Pakistan has respect and love for China: Imran Khan

PTI chairman is on his two-day visit to China to meet the Communist Party of China. PHOTO: EXPRESS/ FILE

Pakistan Tehrik-e-Insaf (PTI) chairman Imran Khan has said that even though the people of Pakistan and China have little direct contact, Pakistanis have a lot of respect and love for China.

Khan said this on the first day of his two-day visit to China at the invitation of the Communist Party of China (CPC), where he met with the leaders of the CPC, including HE Ismail Tiliwaldi, Vice Chairman, Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress; HE Wang Jiarul, Minister International Department, CPC and Ai Ping Vice Minister of the same department, said a press release.

The PTI chairman said that Pakistan and especially his party had a lot to learn from China, including alleviation, anti-corruption measures and accountability of officials and party leaders.

The CPC and PTI agreed upon cooperation with the latter sending its think tank teams to learn from the CPC experience and model.

During the meeting, both sides also discussed the situation in Pakistan and the expanding potential for greater Chinese investment in and assistance to Pakistan.

Source: http://tribune.com.pk/story/286065/pakistan-has-respect-and-love-for-china-imran-khan/

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Son born to Salman Butt minutes before guilty verdict

Former Pakistan cricketer Salman Butt arrives at Southwark Crown Court in central London on November 1, 2011. PHOTO: AFP

LAHORE: The wife of former captain Salman Butt gave birth to a baby boy just minutes before her husband was found guilty Tuesday of a “spot-fixing” betting scam during a match against England.

The 27-year-old’s father told AFP by telephone from Lahore that the baby was born 30 minutes before the verdict, news that was splashed immediately all over Pakistani television stations.

“Salman Butt had a baby boy 30 minutes before the verdict came,” his father, Zulfiqar Butt, told AFP, without giving the baby’s name.

“It’s a matter of great grief for us that Butt has been found guilty. We hope the Almighty will bring him out of this trouble because these are very difficult times for him and the family,” he added.

It is Butt’s first son, he already has a daughter.

The former Test captain was convicted at Southwark Crown Court of conspiracy to obtain and accept corrupt payments and conspiracy to cheat at gambling, while fast bowler Mohammad Asif was found guilty of conspiracy to cheat.

Prosecutors alleged that they conspired with British agent Mazhar Majeed and fast bowler Mohammad Amir to deliver three intentional no-balls during the Lord’s Test between Pakistan and England in August 2010.

The pair were charged after allegations about their involvement in spot-fixing appeared in the now-defunct News of the World tabloid, owned by Australian-born media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, shortly after the Lord’s Test.

Source: http://tribune.com.pk/story/286054/son-born-to-butt-minutes-before-guilty-verdict/

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Pakistan match-fixing scandal: Salman Butt and Mohammad Asif guilty of conspiracy to cheat

Guilty: Mohammad Asif (left) and Salman Butt (right) Photo: PA

After 16 hours of deliberation, former captain Butt was found guilty of conspiracy of cheat at gambling, and conspiracy to accept corrupt payments. Asif was found guilty of conspiracy to cheat at gambling. On the charge of conspiracy to accept corrupt payments, the jury could not reach a verdict on Asif. The jury are still deliberating on that more serious charge.

Midday latest:

Salman Butt. Conspiracy to accept corrupt payments: Guilty 10-2. Conspiracy to cheat at gambling: guilty, unanimous.

Mohammad Asif: Conspiracy to accept corrupt payments: no verdict, jury still deliberating. Conspiracy to cheat at gambling: guilty, unanimous

Butt and Asif become the first sportsmen convicted in the UK courts for cheating since three professional footballers, including two Sheffield Wednesday players, were jailed for betting against their team to lose in 1964.

The two players have already been banned for lengthy terms by the International Cricket Council, which found them guilty of breaching its anti-corruption code at a disciplinary hearing in January.

Butt was banned for 10 years with five years suspended, Asif seven years with two years suspended.

The trial of Asif and Butt relied heavily on the testimony of Mazher Mahmood, the investigations editor of the News of the World, which was closed earlier this year because of the phone-hacking scandal.

The court heard that police uncovered evidence of 9,000 text messages and phone calls between the conspirators and unknown contacts in India, Pakistan and the Middle East in the two weeks preceding the Lord’s Test.

Testimony was also heard from officers with the ICC’s anti-corruption unit and a statement was read to the court by the Pakistan team security officer on last year’s tour to England.

Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/cricket/international/pakistan/8855607/Pakistan-match-fixing-scandal-Salman-Butt-and-Mohammad-Asif-guilty-of-conspiracy-to-cheat.html

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O captains, my captains

Graeme Swann squats on the turf, England v West Indies, 2nd Twenty20, The Oval, September 25, 2011

Which team has used the most captains in a year across formats – Tests, ODIs and Twenty20 internationals? If you were thinking Pakistan, because of the constant churn in their cricket, you’d be wrong. The record belongs to England, who have had six captains so far in 2011, and Zimbabwe, who used six in 2001.

England began 2011 in Australia, wrapping up an innings victory at the SCG to take the Ashes 3-1 under the leadership of Andrew Strauss. Paul Collingwood then took over the captaincy for two T20s in Adelaide and Melbourne, which Strauss did not play. After the one-day series in Australia and the World Cup campaign in the subcontinent, Strauss gave up the ODI leadership to focus on his Test career. With an eye on the future, England axed Collingwood as T20 captain and made the maverick move of appointing a different leader for each format: Strauss for Tests, Alastair Cook for ODIs and Stuart Broad for T20s.

Cook led England in the one-dayers against Sri Lanka and India at home, and Broad during the T20s. England also had an ODI against Ireland in the summer, for which they rested Cook and were led by Eoin Morgan, taking the number of captains for the year to five. Their sixth captain in 2011 was Graeme Swann, who stepped in because injuries ruled out Broad and Morgan from the two T20s against West Indies at the end of the English season.

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India v England: one-day series preview

India v England: one-day series preview

Rounding his troops: MS Dhoni has several new faces in his Indian squad Photo: GETTY IMAGES

By Rod Gilmour

6:30AM BST 14 Oct 2011

India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni gets a chance for redemption against England when he leads his team in the Payback Series (as it has been billed in India). The hosts were beset by injuries on the summer tour of England when they failed to win a single game. With England well equipped in the pace department, Kevin Pietersen back in the fold and the young guns seemingly undeterred by sub-continent conditions over the last 10 days acclimatising, can we expect another whitewash?

Dhoni leads his team at home for the first time since India won the World Cup in April. With Dhoni, Suresh Raina, Virat Kohli, and Gautam Gambhir the only players to survive from that frenzied night in Mumbai five months ago, this is a series for the fringe players to stake a claim for the future.

One to watch

Having played second fiddle to the injured Harbhajan Singh, 25 year-oldRavichandran Ashwin can press claims for a Test call-up with a decent series against England. Heralded as a spinner who can produce the goods under pressure, the talented off-breaker came to prominence in last year’s Champions League for Chennai Super Kings. Played two matches in India’s World Cup-winning run and, with 16 caps, there’s more to come.

Jonny Bairstow is likely to come in for Ian Bell. It would be no surprise. The 22 year-old Bairstow launched a series of searing strokes among his eight sixes and six fours in a 143-run stand with Jonathan Trott in midweek. Bairstow has already made the world sit up and take notice of his huge talent, having hit a match-winning 41 not out from only 21 balls on ODI debut in Cardiff against India last month. He looks to have the measure of the sub-continent conditions, too.

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Science v art in clash of cultures- Pakistan vs the rest of the world in Worldcup

Following article was posted on cricinfo before the semi final of t20 world cup 2009. Pakistan vs South Africa. I just wanted it to be shared with every one.

It’s first a clash of ethos, of philosophies and even of time, more than a semi-final. Here is truly man against machine, the art of cricket against the science of it, cricket’s future and cricket’s past. South Africa’s progress to this point has been smooth, well-planned, calculated and inevitable, as if their players were born to do this. Pakistan have got here in shambles – losing games, winning some, treating it all as a bit of fun – and the players not so much born to do this are struggling to discover why they are doing it at all.

South Africa lack nowhere and nothing. If Jacques Kallis and Graeme Smith are the efficient drones at the top, there is heart in the middle, with the ever-frail skills of Herschelle Gibbs and the creativity of AB de Villiers. Even Albie Morkel, in whom there are glimpses of Zulu, thankfully smiles more. They’ve always had pace, but now they even have spinners, who are not batsmen forced to bowl. Sure, they are a little one-dimensional (watching videos of Umar Gul’s yorkers?), but they are spinners – South African and successful; how often have we said that in the past?

The whole machinery is intimidating, determined to iron out all kinks, the mission pre-programmed; with seven consecutive wins in this format, they have apparently also taken the inherent unpredictability of this format out of the equation. They are well-trained, well-oiled, and their psychologist talks about 120 contests and of processes over outcomes and how choking is not really an issue anymore. They win even warm-up matches and the dead games because every game counts. They are cricket’s future.

Pakistan are the past. They are wholly dysfunctional, but just about getting along, though unsure where they are going. They don’t control their extras, they don’t run the singles hard and they field as if it were still the 60s. They are least bothered about erasing the flaws because any win will be in spite of them. They did hire a psychologist though, and you can only imagine what those sessions were like and how much they actually talked about sport and cricket. There are permanent mutterings of serious rifts. They may not bat, bowl or field well all the time, but sometimes, they do what can only be described as a ‘Pakistan’: that is, they bowl, bat or field spectacularly, briefly, to change the outcome of matches. You cannot plan or account for this as an opponent because Pakistan themselves don’t plan or account for it.

It can come from any person, any discipline, but on evidence, it is likelier to come from the bowling. The batting needs Shoaib Malik and Misbah-ul-Haq to really get their show going. A piece of fielding brilliance cannot be discounted, but generally both Pakistan and West Indies have happily disproved the dictum that in T20 cricket you have to be Jonty Rhodes to get anywhere. Heroes will likely be found among the Umar Guls, the spinners and maybe even Mohammad Aamer, who is a throwback to the late 80s and early 90s, when Pakistani fast bowlers were born ready to play international cricket.

The pressure on South Africa however, will be greater. They are expected to win this and anyway they will always have the whole ‘chokers’ tag to deal with until the day they actually lift a big trophy. It doesn’t help that they look as good as they did during the 1999 World Cup, though they are easier on the eye. Pakistan, as Younis Khan said before leaving for England, won’t much mind a semi-final spot; Kamran Abbasi rightly noted that they may have had an easier ride to the semis than most but no country has had a rougher two years. Clearly they’d love to win it, but they have already achieved more than many thought and a loss wouldn’t be the end of the world. But importantly, as the only side to make it to the last four in 2007 and 2009, they have underscored their significance in this brave new, T20 world, a world in which they absolutely cannot be ignored.

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Mazhar Majeed RAW front man, claims Daily Mail

In another development, the investigations conducted by the Daily Mail have revealed that the ICC President Sharad Pawar, an Indian national is making an effort to involve Pakistani players in spot-fixing with the intent of seeing it banned for the next two to three years. The investigation also reveals that the ICC Chief and its members, The News of the World and the notorious Indian intelligence agency RAW have masterminded this mud-slinging against the Pakistan cricket team at a very crucial time, where the international world sought the return of international cricket in Pakistan, with Zimbabwe promising to tour the country later this year.

The investigations have revealed that the picture of Salman Butt along with Mazhar Majeed, the high profile bookie, has been fabricated and created in Photoshop. The daily mail in its report has indicated that Mazhar Majeed is supposedly a RAW front man, holding a key position with the agency’s fund for the generation of illicit money, which includes the Mafia wings, running brothel houses, prostitution syndicates and gambling dens which were betting on cricket and soccer.

According to the report, Majeed worked in a movie theatre at a lowly position when he was handpicked by RAW and trained under the command of RAW’s Special Operation Division SOD, headed by Chhota Rajan where he was trained for sports betting. The Daily Mail in their investigation also noted that Majeed was introduced to different bookies in Mumbai, Delhi, Johannesburg, Cape Town and Dubai by RAW officials. These findings divulge that in 2007, RAW arranged a meeting between Mazhar Majeed and Indian cricket stars Sachin Tendulkar, Harbhajan Singh and Rahul Dravid so that they can further introduce Majeed to different players of international cricket teams, especially cricketers from Pakistan.

Furthermore, the findings disclosed that in 2009, an Indian businessman Vijay Aloowalia based in CapeTown, South Africa hosted a dinner for Pakistani and Indian cricketers where Majeed was introduced to some Pakistani players. In their investigations, the Daily Mail has further indicated that RAW’s undercover officials working at the Indian High Commission at London held meetings with British journalists after which they finally succeeded in convincing a certain journalist to organize an operation which would go on to implicate the Pakistani players ahead of their ODI series.

The investigations further go on to point out that the quick bail of Mazhar Majeed was also sponsored by the Indian High Commission and RAW since the Indian diplomats at London were seen to be highly active following the arrest of Majeed. The Daily Mails investigations conclude that the basic aim of RAW was to play havoc with the careers of Pakistani players and when Sharad Pawar was taken on board the ICC President supported the plan to get the Pakistan Cricket team suspended for a period of three to five years from international cricket. Following the accusations, Malcolm Speed was quick to put forward the suggestion of banning the Pakistan team based on what could be termed “yellow journalism.”

It is also imperative to mention that India and Pakistan have had a strained relationship, due to the Kashmir dispute, with Indian’s blaming Pakistan for the insurgency in the valley. Pakistan has blamed India for multiple insurgencies through Afghanistan in the regions of Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa and Balochistan. The Pakistani foreign office claiming that they had proofs of Indian involvement in the insurgency.

This report might be termed as speculation and a conspiracy theory, however only the final report by the Scotland Yard can shed more light on the truth of the betting scam that has considerably damaged Pakistan cricket.

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