Independent Pakistan – I know what I believe I know

Law minister says Khan’s eye treatment fully satisfactory as opposition protest enters fourth day

ISLAMABAD: Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar said on Monday that a medical team had expressed complete satisfaction with the ongoing treatment of incarcerated former prime minister Imran Khan’s eye, downplaying concerns about his vision as a sit-in by the opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and its alliance partners over the issue entered its fourth day.

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No Handshake, No Contest

Colombo did its best to stage the spectacle. Grey skies, armed security, the familiar inflation in fake jerseys. For a week, the cricket world held its breath over whether Pakistan would even turn up. In the end, they did – not out of sporting spirit, but because the money spoke louder than solidarity with Bangladesh. And what followed was less a contest than a public execution, dressed up as the greatest rivalry in the game. India won by 61 runs. It was their eighth victory in nine T20 World Cup meetings, their 13th in the last 17 white-ball encounters overall. Ishan Kishan’s 77 off 40 balls was the highlight of a one-sided batting display; Pakistan’s reply was a procession, slumping to 13 for 3 inside three overs and folding for 114. Usman Khan’s 44 offered the only flicker of resistance. The rest was surrender.

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Doctors examine jailed ex-PM Khan’s eyes in Adiala prison, PTI rejects process as ‘malicious’

ISLAMABAD: A five-member team of doctors carried out a one-hour eye examination of former Prime Minister Imran Khan inside Adiala jail on Sunday, sources said, as the opposition alliance pressing for his transfer to a hospital continued its sit-in at Parliament House for a third day.

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India vs Pakistan: The rivalry that cricket refuses to let die

In the end, it took the full machinery of international cricket’s diplomacy – late-night talks in Lahore, interventions from the ICC, quiet words from friendly nations – to ensure that the fixture everyone knew had to happen actually would. For a few fraught days this month, the T20 World Cup’s marquee clash between India and Pakistan teetered on the edge of cancellation, another casualty of the region’s tangled politics. That it survived, to be played on Sunday evening at Colombo’s R. Premadasa Stadium, says something profound about the strange, stubborn power of this particular contest. It does not merely sustain cricket; in many ways, it defines it.

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