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Pakistan dreads becoming no-go area again after NZ snub India to start home season with New Zealand series

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(Reuters) - After a decade spent trying to woo back cricket’s internatio­nal elite, Pakistan is facing the prospect of being declared the game’s no-go area again, and the anger is palpable.

A sense of deja vu swept the country on Friday when New Zealand abruptly pulled the plug on their first Pakistan tour in 18 years, citing a security alert.

With England also cancelling what would have been their first visit to the South Asian country in 16 years next month, Pakistan’s bumper home season looks in disarray.

NEW DELHI, (Reuters) - New Zealand will return to the sub-continent in November to play three Twenty20 Internatio­nals and two test matches in India, two months after abandoning their tour of Pakistan over safety concerns.

The series against New Zealand will kick-start India’s 2021-22 home season which includes four tests, three one-dayers and 14 Twenty20 Internatio­nals, the Indian cricket board said in a statement yesterday.

New Zealand called off their limitedove­rs tour of Pakistan minutes before the opening fixture in Rawalpindi on Friday following a security alert from their government.

It is a massive setback for the cricketmad nation which moved heaven and earth to project itself as a safe destinatio­n and won tour commitment­s from several leading teams.

“It’s been pretty gut-wrenching,” PCB chief executive Wasim Khan told a virtual news conference on Sunday.

“We’ve done a huge amount of work in building our credibilit­y back up again in world cricket. The rug has been pulled out from under our feet as quick as that.”

Cricket Australia said it was monitoring the situation and would “talk with the India could not host the second half of the Indian Premier League (IPL) or the Twenty20 World Cup because of the COVID-19 surge in the country this year.

Both tournament­s have been shifted to the United Arab Emirates, with Oman also hosting some T20 World Cup matches.

West Indies will arrive in India in February to play six limited-overs matches, followed by Sri Lanka who will face their hosts in two tests and three Twenty20 Internatio­nals.

South Africa will tour India in June to play six Twenty20 matches. relevant authoritie­s once more informatio­n becomes known” ahead of its scheduled tour early next year.

Cricket West Indies did not reply to Reuters’ e-mail asking if it would reconsider their team’s tour of Pakistan later this year but the atmosphere is not promising.

“The abrupt departure of New Zealand has left many scars for us, and we just certainly hope that this is not going to have long-term consequenc­es for us moving forward,” added Khan.

With the Taliban sweeping to power in neighbouri­ng Afghanista­n, Pakistan will have to work extra hard to convince other teams to tour the country.

Shunned by all after the deadly 2009 attack on the Sri Lanka team bus in Lahore, Pakistan’s “home” matches in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) have been played without fan support and earned the PCB little in the way of revenue. Pakistan has no plans to again move home games offshore, says Khan.

Test cricket returned to the country when Sri Lanka toured in 2019 but PCB officials know their country will only be deemed safe when the likes of England and Australia agree to go there.

DANGEROUS PRECEDENT

In recent times, teams touring Pakistan were accorded the kind of security usually reserved for visiting heads of state and their cricket establishm­ent wonders what else they could have done.

“NZ just killed Pakistan cricket,” tweeted former test bowler Shoaib Akhtar, while angry fans demanded Pakistan boycott next month’s Twenty20 World Cup match against New Zealand.

The PCB has ruled out that prospect but is infuriated at New Zealand’s refusal to share the exact nature of the threat that derailed the tour.

“It sets a very dangerous precedent if countries can unilateral­ly just abandoned tours. Then it does affect relationsh­ips. Where does it leave us as a sport?” Khan said. The PCB official said he would be making a broader point at the Internatio­nal Cricket Council (ICC), seeking to end the “inequality” within the governing body.

“Inequality exists, and I don’t care what people say,” the British-born former chief executive of English county Leicester said.

“It’s easy to walk out of countries like Pakistan without any reason, without any dialogue, without any discussion. That has to stop, because the inequality has to stop in the world of cricket.”

The players are dreading the prospect of having to resume playing their “home” games abroad but Khan said the PCB would not go down without a fight.

“As it stands at the moment, we have no plans to go abroad to play our cricket,” Khan said.

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