RAWALPINDI: Pacemen Hasan Mahmud and Nahid Rana shared nine wickets on Monday to set Bangladesh on course for victory over Pakistan before rain stopped play on the fourth day of the second Test.
Hasan took 5-43 while Nahid added 4-44 — both career-best figures — in dismissing Pakistan for 172 in their second innings and giving the visitors a target of 185 to secure a 2-0 series win in Rawalpindi.
Openers Zakir Hasan and Shadman Islam raced to 42 without loss — with Zakir hitting two sixes and two boundaries — before rain clouds gathered and bad light suspended play one over after the tea break.
Bangladesh lead the two-match series 1-0 after a surprise win in Rawalpindi last month, their first in 14 tests against Pakistan.
They have only won two series away from home — against the West Indies in 2009 and Zimbabwe in 2021 — and need another 143 runs on the final day on Tuesday to secure victory.
Pakistan had been 117-6 at lunch, with Mohammad Rizwan and Salman Agha fighting to save the hosts’ blushes before Hasan ended their 55-run stand.
He had Rizwan caught behind for 43 and had Mohammad Ali caught in the slips on the next ball for a golden duck to leave Pakistan teetering on 136-8.
Salman, who top-scored with 47, added 27 for the last wicket with Mir Hamza before Hasan wrapped up the innings with his fifth wicket, getting Hamza caught in the slip.
The morning session belonged to 21-year-old Nahid, who dismissed Shan Masood (28), Babar Azam (11) and Saud Shakeel (two) in a spell of express bowling.
The rain-affected Test saw Friday’s first day’s play washed out and then a remarkable fightback by Bangladesh on Sunday.
The visitors were 26-6 in reply to Pakistan’s first innings 274 before Liton Das (138) put together a seventh-wicket partnership of 165 with Mehidy Hasan Miraz (78) that enabled Bangladesh to reach 262.
Pakistan took their overnight score of 9-2 to 47-2 in 10 overs on Monday before Bangladesh broke through with a spell of three wickets for 18 runs.
Saim Ayub fell for 20 to a brilliant catch by Najmul Hossain at mid-off as the opener failed to keep down a drive off fast bowler Taskin Ahmed.
Nahid then had Pakistan skipper Masood caught behind by Liton off a wild shot before getting the prized wicket of Azam, caught at slip off a sharp delivery in his next over.
Nahid grabbed his third by dismissing Shakeel and went to lunch with figures of 3-22 off five overs.
Rain halts Bangladesh victory bid after Hasan, Nahid demolish Pakistan
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Rain halts Bangladesh victory bid after Hasan, Nahid demolish Pakistan

- Hasan took 5-43 while Nahid added 4-44, both career-best figures, in dismissing Pakistan for 172 in second innings
- Openers Zakir Hasan and Shadman Islam raced to 42 without loss, with Zakir hitting two sixes and two boundaries
Pakistan mulls over 60 percent cut in solar buyback tariffs to save $15 billion in 10 years

- Pakistan currently buys back solar-generated electricity from domestic, commercial and industrial producers at Rs27 per kilowatt hour
- Authorities to present revised policy ‘within a month’ as global energy think-tank ranks solar as Pakistan’s largest power source in 2025
KARACHI: Pakistan’s government plans to more than halve the buyback tariffs for net-metered solar power to save Rs4.3 trillion ($15.1 billion) over the next ten years, according to people privy to the matter.
Authorities at Pakistan’s energy ministry are working on a new solar policy that looks to change the current net-metering regime under which the cash-strapped government is buying back solar-generated electricity from domestic, commercial and industrial producers at Rs27 per kilowatt hour (kWh).
The buyback rates for large scale grid-connected solar plants like Quaid-e-Azam Solar Power (Pvt.) Limited, Pakistan’s first 100-megawatt solar utility set up by Punjab government, ranges between Rs9 and Rs11.
“The government is proposing to remove this anomaly and offer almost a uniform buyback rate for net-metered solar power in line with global standard practice,” said a Pakistani energy ministry official who is privy to the policymaking discussions but cannot share them with media.
He said officials at the ministry’s power division will present a revised solar policy to the federal cabinet “within a month,” proposing to reduce the buyback price for net-metered solar power by more than 60 percent to Rs10 per kWh.
The government plans to link the buyback rates with the national base tariff.
“The government is encouraging these domestic and other distributed solar producers and has allocated a quantum for them in the IGCEP (Indicative Generation Capacity Expansion Plan),” the official said.
“What this new net-metering policy will define is the question that at what rate the government should buy power from these distributed producers. We are working this out.”
The move would help the government save Rs4.3 trillion ($15.1 billion) in the decade to come, he added.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government is currently trying to revive Pakistan’s debt-ridden economy by introducing energy and economic reforms, backed by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) that approved a $7 billion loan for the South Asian nation in Sept., last year.
Promoting renewable energy sources like solar and wind has been part of the government’s plan to avoid costly oil imports that shrank five percent to $15 billion from July 2024 till May 2025, according to latest official figures.
The South Asian country has boosted solar electricity generation by over three times the global average so far this year, fueled by a more than fivefold rise in solar capacity imports since 2022, Reuters reported last month, citing data from global energy think tank Ember.
The combination of rapidly rising capacity and generation has propelled solar power from Pakistan’s fifth-largest electricity source in 2023 to its largest in 2025, Reuters said.
However, the country still relies heavily on fossil fuels and generates 56 percent electricity from thermal, 24.4 percent from hydel, 8 percent from nuclear and 12.2 percent from renewable energy sources.
According to Pakistan’s latest economic survey, the nation’s total installed electricity generation capacity stood at 46,605 megawatts from July 2024 till March 2025, showing 2 percent increase from 45,888 megawatts during the same period in the previous year.
“The increase can be attributed with the installed capacity of 2,813 MW from net-metering,” the survey said.
Shankar Talreja, head of research at Karachi-based brokerage firm Topline Securities, said Pakistan had been spending billions of dollars on the import of solar panels from China, thus pushing the country’s inflation-hit consumers from grid-based energy to solar photovoltaic plants many of them have now installed at their rooftops to ensure smooth and cheaper supply of electricity.
“The benefit of net-metering was quite attractive, [so] people started installing solar at their rooftops and they were also selling excess electricity to government at a price of over Rs20 per kwh,” Talreja said.
“Pakistan imports over $2 billion of solar [panels] every year and it was increasing at a higher rate, resulting in further reduction in utilization of grid energy.”
Pakistan has so far imported solar panels of 48,000 megawatts capacity, mostly from China, of which, the country is generating close to 6,000 megawatts power due to low efficiency (up to 21 percent) of these panels, according to officials.
“People are installing as many solar plants as possible and selling their surplus power to the government at a higher rate,” the energy ministry official said, adding the government is also considering 8,500 megawatts power generation quota for the distributed net-metering solar electricity that comes from domestic, agriculture, commercial and industrial producers.
“The buyback rate the power division is proposing stands equivalent to the tariff we are using to buy power from large-scale solar plants,” he said, adding that even K-Electric, Pakistan’s largest private utility that powers the country’s commercial capital of Karachi, had agreed to sell its solar power to the government at as much as Rs10 per kilowatt.
Last month, K-Electric signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with China’s Huawei Digital Power Pakistan to strategically collaborate for 300 MWh battery energy storage systems and electric vehicles charging infrastructure to accelerate Pakistan’s smart energy transition.
The off-grid solar solution was one of the major reasons for 4 percent decrease in Pakistan’s total electricity consumption that dropped to 80,111 gigawatt hours from July 2024 till March 2025, according to the economic survey.
Talreja said the government, sensing the costly nature of net-metering, has started discouraging and insisting people to stay on the national grid, and proposed to slash and link the buyback tariff with national base tariff, i.e. 33 percent.
“The government is trying its best to increase share of renewables in overall energy mix, however, its implementation gets tougher due to idle capacity of expensive thermal assets,” the economist said.
Pakistan seeks higher 2026 Hajj quota after 455,000 register for pilgrimage

- Islamabad urges Saudi Arabia to raise Hajj quota from 179,210 in 2025 to 230,000 next year
- Pakistan's current Muslim population is approximately 230 million, according to latest census
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan's religious affairs minister, Sardar Mohammad Yousaf, said on Tuesday the country has requested a higher Hajj quota in proportion to its population for the next year from Saudi Arabia, after early registrations for the pilgrimage reached 455,000 this month.
Pakistan's current Muslim population is approximately 230 million, according to the latest census cited by the minister.
He added the government had urged the Kingdom to raise the country’s Hajj quota from 179,210 to 230,000 in a formal letter, aiming to enable more citizens to perform the annual Islamic pilgrimage.
"A gazette notification has ... been issued regarding the population, so based on that population, our [Hajj] quota should be 230,000," Yousaf said during a news conference.
"For this, we've written to the Saudi government and demanded [an increase], and a letter has been sent [to them] by the Ministry of Religious Affairs," he continued. "We hope they will consider this [request] and adjust our quota in proportion to our population."
Yousaf highlighted that the registration of 455,000 intending pilgrims by the deadline reflected their strong eagerness to perform Hajj.
The government announced the initiation of next year’s Hajj process early, asking aspiring pilgrims to register themselves first.
No fee was required at the registration stage.
All registered applicants will now be able to choose between the government and private Hajj schemes.
A large portion of the private Hajj quota for 2025 remained unutilized due to delays by tour operators in meeting payment and registration deadlines, while the government fulfilled its full allocation of over 88,000 pilgrims.
Private operators attributed the shortfall to technical issues, including payment processing problems and communication breakdowns.
At SCO summit, Pakistan slams Israel for using ‘aggression as tool of policy’ in Middle East

- The bloc is seen by some Western analysts as regional grouping by Beijing, Moscow to counter United States influence in Asia
- Pakistan FM Ishaq Dar says Israeli military actions against SCO members are ‘unacceptable,’ demands immediate end to Gaza war
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s deputy prime minister and foreign minister, Ishaq Dar, on Tuesday criticized Israel for using “aggression as a tool of policy” in the Middle East, condemning Israeli military actions against regional states and demanding an end to its 20-month war on Gaza.
Dar said this while addressing a meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization’s (SCO) Council of Foreign Ministers (CFM), which came in the backdrop of heightened tensions in South Asia and the Middle East, particularly after the Pakistan-India conflict and Israeli military actions against several Gulf countries.
Israel’s war on Gaza, which began after Oct. 2023 attacks by Hamas on Israel, has killed more than 58,000 Palestinians, over half of them women and children, according to the Palestinian health ministry. On Tuesday, the UN rights office said it had recorded at least 875 killings within the past six weeks at aid points in Gaza.
Speaking at the CFM meeting, Dar said Pakistan was seriously concerned at the trends of using aggression as a tool of policy, emphasizing the resolution of disputes through peaceful means and according to the principles of international law, justice and fairness.
“Israel has shown a reckless disregard for international norms and humanity through its relentless and disproportionate use of force in Gaza resulting in the death of tens of thousands of civilians causing the worst humanitarian crisis in Gaza,” he said.
“We call for immediate halt to Israel’s atrocities.”
Dar said the only viable remedy to the Palestine dispute was the realization of the two-state solution, which includes the establishment of Palestine as a viable, secure and contiguous state on the basis of pre-1967 borders.
He also condemned the “unjustified and illegitimate aggression” by Israel against Iran and the United States (US) strikes on its nuclear facilities.
“Such illegal actions directed against SCO member states are unacceptable,” Dar said.
The 12-day war between Iran and Israel, which began on June 13 Israeli airstrikes on Iranian nuclear facilities and military leadership, killed around 1,000 Iranians and more than two dozen Israelis.
The SCO, comprising China, Russia, Pakistan, India, Iran, Belarus and Central Asian states, is seen by some Western analysts as a regional grouping by Beijing and Moscow to counter United States influence in Asia.
The CFM meeting, a key diplomatic gathering aimed at preparing the groundwork for the upcoming SCO Leaders’ Summit later this year, was convened to review progress on multilateral cooperation and set the agenda for endorsement by heads of state.
A year after maiming, Cammie the camel walks again with prosthetic limb in Pakistan

- Cammie lost her leg after a landlord in Sanghar attacked her for straying into his field for food
- A US-based firm built a prosthetic limb for the camel cared for by a Karachi animal shelter
KARACHI: A year after being brutally maimed by a landlord who chopped off her leg in Sanghar district of Pakistan’s southern Sindh province, Cammie the camel walked again Tuesday morning on all four legs with the help of a prosthetic limb, creating a euphoric feeling among her caregivers.
Cammie’s first steps came after a long period of intensive rehabilitation at the Karachi shelter of the CDRS Benji Project for Animal Welfare, which collaborated with a US-based prosthetics firm and received support from the provincial government to provide the young camel with a new limb.
“Today I am ecstatic,” Sarah Jahangir, director of the animal shelter, told Arab News. “I don’t have words for how happy I am seeing Cammie stand up on her prosthetic.”
“I am so proud of my team,” she continued.
Jahangir also expressed gratitude to Senator Qurat-Ul-Ain Marri and her sister, Shazia Marri, a provincial lawmaker in Sindh, for their support.
“I can’t thank both enough for rescuing Cammie, and trusting us and supporting us wholeheartedly.”
Cammie had wandered into a private field in Sanghar last year in search of food when a landlord, enraged by the intrusion, hacked off her front leg with a sharp weapon.
The incident led to public outcry that forced the state to intervene. Authorities filed an animal cruelty case against the landlord, arresting five people under Pakistan’s rarely enforced animal rights laws.
The prosthetic leg, specially designed by Virginia-based Bionic Pets, was delivered two months ago. Cammie’s medical team had waited for both her physical wound to heal and for her mental readiness before fitting the limb.
“She was a very scared, nervous little child,” said Sheema Khan, the shelter manager, who was crying on Tuesday when Cammie took her first steps with the new leg.
To help her emotionally overcome, Cammie was paired with another rescued camel, Callie, who became her emotional companion. Their friendship proved vital: on the night Callie arrived, Cammie stood up on her own for the first time in months.
However, the wounded camel couldn’t walk until the moment arrived on Tuesday morning.
“Seeing Cammie stand on her own is vindication of months of dedicated hard work,” Senator Qurat-Ul-Ain Marri told Arab News.
“When this tragic incident first occurred, my sister, the elected MNA from Sanghar, was appalled… With the help of the Sindh Government and the selfless volunteers at CDRS Benji, we resolved to bring her back on her feet, and today we have managed that. Allah has been most kind.”
Pakistan monsoon death toll rises to 116 after five more killed in last 24 hours

- The development comes as authorities warn of more downpours, flooding over the next two days
- At least 253 people have been injured in rain-related incidents since monsoon began in late June
ISLAMABAD: At least five more people were killed in rain-related incidents in Pakistan in the last 24 hours, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said on Tuesday, taking the overall monsoon death toll to 116 since late June.
In Punjab, two children died after being struck by lightning in Okara, while two others were killed in a house collapse in Bahawalnagar. A man was killed in a house collapse in Sindh’s Hyderabad. At least 253 people have been injured in rain-related incidents since monsoon began in late June.
In its latest report on Tuesday, the NDMA said monsoon currents from the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal were penetrating into central parts of Pakistan and were likely to cause thunderstorm and heavy rains.
“Scattered to widespread thunderstorm/rain with isolated heavy falls and torrential rains at few places is expected over Bahawalpur, Multan, DG Khan, Sahiwal, Lahore, Gujranwala and Faisalabad Divisions,” it said.
“Scattered thunderstorm/rain with isolated heavy falls is expected over the upper catchments of all rivers along with Islamabad, upper Sindh, east Balochistan, Peshawar, Kohat, Bannu, DI Khan, Rawalpindi and Sargodha Divisions.”
The authority said flash flooding due to hill torrents is expected in DG Khan and east Balochistan on July 15-16, while urban flooding is expected in major Punjab cities over the next two days.
The NDMA earlier directed authorities to ensure deployment of emergency teams, improve drainage systems and coordinate closely with local administration. It advised public to stay away from weak structures and electricity poles, avoid unnecessary travel and relocate vehicles and livestock to safer locations.
Monsoon season brings South Asia 70 to 80 percent of its annual rainfall, arriving in early June in India and late June in Pakistan, and lasting through until September.
The annual rains are vital for agriculture and food security, and the livelihoods of millions of farmers. But increasingly erratic and extreme weather patterns are turning the rains into a destructive force.
Pakistan is one of the world’s most vulnerable countries to the effects of climate change, and its 240 million residents are facing extreme weather events with increasing frequency.
In 2022, unprecedented monsoon floods submerged a third of Pakistan and killed 1,700 people, with some areas yet to recover from the damage. In May, at least 32 people were killed in severe storms, including strong hailstorms.