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Bowlers, openers give India Women flying start in Wankhede Test
Alyssa Healy’s hopes of starting off a new legacy for Australia under her captaincy by batting long was thoroughly thwarted by Indian bowlers on an up and down surface at the Wankhede. Healy kept her end of the bargain by winning the toss and deciding to bat first, but her top-order faltered as India made regular inroads to deny Australia the chance to build and consolidate. In the final session, Australia were bundled out for 219. To compound their woes, India openers Smriti Mandhana and Shafali Verma began briskly as the hosts finished on 98/1 at stumps.
India had a charmed start to the morning as Beth Mooney and Phoebe Litchfield were involved in a miscommunication in the first over that led to the run out of the latter. In the second over, Pooja Vastrakar cleaned up Ellyse Perry, like she did Natalie Sciver-Brunt just last week – with a length ball that jagged back sharply to breach the bat-pad gap and rattle the stumps.
Tahlia McGrath arrived with counterattacking instincts and the India quicks offered her ample width for it. She got a couple of reprieves as Deepti Sharma put down both chances at slip off the bowling of Renuka Thakur and Sneh Rana. McGrath went on to score a 52-ball 50 to plot a move on for Australia, but Rana put an end to that. The off-spinner, in the middle of an exceptionally dry spell, got McGrath to flick uppishly on a flighted full ball. It traveled only as far as mid-wicket where Rajeshwari Gayakwad timed her jump and pouched a sharp catch.
Mooney and Alyssa Healy looked to take the team to Lunch without any further damage but Vastrakar returned to deny them that. She went round the stumps and surprised Mooney with an angled in short ball – the last one of the morning session. Mooney fended awkwardly at it, and ended up hitting to Rana at first slip to depart for 40.
Australia’s resurrection was down to their skipper and Annabel Sutherland. They made slow progress in the second session before Deepti Sharma cleaned up Healy to leave Australia five down. Healy’s dismissal was also down to the ball keeping extremely low as it sneaked underneath her attempted sweep shot. In the next 10 overs, Australia’s downward spiral gathered pace as they went from 143 for 5 to 168 for 8, with Vastrakar returning to dent the visitors with the wickets of Sutherland and Ashleigh Gardner.
After picking four wickets each in the first two sessions, India were frustrated by Australia’s ninth-wicket stand between Kim Garth and Jess Jonassen even as shouts of ‘ek aur, bas ek aur’ [one more, just one more] were heard from the chirpy close-in fielders. The two played out nearly 15 overs before Deepti trapped Jonassen leg before. It took a review from India to get the decision in their favour. Debutant Lauren Cheatle then stayed put at one end while Garth added valuable runs to drag Australia past the 200-run mark. In her 23rd over of the day, Rana ended the innings when Cheatle decided to take matters into her own hands and gave the spinner the charge, only to mistime her big shot to Mandhana at mid-off.
India continued to hammer home the advantage as Mandhana and Shafali made a stroke-filled start. Mandhana got off the mark with a pristine square cut off Kim Garth in the second over while Shafali drove Cheatle for two successive fours. They took India to 50 in just the eighth over as boundaries came easily to both.Ellyse Perry struggled to get her footing right and bowled a couple of no-balls in her first over that went for 13 as India really flew off the blocks. Ashleigh Gardner arrived to put the brakes but Shafali punished Perry at the other end. With less than 10 minutes for close of play, Jonassen gave Australia a reason to break out a faint smile as she trapped Shafali leg before. Shafali walked off for 40 off 59 and India finished the day on 98/1, with Mandhana going strong at 43*.
Brief scores:
Australia Women 219 in 77.4 overs (Tahlia McGrath 50, Beth Mooney 40, Alyssa Healy 38, Kim Gath 28*; Pooja Vastrakar 4-53, Sneh Rana 3-56, Deepti Sharma 2-45) lead India Women 98-1 in 19 overs (Smriti Mandhana 43*, Shafali Verma 40: Jess Jonasen 1-04) by 121 runs
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Rathnayake in Sri Lanka squad for England T20Is; Thushara, Kamindu left out
Pavan Rathnayake has re-entered Sri Lanka’s T20I squad following his 121 off 115 balls in the third ODI against England. Omitted from the squad to play England in three T20Is, however, are fast bowler Nuwan Thushara and batting allrounder Kamindu Mendis. Legspinner Dushan Hemantha has also been left out.
Left-arm-spinning allrounder Dunith Wellalage retains his place in the T20I squad, though he hasn’t played a T20I since September. Maheesh Theekshana and Wanindu Hasaranga are the two other frontline spinners. Dhananjaya de Silva and Charith Asalanka – who both bowl fingerspin – are in the squad too.
On the seam-bowling front, Eshan Malinga and Pramod Madushan are in the squad, in addition to Dushmantha Chameera and Matheesha Pathirana. Thushara had been a consistent presence in Sri Lanka’s T20I squads over the past two years, but his omission comes after several modest performances since September.
Aside from Rathnayake’s inclusion, the batting is largely as expected, with Kusal Perera coming back in the only format he now plays.
Sri Lanka are yet to announce their squad for the T20 World Cup, which will start on February 7. Teams have time till January 31 to make changes to squads, following which they will have to get the approvals from the ICC to make changes.
Sri Lanka squad for England T20Is:
Dasun Shanaka (capt.), Pathum Nissanka, Kamil Mishara, Kusal Mendis, Kusal Perera, Dhananjaya de Silva, Charith Asalanka, Janith Liyanage, Pavan Rathnayake, Dunith Wellalage, Wanindu Hasaranga, Maheesh Theekshana, Dushmantha Chameera, Pramod Madushan, Matheesha Pathirana, Eshan Malinga
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U19 World Cup: Peake ton fires Australia into the semis
Australia Under 19s 314/7 in 50 overs (Oliver Peake 109, Nitesh Samuel 56; Jakeem Pollard 2-37, R’Jai Gittens 2-45) beat West Indies Under 19s 292/9 in 50 overs (Zachary Carter 64, Joshua Dorne 62; Charles Lachmund 4-66, Aryan Sharma 2-47) by 22 runs
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The National Strategic Action Plan to monitor and combat human trafficking (2026-2030) officially launched
The Prime Minister Dr. Harini Amarasuriya participated in the official launch of the National Strategic Action Plan to monitor and combat human trafficking (2026-2030) held on 28th of January at the Cinnamon Life Hotel, Colombo. The event was jointly organized by the Ministry of Defence, National Anti Human Trafficking Task Force ( NAHTTF), International Organization for Migration (IOM).
This five-year Action Plan was unveiled under the leadership of the Ministry of Defence, in its capacity as Chair of the NAHTTF and with the technical support from the International Organization for Migration (IOM). The National Strategic Action Plan 2026-2030 establishes a unified national framework to prevent human trafficking, protect and assist victims, strengthen law enforcement responses, and enhance accountability.
Addressing the event, the Prime Minister reaffirmed the Government’s commitment to strengthening national efforts to prevent and address human trafficking and stated that the Action Plan must transcend its symbolic launch into concrete, coordinated, and sustained implementation.
The Prime Minister also noted that the launch of the National Strategic Action Plan is timely, as it operationalizes the four internationally recognized pillars of the anti-trafficking framework namely prevention, protection, prosecution, and partnership.
The Prime Minister further stated,
“Caring for trafficking survivors in Sri Lanka requires a holistic, gender-sensitive, and survivor-centered approach that addresses both immediate protection and long-term recovery. This includes safe shelter, medical care, and trauma-informed psychological support, with particular attention to women and girls who experience more severe and gendered forms of violence, alongside legal assistance, economic empowerment, and skills development to prevent re-trafficking.
Human trafficking is a structural and social challenge that requires sustained, multi-sectoral action. Ministries and government agencies must embed anti-trafficking priorities into their core strategies and day-to-day operations, ensuring institutional integration and professional accountability”.
The event was attended by Parinda Ranasinghe Jnr, PC, Attorney General of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, the Secretary to the Ministry of Defence and Chair of the NAHTTF, Air Vice Marshal Sampath Thuyacontha; and Kristin Parco, IOM Chief of Mission in Sri Lanka and Maldives. Members of the NAHTTF representing 23 key government entities, along with representatives of the diplomatic community, United Nations entities and Civil Society Organizations (CSOs).
(Prime Minister’s Media Division)
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