally and from his own Democratic base over his backing for Israel as the death toll in Gaza soars and the specter of famine looms.

    Israel’s disproportionate retaliatory offensive in the Gaza Strip has killed 30,534 people, mostly women and children, according to the health ministry.

    US protest movements have urged voters to punish Biden at the polls over his support for Israel. More than 100,000 people in Michigan voted “uncommitted” rather than cast their ballot for him in the US swing state’s Democratic primary last week.

    As conditions deteriorate, Israel is facing an increasingly sharp rebuke from its top ally the United States.

    Vice President Kamala Harris expressed “deep concern about the humanitarian conditions in Gaza” during talks in Washington on Monday with Israeli war cabinet member Benny Gantz.

  • Khyber Pakhtunkhwa cabinet set to take oath today

    Khyber Pakhtunkhwa cabinet set to take oath today

    The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) cabinet is set to take its oath of office today after Chief Minister of the province Ali Amin Gandapur got approval from Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) founder Imran Khan, who is currently in Adiala jail serving sentences in multiple cases.

    Ali Amin Gandapur said in a statement that he discussed the formation of the KP cabinet with Imran Khan in Adiala jail.

    “Cabinet members will take oath today,” he confirmed.

    After meeting the founder of PTI, the newly-elected chief minister came back to Peshawar and asked relevant authorities to arrange the oath taking ceremony in the Governor House.

    However, the names of cabinet members have not been revealed yet.

    Interestingly, a majority of those considered and approved as cabinet members by Imran Khan were unaware of their selection. The News learnt from its sources that KP CM Gandapur did not disclose the names of his cabinet members, as he was under pressure by certain factions within the party to accommodate their nominees.

  • Israel says to allow worshippers access to Al-Aqsa in Ramzan as in ‘previous years’

    Israel says to allow worshippers access to Al-Aqsa in Ramzan as in ‘previous years’

    Israel will allow as many Muslim worshippers to access Al-Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem during the first week of Ramzan as in previous years, the prime minister’s office said Tuesday.

    “In the first week of Ramzan, worshippers will be allowed to enter the Temple Mount, in similar numbers to those in previous years,” the statement said, using the Jewish term for the site.

    “Every week there will be a situation assessment in terms of security and safety and a decision will be made accordingly,” it added.

    Every year, tens of thousands of Muslim worshippers perform Ramzan prayers at the Al-Aqsa mosque.

    Ramzan comes this year as Israel wages a genocide in the Gaza Strip in a disproportionate response to Hamas in Israel on October 7.

    Israel has been assessing how to address worship in Jerusalem during Ramzan, the Islamic fasting month due to start on March 10 or 11, depending on the lunar calendar.

    Israel’s far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir had recently said that Palestinian residents of the West Bank “should not be allowed” entry to Jerusalem to pray during Ramzan.

    “We cannot take risks,” he said, adding: “We cannot have women and children hostage in Gaza and allow celebrations for Hamas on the Temple Mount.”

    Ben Gvir leads a hard-right party advocating Jewish control of the compound.

    Days later, the United States called on Israel to allow Muslims to worship at Al-Aqsa.

    “It’s not just a matter of granting people religious freedom that they deserve… it’s also a matter that directly is important to Israel’s security,” State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said.

    “It is not in Israel’s security interest to inflame tensions in the West Bank or in the broader region.”

    Hamas has called for a mass movement on Al-Aqsa for the start of Ramzan.

    “Ramzan is sacred to Muslims; its sanctity will be upheld this year, as it is every year,” the Israeli government statement said after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu held a meeting of all security agencies on Tuesday.

  • No more recommendations; team selection to be on merit, says PCB Chairman Mohsin Naqvi

    No more recommendations; team selection to be on merit, says PCB Chairman Mohsin Naqvi

    Chairman Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Mohsin Naqvi has made it clear to the national players that from now, the team will be selected only on merit and no more recommendations will be accommodated.

    Naqvi stressed that he is not stopping any player from earning money but Pakistan should be their first priority.

    In a meeting with national players involved in Pakistan Super League (PSL) in Islamabad, Mohsin Naqvi said, “Whenever the team will be selected after today, it will be on merit. I will not tell anyone that you people should not earn money. Give Pakistan first priority, in any case I am not telling anyone to reduce their earnings. “

    Talking about the practice of adjusting players who do not come on merit, the Chairman stated, “If you see something like this, all you have to do is send me a message and I’m telling you, I’m a very friendly guy and I’m also mean. So mean that if a single complaint is heard, the whole team will go.”

  • Oil prices drop again on concerns over China’s economic changes

    Oil prices drop again on concerns over China’s economic changes

    In the wake of growing apprehensions over reduced oil consumption in China, a key player in the global oil market, oil prices witnessed a consecutive decline for the second day.

    The current market scenario reveals Brent crude trading at $82.16 per barrel, marking a 0.52 per cent decrease, while West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI) is trading at $77.9 per barrel, down by 0.6 per cent from the previous close.

    China, a significant oil consumer, declared its commitment to overhaul its economic development model and address industrial overcapacity concerns.

    Alongside these initiatives, China set its economic growth target for 2024 at approximately 5 per cent, a figure consistent with last year’s goal and in alignment with analysts’ predictions, according to Reuters.

    However, achieving this growth target may prove challenging this year, as analysts point out that China’s favourable base effect in 2023, resulting from the pandemic-affected 2022, may not be replicable. This potential hurdle has raised concerns and could impact investor sentiment.

    China, being the world’s largest crude importer, also announced intentions to intensify the exploration and development of oil and natural gas resources.

    Simultaneously, there is a commitment to tighten control over fossil fuel consumption, reflecting the nation’s dual focus on energy development and environmental responsibility.

    While anxieties regarding China’s demand outlook contributed to the downward pressure on oil prices, other factors provided support.

    Major oil producers’ decisions to reduce output and geopolitical tensions arising from the Israel-Gaza conflict played a role in sustaining crude prices.

    Over the weekend, the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies (OPEC+) extended their voluntary oil output cuts of 2.2 million barrels per day (bpd) into the second quarter.

    This decision aimed to bolster prices amidst global growth concerns and increased production outside the OPEC+ alliance.

  • PSL 9: Peshawar Zalmi defeats Multan Sultans by four runs after a thriller match

    PSL 9: Peshawar Zalmi defeats Multan Sultans by four runs after a thriller match

    In the 21st match of Pakistan Super League 9, Peshawar Zalmi defeats Multan Sultans by four runs after a thriller match in Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium.

    Peshawar Zalmi captain Babar Azam won the toss and elected to bat first against Multan Sultans.

    Peshawar Zalmi inning

    Peshawar Zalmi scored 204 runs for the loss of 5 wickets in the allotted 20 overs, captain Babar Azam scored 64 runs. Apart from this, Saim Ayub scored 46 runs, Haseebullah scored 31 runs and Asif Ali scored 11 runs. Rovman Powell scored 23 runs and Aamir Jamal scored 12 runs.

    Usama Mir took 3 wickets and Chris Jordan took 2 wickets for Multan Sultans.

    Multan Sultan inning

    Chasing the target of 205 runs, Multan Sultan took aggressive start by hitting 14 runs in first over. Multans captian Muhammad Rizwan scored 32 runs, Chris Jordan 30 while Iftikhar Ahmed scored 60 runs of just 21 balls but could not chase down the total.

    Multan scored 200 runs for the loss of five wickets in alloted 20 overs.

    From Peshawar’s side Aamir Jamal took two while Mehran Mumtaz and Naveen ul Haq took one wicket each.

  • Bitcoin’s price soars close to $69,000, then pulls back to $65,000

    Bitcoin’s price soars close to $69,000, then pulls back to $65,000

    Bitcoin, the leading cryptocurrency by market value, surged to a two-year peak, surpassing $68,600 on Tuesday and approaching its all-time high.

    The cryptocurrency has seen a notable 50 per cent surge this year, with a significant portion of the increase occurring in recent weeks, marked by inflows into US-listed bitcoin funds.

    During Asian trading hours on Tuesday, Bitcoin hovered around $68,500, reaching a session high of $68,828, just shy of the record peak of $68,999.99 set in November 2021.

    The approval of spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds in the United States earlier this year attracted new significant investors, reigniting enthusiasm reminiscent of the 2021 bull run.

    However, Bitcoin has now retreated to $65,000 as of 9:50 p.m. Kyle Rodda, senior markets analyst at Capital.com, described the current market conditions as “crypto mania 4.0,” suggesting that continued low bond and rate volatility could sustain the momentum, though acknowledging signs of irrational behaviour.

    In the week ending March 1, net flows into the ten largest US spot bitcoin funds totaled $2.17 billion, with over half directed towards BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust, according to LSEG data.

    Tony Sycamore, a market analyst at IG, expressed optimism about Bitcoin’s potential move towards $80,000 despite short-term overbuying.

    The cryptocurrency rally aligns with record-breaking performances in global stock indexes, including Japan’s Nikkei, the S&P 500, and the Nasdaq.

    Simultaneously, volatility measures in equities and foreign exchange markets are trending downward.

    Ether, Bitcoin’s smaller rival, also surged over 50 per cent for the year, reaching $3,649. Speculation about exchange-traded funds driving inflows has contributed to Ether’s momentum.

    A regulatory filing on Monday revealed that the US Securities and Exchange Commission has delayed its decision on BlackRock’s application for a spot ethereum exchange-traded fund.

    In a separate development, Tether announced that the number of dollar-pegged stablecoins it issued has surpassed $100 billion, providing stability in the cryptocurrency market.