The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Pakistan invites England cricket team back after 13 years

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s interior minister has invited the England cricket team to tour the country for the first time since 2005, after a successful visit by the West Indies amid improved security boosted hopes of an internatio­nal revival.

A visit by a major Test-playing nation such as England would be hugely significan­t, in terms of both cricket as well as Pakistan’s wider security and the message it hopes to send about its crackdown on extremism and militancy.

Interior minister Ahsan Iqbal extended the invitation to UK High Comissione­r Thomas Drew on Tuesday, urging the internatio­nal community to recognise the strides Pakistan has made.

“The successful staging of internatio­nal matches in Pakistan is a clear proof that we have defeated terrorism and extremism,” he said, according to an official statement.

Drew said he was already looking forward to “this summer’s big cricketing event”, Pakistan’s upcoming England tour.

“But I also hope that it will not be long before I can welcome an England team to Pakistan,” he told AFP Wednesday. “That really is something to look forward to.”

For years foreign teams refused to tour Pakistan, wracked by Islamist attacks. In 2009 an attack on the Sri Lankan team in Lahore drove internatio­nal cricket from the country entirely, and their fixtures have been played in the United Arab Emirates.

But security has improved dramatical­ly in recent years, and since 2015 Pakistan has hosted Zimbabwe, a World XI, Sri Lanka, the finals of its domestic T20 league for two years running and, most recently, the West Indies, for a short T20 series which finished on Tuesday.

The matches have been staged in both Lahore and Karachi, the cricket-obsessed country’s two largest cities, both of which have been hit repeatedly by militant violence over the last decade.

Head-of-state level security has been provided for visiting players, most of whom have come away praising the arrangemen­ts.

Various military operations across the country have led to the increased security, particular­ly in the northweste­rn tribal region, where militants once operated with impunity.

But the US maintains that Pakistan is hosting militant safe havens in the northwest, accusation­s Islamabad denies; while critics warn that the country has not gone far enough in rooting out the long-term causes of extremism.

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