Pakistan finish second in Street Child Football World Cup in Qatar

Team Pakistan poses for a group photo with the runner up trophy after the final of Street Child World Cup in Doha on October 15, 2022. (Photo courtesy: Muslim Hands Pakistan)
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Updated 16 October 2022
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Pakistan finish second in Street Child Football World Cup in Qatar

  • The final World Cup match against Egypt was decided on penalty shoot-outs
  • Pakistan’s Tufail Shinwari became player of the tournament with 13 goals

ISLAMABAD: Egypt won the final of the Street Child Football World Cup 2022 in Doha on Saturday, as Pakistan finished in the second place with an impressive performance in the tournament.

The Pakistan team remained unbeaten in its seven matches until it played the final match with Egypt which was decided on penalty shoot-outs (4-3).

Its match with Burundi ended in a goalless draw.

Pakistan’s forward Tufail Shinwari outshined other players throughout the tournament and scored 13 goals. The 16-year-old bedazzled the audience with back-to-back hat-tricks against Bosnia and Qatar before his team entered the knock-out stage.

Speaking to Arab News over the phone from Doha, Ansari said he was “proud” to be the player of the tournament.

“We are sad that we could not get the title but at the same time we are coming back [to Pakistan] with an objective [to play football] in our life,” he continued.

The 11-day event included 28 teams from 24 countries and was organized by a UK-based non-profit, Street Child United.

Neighboring India went out of the tournament after playing its group matches.

The Pakistani team was chosen out of 90 players who were trained during a yearlong trial process conducted by Muslim Hands, a charity organization in Pakistan.

During the trial stage, families of selected players were also given stipends, encouraging them to allow their children, many of whom work to support their relatives, to play professional football.

This was the fourth edition of the tournament, with the last three held in South Africa (2010), Brazil (2014) and Russia (2018).


Hundreds protest in Pakistan over India’s threats

Updated 24 April 2025
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Hundreds protest in Pakistan over India’s threats

  • A protest called by a religious party was attended by around 700 people Lahore
  • Around 300 people holding anti-India placards marched through Muzaffarabad

LAHORE: Hundreds of Pakistanis joined protests across the country on Thursday, including in Kashmir, to rage against Indian threats after a deadly attack on tourists across the contested border.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi vowed to pursue and punish the gunmen responsible for killing 26 civilians in the tourist hotspot of Pahalgam on Tuesday, accusing Pakistan of supporting “cross-border terrorism.”
The attack in Indian-administered, Muslim-majority Kashmir was the deadliest for a quarter of a century and marked a dramatic shift with the targeting of civilians instead of Indian security forces.
“If India wants to go to war, then come forward openly,” businessman Ajmal Baloch told AFP at a protest called by a religious party and attended by around 700 people Lahore, where the main border crossing with India is located.
India has said it will suspend the Indus Water Treaty, which shares critical water between the two nuclear-armed neighbors, although it has no major means of restricting the river’s flow downstream to Pakistan.
However, protesters including Baloch raged against the “unacceptable” threat.
“Water is our right and, God willing, we will reclaim it, even if that means through war. We will not back down,” 25-year-old Muhammad Owais said.
Around 300 people brandishing placards carrying anti-India slogans marched through the main city of Muzaffarabad in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
“If India makes the mistake of attacking, the Pakistani Kashmiris will fight on the frontline, we’re ready to die for Pakistan,” said Shoukat Javed Mir, a senior leader of the Pakistan People’s Party in the region.
In Quetta, the capital of Balochistan province, around 150 people staged a protest.


Pakistani Olympic gold medalist Arshad Nadeem declines invitation to India championship 

Updated 24 April 2025
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Pakistani Olympic gold medalist Arshad Nadeem declines invitation to India championship 

  • Indian javelin star Neeraj Chopra has invited Nadeem to participate in Bengaluru Classic Throwing Championship on May 24
  • Nadeem cites participation at 26th Asian Athletics Championships in South Korea from May 27-31 for skipping Indian event

KARACHI: Pakistani Olympic gold medalist Arshad Nadeem this week declined Indian javelin star Neeraj Chopra’s invitation to participate in the Bengaluru Classic Throwing Championship due to prior commitments.

The Bengaluru Classic Throwing Championship, also known as the Neeraj Chopra Classic, is an international javelin event set to be held on May 24 as part of the World Athletics Gold Label series to promote elite competition in India.

Nadeem, 28, cited participation at the 26th Asian Athletics Championships scheduled from May 27-31 in Gumi, South Korea, as the reason for skipping the Indian event.

“Yes, I am not going,” he told Arab News in a text message. “Because I am going to the Asian Championships.”

According to the official Olympics website, Nadeem said Chopra’s event was scheduled for May 24 while he had to leave for South Korea on May 22.

“I have been training hard for the Asian Championship,” it quoted him as saying. “I am grateful to Chopra for inviting me to the event.”

Nadeem made history at the Paris 2024 Olympics by winning Pakistan’s first-ever athletics gold with a record-breaking javelin throw of 92.97 meters. His throw not only set a new Olympic and Asian record but also ended Pakistan’s 32-year Olympic medal drought. 

He has since become a national hero, inspiring millions with his journey from humble beginnings in smalltown Mian Channu to the top of the Olympic podium.


Pakistan’s stocks, dollar bonds plunge amid investor concerns over surging tensions with India

Updated 5 min 54 sec ago
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Pakistan’s stocks, dollar bonds plunge amid investor concerns over surging tensions with India

  • Pakistani stocks lose two percent of their index value at close of market, dollar bonds decline by more than four cents
  • Tensions between India and Pakistan surged this week after Delhi blamed Islamabad for an attack in Jammu and Kashmir

KARACHI: Pakistan’s stocks and dollar-denominated bonds plunged in value on Thursday, which financial experts attributed to investor concerns over surging tensions between Islamabad and New Delhi. 

Pakistan’s stocks shed two percent of their index value when the market closed on Thursday, as per data from the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX). The benchmark KSE-100 Index plummeted to 114,661 points but managed to recover some ground before closing at 115,019.81 points. 

Pakistan’s dollar-denominated bonds maturing in 2036 also declined by more than four cents to 74 cents, international news agency Reuters reported, citing data from Tradeweb. Pakistani financial experts attributed the plunges to increasing investor concerns after renewed tensions between Islamabad and New Delhi. 

New Delhi on Wednesday blamed Pakistan for being involved in an attack this week in Indian-administered Kashmir. Gunmen killed 26 men at a tourist site in the Anantnag district in Indian-administered Kashmir, following which India announced it was suspending its decades-old water-sharing treaty with Pakistan, among a raft of measures that included downgrading ties with Islamabad on Wednesday. Pakistan denied involvement in the attack and reciprocated with similar measures on Thursday. 

“Both the KSE-100 and Nifty-50 are in the red today due to pressure from rising Pakistan-India tensions following the Pahalgam incident,” Najeeb Ahmed Khan Warsi, head of online trading at brokerage firm Foundation Securities Ltd., told Arab News.

The Nifty-50 is India’s National Stock Exchange index, representing the float-weighted average of the country’s 50 largest listed companies.

Warsi said investor sentiment remained “cautious” despite corporate earnings largely aligning with market expectations, noting that trading at Asian markets had also subdued with global recovery losing momentum amid uncertainty over the US–China tariff policy.

“Geopolitical and global economic concerns continue to overshadow market fundamentals,” he said. 

Kamal Ahmed, an analyst at AKD Securities Ltd., said whenever border tensions arise, stock markets in both countries experience uncertainty. This prompts investors to take safer positions that impacts the market negatively. 

“The market sentiment going forward will depend on how long this standoff lasts,” Ahmed explained. “Investors will remain cautious and the market could decline further if the situation escalates.”

Top brokerage firm Topline Securities said the plunge reflected “heightened investor caution.”

“Despite the risk-averse sentiment, overall participation remained firm with volumes clocking in at 505 million shares and a turnover of Rs24.44 billion ($87.94 million), underscoring continued investor engagement amid macro and geopolitical overhangs,” Topline Securities said in a statement. 

Despite being supported by strong earnings, Pakistan’s stock index has lost 2.9 percent since Tuesday, when the attack took place. Pakistan’s stock market has been performing impressively, gaining more than 80 percent last year in both dollar and rupee terms. This surge was primarily driven by investor optimism surrounding a positive review by the International Monetary Fund, whose executive board is expected to approve a $1 billion tranche for Pakistan next month.

Further positive developments, such as global ratings agency Fitch recently upgrading Pakistan’s credit rating, are expected to support the growth of the country’s equities. 


What is The Resistance Front, the militant group linked to Pahalgam attack?

Updated 24 April 2025
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What is The Resistance Front, the militant group linked to Pahalgam attack?

  • Kashmir Resistance has claimed responsibility for Tuesday’s attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir
  • The group, which emerged in 2019, has not previously had any major incidents attributed to it

Kashmir Resistance, also known as The Resistance Front, has claimed responsibility for Tuesday’s attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir, the deadliest incident of its kind in India since the 2008 shootings in Mumbai.

Here are some facts about the group.

WHAT IS TRF?

TRF emerged in 2019 and is considered an offshoot of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba, according to the South Asia Terrorism Portal, a Delhi-based think tank. Islamabad denies it supports any terror groups.

Indian security officials said TRF uses the name Kashmir Resistance on social media and online forums, where it claimed responsibility for Tuesday’s attack in Indian Kashmir’s Pahalgam area.

Lashkar-e-Taiba, listed as a foreign terrorist organization by the United States, is the group accused of plotting attacks in India and in the West, including the three-day assault on Mumbai in November 2008.

“This is basically a front of the LeT. These are groups which have been created over the last years, particularly when Pakistan was under pressure from the Financial Action Task Force and they were trying to create a pattern of denial that they were involved in terrorism in Jammu and Kashmir,” said Ajai Sahni, head of the South Asia Terrorism Portal.

WHAT HAS THE GROUP DONE?

The group has not previously had any large incidents attributed to it, according to Sahni.

“All TRF operations are essentially LeT operations. There will be some measure of operational freedom as to where they hit on the ground, but the sanction would have come from the LeT,” Sahni said.

WHAT DOES INDIA SAY ABOUT TRF?

India’s interior ministry told parliament in 2023 that the group had been involved in the planning of killings of security force personnel and civilians in Jammu and Kashmir.
The group also coordinated the recruitment of militants and the smuggling of weapons and narcotics across the border, the ministry said.

Intelligence officials told Reuters that TRF had also been issuing online threats against pro-India groups for the past two years.

WHAT DOES PAKISTAN SAY?

Pakistan has denied that it supports and funds militants in Kashmir, saying it offers only moral and diplomatic support.


‘Act of war’: Pakistan announces retaliatory measures as India downgrades ties following deadly attack 

Updated 8 min 25 sec ago
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‘Act of war’: Pakistan announces retaliatory measures as India downgrades ties following deadly attack 

  • India alleges cross-border involvement in Tuesday’s attack, suspends Indus Waters Treaty, closes only land border among other measures
  • Pakistan says will respond with “full force across the complete spectrum of national power” if India diverts or stops its waters

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan said on Thursday any attempts by India to stop or divert its waters under the Indus Waters Treaty would be seen as an “act of war” that the country would respond to with “full force across the complete spectrum of national power.”

The announcement came as part of a raft of measures taken by Islamabad after Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif chaired a meeting of the National Security Committee (NSC) to discuss Pakistan’s response to escalatory actions announced by India on Wednesday following a deadly militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir in which 26 tourists were killed and that New Delhi says Islamabad is behind. Pakistan has denied involvement.

Kashmir has been disputed between India and Pakistan since 1947. Both control separate parts of the Himalayan region but claim it in full.

Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri said on Wednesday a cabinet committee on security was briefed on the cross-border linkages of the latest attack, but did not offer any proof of the linkages or provide any more details. In response to the attack, he said India was spending the Indus Waters Treaty with immediate effect, closing the only open land border crossing point at Attari-Wagah, disallowing Pakistani nationals from traveling to India under special South Asian visas, and declaring all defense advisers in the Pakistani mission in New Delhi persona non grata, with a week to leave. India would also pull out its own defense advisers in Pakistan and reduce the staff size at its mission in Islamabad to 30 from 55, Misri said.

“The Committee reviewed the Indian measures announced on 23 April 2025 and termed them unilateral, unjust, politically motivated, extremely irresponsible and devoid of legal merit,” said a statement from three Pakistani PM’s office after the NSC meeting.

Islamabad said it rejected the Indian announcement to hold the Indus Waters Treaty in abeyance, as it was a binding international agreement brokered by the World Bank and contained no provision for unilateral suspension. 

“Water is a vital national interest of Pakistan, a lifeline for its 240 million people and its availability will be safeguarded at all costs,” the statement said.

“Any attempt to stop or divert the flow of water belonging to Pakistan as per the Indus Waters Treaty, and the usurpation of the rights of lower riparian will be considered as an Act of War and responded with full force across the complete spectrum of National Power.”

The treaty, mediated by the World Bank in 1960, split the Indus River and its tributaries between the neighbors and regulated the sharing of water. The treaty remains one of the world’s most resilient water-sharing agreements, withstanding even wars and decades of strain between the neighbors.

Pakistan is heavily dependent on water flowing downstream from this river system from Indian Kashmir for its hydropower and irrigation needs. Suspending the treaty would allow India to deny Pakistan its share of the waters.

“COMMITTED TO PEACE”

Diplomatic relations between neighboring Pakistan and India were weak even before the latest measures were announced as Pakistan had expelled India’s envoy and not posted its own ambassador in New Delhi after India revoked the semi-autonomous status of Kashmir in 2019.

India has long accused Pakistan of involvement in an insurgency in Kashmir, but Islamabad says it only offers diplomatic and moral support to Kashmiris in their struggle for self-determination.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed in Kashmir since the uprising began in 1989, but it has tapered off in recent years and tourism has surged in the scenic region.

Among other retaliatory measures announced on Thursday, Pakistan said it would exercise the right to hold all bilateral agreements with India, including but not limited to the 1972 Simla Agreement, in abeyance. 

The Simla Agreement says both countries will “settle their differences by peaceful means through bilateral negotiations.” India has consistently maintained that the Kashmir dispute is a bilateral issue and must be settled through bilateral negotiations as per the Simla Agreement, 1972 and under the treaty has denied any third party intervention even from the United Nations.

Pakistan also said it would close the Wagah land border with immediate effect and suspend all cross-border transit from India through this route “without exception.” With no direct flights operating between the two countries, the move cuts all transport links between them.

Islamabad said those who had crossed with valid visas through Wagah could return through that route by April 30.

Islamabad also suspended all visas under the SAARC Visa Exemption Scheme (SVES) issued to Indian nationals and deemed them canceled with immediate effect, with the exception of Sikh pilgrims who frequently travel to Pakistan to visit religious sites. Pakistan gave Indian nationals currently in Pakistan under SVES 48 hours to leave.

“Pakistan declares the Indian Defense, Naval and Air Advisers in Islamabad persona non grata,” the statement added. 

“They are directed to leave Pakistan immediately but not later than 30 April 2025. These posts in the Indian High Commission are deemed annulled. Support staff of these Advisers are also directed to return to India.”

Islamabad will also reduce the strength of the Indian High Commission in the capital to 30 diplomats and staff members from April 30 and Pakistan’s airspace would be closed with immediate effect for all Indian owned or Indian operated airlines. All trade with India, including to and from any third country, has also been suspended. 

“The Pakistani nation remains committed to peace, but will never allow anyone to transgress its sovereignty, security, dignity and their inalienable rights,” the statement concluded. 

India has not yet responded to Pakistan’s measures but police in India’s Kashmir published notices on Thursday naming three suspected militants “involved in” Tuesday’s attack and announced rewards for information leading to their arrest.

Two of the three suspected militants are Pakistani nationals, the notices said.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in his first speech since the attack in the Himalayan region, vowed on Thursday to punish all those responsible.

“I say to the whole world: India will identify, track and punish every terrorist and their backer,” the Indian prime minister said. “We will pursue them to the ends of the Earth.”

With inputs from Reuters