Sri Lanka board tells cricketers to stay in Pakistan after bomb blast

Sri Lanka board tells cricketers to stay in Pakistan after bomb blast
Sri Lanka’s Mahesh Theekshana, center, and Asitha Fernando, second right, shakes hand with Pakistani players on the end of the first one day international cricket match between Pakistan and Sri Lanka, in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, Nov. 11, 2025. (AP)
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Sri Lanka board tells cricketers to stay in Pakistan after bomb blast

Sri Lanka board tells cricketers to stay in Pakistan after bomb blast
  • The players expressed fears for their safety following Tuesday’s suicide bombing in the Pakistani capital
  • “If any player, players, or member of the support staff return despite SLC’s directives, a formal review will be conducted,” SLC said

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) on Wednesday told its players to remain in Pakistan or risk facing a “formal review” after members of the squad declared their intention to depart early from their tour of the country due to security concerns.
The players expressed fears for their safety following Tuesday’s suicide bombing in the Pakistani capital, which killed 12 and wounded 27 outside a court.
SLC issued a statement saying it had instructed the team to go ahead with their ongoing tour of Pakistan as scheduled despite an unspecified number of players requesting to return home.
“If any player, players, or member of the support staff return despite SLC’s directives, a formal review will be conducted... and an appropriate decision will be made,” the board said.
It added that replacements would be sent to ensure the tour continues without interruption.
The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) confirmed that the second ODI scheduled for Thursday has been put back by one day to Friday while Saturday’s third match will now be played on Sunday. Both will be in Rawalpindi.
“Grateful to the Sri Lankan team for their decision to continue the Pakistan tour,” PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi said on social media. “The spirit of sportsmanship and solidarity shines bright.”
Six Sri Lankan players were wounded in March 2009 when gunmen opened fire on their team bus as it was taking them to Qaddafi Stadium in Lahore for a Test match.
The incident led to international teams staying away from Pakistan for nearly a decade.
Pakistan beat Sri Lanka by six runs in the opening ODI in Rawalpindi on Tuesday, a game that went ahead despite the suicide attack in the twin city of Islamabad.
The PCB said security around the visiting team had been tightened following the attack.
Naqvi met Sri Lankan players at their Islamabad hotel on Wednesday and assured them of their safety, Pakistani officials said.
Sri Lanka are playing in a three-match ODI series against Pakistan before taking part in a T20 tri-series tournament against the hosts and Zimbabwe from November 17-29.


Footballers and human rights leaders call on UEFA president to suspend Israel from European football

Footballers and human rights leaders call on UEFA president to suspend Israel from European football
Updated 10 sec ago

Footballers and human rights leaders call on UEFA president to suspend Israel from European football

Footballers and human rights leaders call on UEFA president to suspend Israel from European football
  • Signatories argue that no shared venue, stage, or arena in international civil society should welcome a regime that commits genocide
  • Signatories address Aleksander Ceferin directly with his own words on football, Football belongs to everyone

LONDON: Athletes 4 Peace, a group of 70 plus athletes, co-signed a letter to UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin with #GameOverIsrael, the Gaza Tribunal and the Hind Rajab Foundation demanding that he follow through on the legal and moral responsibilities inherent in his role and immediately suspend Israel from European football.

The signatories argue, “No shared venue, stage, or arena in international civil society should welcome a regime that commits genocide, apartheid, and other crimes against humanity. Israel’s continued impunity for such crimes will only be ended by the weight of collective conscientious action, including measures to block their entry to sporting or cultural events and activities.”

They address Aleksander Ceferin directly with his own words on football, “Football belongs to everyone” and warn that he risks severing football from its heart and soul – humanity – by allowing those who would destroy their own humanity and that of others entry into the sport.

International Human Rights Lawyers and former UN Human Rights Director Craig Mokhiber said: “UEFA action is stalled behind the smokescreen of a fake ‘ceasefire’ and sham ‘peace process.’ But neither the genocide nor apartheid have ended. UEFA must correct their course immediately and suspend Israel from European football. With each passing day, UEFA’s complicity grows.”

Former Adviser to the Middle East Peace Envoy and Campaign Director for Game Over Israel Ashish Prashar added: “For President Ceferin to pause his vote to suspend Israel from European football over a peace plan in name only, is either grossly naive, or purposefully blind.”  

#GameOverIsrael was launched on September 16 with a billboard in Times Square, calling on football federations to boycott Israel.

Athletes 4 Peace are a united voice of sports professionals from around the world, standing for justice, fairness, and humanity in sport.

Gaza Tribunal is a consortium of humanitarian law and human rights experts whose aim it is to awaken civil society to its responsibility and opportunity to stop Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

The Hind Rajab Foundation is a branch of the March 30 Movement mainly dedicated to the quest for justice in response to the crimes against humanity, war crimes and human rights violations perpetrated by the Israeli state against Palestinians. Established during the ongoing Gaza genocide, the foundation honors the memory of Hind Rajab and all those who have perished or suffered under the Israeli genocidal campaign.