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Sajid Khan turns the Test Pakistan’s way after Ben Duckett sweeps to century

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Sajid Khan is pumped up after dismissing Ollie Pope [Cricinfo]

Slowly, slowly…,  and then with the snap of resolve that vindicated every one of their seemingly half-baked plans, Pakistan roared into command in the second Test at Multan, transforming another day of dominant England batting with a trademark surge of wickets, the likes of which had eluded them throughout their dismal run of six Test losses in a row.

By the close, England were on the ropes at 239 for 6, still trailing by a substantial 127 despite battling hard to bowl their opponents out for 366 shortly after lunch. This was in spite of a brilliant fourth Test hundred fromBen Duckett that had, at one stage, been almost contemptuous in its dominance.

After 12 overs, England had been hurtling along to 73 for 0. Midway through the 42nd, they were still bubbling nicely at 211 for 2, even after Sajid Khan’s ripper through the gate to Ollie Pope had hinted that this re-used surface was just beginning to heat up after seven days of action.

But 18 balls later still, their castle had crumbled to the tune of four wickets for 14 runs, with Sajid’s extraction of Joe Root – currently riding at a career-best high in the ICC rankings – being the moment that belief surged back into Pakistan’s cricket. If there was an element of good fortune in the ricocheting sweep shot that cannoned into Root’s off stump for 34, what followed might as well have been transcribed directly from the fever dream that had doubled as Pakistan’s pre-Test selection meeting.

Runs on the board: check. Seam irrelevant: check. Spinners finding turn from the straight with men parked round the bat: check.

With the first ball of his next over, Sajid found another ripper that fizzed off Duckett’s outside edge to nestle in Salman Agha’s midriff at slip. Before the over was finished, he had the dangerous Harry Brook too, who had thumped the legspinner Zahid Mahmood for two ominously emphatic fours in his brief stay but had no answer to a fizzing offbreak that ripped into his stumps from a full length.

Then, with Zahid put out to pasture once more, back came Sajid’s fellow fingerspinner, Noman Ali, whose second ball bit into Ben Stokes’ inside edge and ballooned to short leg, to extract the England captain for 1 from five balls in his first competitive innings since August. Jamie Smith and Brydon Carse endured to the close, but with the surface only heading in one direction now, parity is surely a pre-requisite if this match is not to slide further out of England’s control.

It was a stunning turnaround to cap an engrossing day of Test cricket, but even by Pakistan’s chaotic standards, the manner of their revival took the biscuit. Right up until the moment that everything clicked into place, their challenge had been falling apart.

Their troubles had seemingly begun before a ball was bowled, with Aamer Jamal – their lone seamer – sustaining a hip niggle during his doughty innings of 37 in the morning session. He contributed just six expensive overs across three spells, and with Shan Masood showing little faith in his legspinner, Zahid, Duckett toyed with the fingerspinners, utilising his vast array of sweep options to drag their leg-side fielders in every conceivable direction.

He duly reached a brilliant century (with a sweep, of course) from a brisk 120 balls, but it was still, remarkably, the slowest of his four to date in Test cricket. In the process, he became the fastest man to reach 2000 Test runs, from 2293 balls – a niche stat maybe, but one which reflected the extent to which he has not only bought into but personified, England’s Bazball mantra since his recall for their last tour of Pakistan in December 2022.

Throughout his innings, however, there had been just the glimmer of the contest that could yet exist beneath the veneer of Duckett’s aggression. Zak Crawley’s innings was a case in point. With his preference for pace on the ball, he was far less assured against the spinners, and had two huge let-offs before finally snicking off to a loose drive outside off for 27, a decision Noman successfully reviewed.

Crawley should have been run out on 20 after being sent back on a quick single to backward square but Sajid broke the stumps before the ball had arrived, and five runs later, he was ready to walk after being struck on the pads while sweeping, again off Sajid. But Duckett persuaded him to review with the ball shown to be missing leg.

Duckett himself had a massive moment on 83 when Noman, by now bowling round the wicket to close off that full range of sweeps, beat his leg stump by a slenderest coat of varnish as Duckett instead wound into a reverse. He was twice clanged on the visor too as the ball bit and bounced out of the rough, and though he was disappointed to form part of the late collapse, the wonder in hindsight was how easy he had made it seem while the going was good.

The chaos of the closing overs was all a far cry from the more leisurely pace of the morning, in which Pakistan had resumed on a promising 259 for 5, on a surface that – while offering some turn and reverse swing – still had more in common with the road that had dished up 1599 runs in last week’s first Test.

In cooler, hazier conditions, the pitch seemed to have acquired an extra yard of pace for the day’s opening exchanges, which Carse utilised to superb effect. Mohammad Rizwan had added just four to his overnight 37 when he was beaten by extra lift, angled into his splice, and Smith behind the stumps reacted superbly to cling onto a fast-travelling chance.

It was due reward for an exemplary display from Carse, whose key wicket of Saud Shakeel on the first evening had also required him to extract some unlikely life from the surface. Agha then found some impetus with four fours through deep third, but Stokes, to his credit, refused to plug the gap in conventional style, instead choosing to add a gully to ramp up the risk-reward element to the stroke. Potts duly extracted some extra bounce, and Smith – for the third time in the innings – made a very sharp chance look simple.

When Sajid punched a drive on the up to short cover, Pakistan were in danger of another damaging subsidence at 309 for 8, but Jamal and Noman’s key stand of 49 for the ninth wicket helped pump the innings past 350. England were nevertheless deeply satisfied with their day-and-a-bit’s work when Leach wrapped things up with his fourth of the innings. But, as had been ordained when Masood won the toss, runs on the board will be critical in this contest. Right now, notwithstanding Duckett’s brilliant response, England don’t have enough of them.

Brief scores:
England 239 for 6 in 53 overs (Ben Duckett 114, Joe Root 34;  Sajid  Khan 4-86) trail Pakistan 366  in 123.3 overs (Kamran Ghulam 118, Saim Ayub 77; Jack Leach 4-114, Brydon Carse 3-50) by 127 runs

[Crickinfo]



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Singapore scrambles fighters as bomb threat targets Air India jet

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Indian airlines have been victims of a spate of bomb threats in recent days [Aljazeera]

Singapore scrambled fighter planes as an approaching Air India Express passenger plane received a bomb threat.

The city-state’s air force dispatched two F-15SG military aircraft to escort Air India flight AXB684 away from populated areas, Minister for Defence Ng Eng Hen said in a Facebook post late on Tuesday. The Indian airline had received an email claiming a bomb was on board its plane

The Air India aircraft landed safely at Changi Airport at 10:04pm (1404 GMT), Ng said. Singapore’s ground-based air defence systems and explosive disposal team were activated during the incident.

Once it had safely landed, the plane was handed to the airport police, who reported that security checks revealed no threatening items on board.

Indian airlines have faced “a number of threats in recent days,” via email or social media, all of which have been found to be hoaxes, Air India said in a statement.

Earlier on Tuesday, the Indian flag carrier was forced to divert a flight headed to Chicago to land in Canada. The previous day, a flight from Mumbai to New York was diverted to Delhi due to a bomb hoax.

India’s budget airlines have also been affected. IndiGo was forced to delay flights to Oman and Saudi Arabia while SpiceJet received a bomb threat to a flight to Mumbai from the northern city of Darbhanga.

[Aljazeera]

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Nigeria fuel tanker explosion kills at least 94, injures dozens

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At least 94 people have been killed and about 50 others wounded after an overturned fuel tanker exploded in northwestern Nigeria, according to police.

The overnight explosion took place on an expressway in Jigawa State as people rushed to the vehicle to collect the fuel, a police spokesman said on Wednesday.

“We have so far confirmed 94 people dead,” Lawan Shiisu Adam said, warning the death toll could rise.

The tanker had veered to avoid colliding with a truck in the town of Majia, the spokesman said.

Following the crash, residents crowded around the vehicle, which likely increased the number of casualties, he added.

“The residents were scooping up fuel from the overturned tanker when the explosion occurred, sparking a massive inferno that killed 94 people on the spot,” Adam told The Associated Press news agency.

Videos that appeared to be from the scene showed a massive fire stretching across the entire area, with what appeared to be bodies littered at the scene.

The fire burned into the early hours of Wednesday.

The wounded were taken to local hospitals in Ringim and Hadejia towns where they were being treated, Adam said.

Deadly truck accidents are common along most of the main roads in Nigeria, with experts attributing many of them to reckless driving, poor road conditions and ill-maintained vehicles.

Last month, at least 48 people were killed in an explosion after a fuel tanker collided with another truck in Nigeria’s north-central Niger State.

In 2020 alone, there were 1,531 petrol tanker crashes resulting in 535 deaths and injuries to 1,142 people, according to Nigeria’s Federal Road Safety Corps.

Tanker explosions can result in mass casualties as residents often look to siphon off fuel following accidents. Fuel has also become an even more precious commodity as Nigeria suffers its worst economic crisis in a generation.

The Nigerian National Petroleum Company in early September increased the price of petrol by at least 39 percent, the second steep hike in more than a year.

[Aljazeera]

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Kenyan deputy president’s impeachment trial begins

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Kenya’s parliament has begun the final step to remove Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua from office.

An overwhelming majority voted in the National Assembly last week to approve his impeachment, setting the stage for the two-day trial in the Senate that decides whether or not to oust him.

The deputy president faces 11 charges including corruption, inciting ethnic divisions and undermining government – all of which he denies.

The row follows his recent fallout with President William Ruto, who has remained silent about the matter.

Gachagua’s trial is being conducted before the full house of the Senate after it abandoned a process to set up an 11-member committee to investigate the charges.

The deputy president stood before the chamber for the charges to be read out to him as proceedings got under way – pleading not guilty to each one.

Analysts expect the deputy president’s impeachment to be upheld as the ruling party senators are likely to be backed by those from the main opposition as happened when the the lower house voted on the case.

Later on Wednesday, evidence by the National Assembly against Gachagua, including any witnesses, will be introduced and examined for three hours followed by another two hours of cross-examination.

On Thursday, the trial will resume to deal with the evidence and witnesses from Gachagua’s side until late afternoon.

At the conclusion of the process in the evening, senators will debate the motion for about two hours and then take a vote – scheduled to happen on Thursday night from 20:30 local time.

The Senate can decide to extend the process to Friday, the last day it can legally extend the matter.

At least two-thirds of the 67 Senate members must approve the motion for Gachagua to be removed from office.

Should that happen and his impeachment stands, he would be barred from ever holding public office. He is expected to challenge the impeachment in the courts if it passes.

The deputy president has made numerous unsuccessful attempts to stop the impeachment process, with at least 26 court cases having been filed so far.

On Tuesday, a judge ruled that the court would not interfere and said the Senate should proceed with its constitutional mandate.

And just before the process began on Wednesday, a three-judge bench also declined a similar request.

Some of the grounds for Gachagua’s impeachment include accusations that he acquired assets worth 5.2bn Kenyan shillings ($40m; £31m) in the two years since he became deputy president – allegedly acquired through corrupt means.

He has explained, including during his trial at the National Assembly, that most of the properties in question were from his late brother’s estate.

The deputy president is a wealthy businessman from the vote-rich central Mount Kenya region.

In just five years, he rose from being a first-time MP to become the number two in Kenya’s leadership, after Ruto picked him as his running mate in the August 2022 election.

At the time, he was battling corruption allegations in court which were later dropped after he became the deputy president.

His impeachment trial has dominated the discussions of many Kenyans and the media in recent weeks.  Some see the high political drama that the matter has elicited as a distraction from the economic concerns of the majority of Kenyans struggling with the high cost of living.

In June disgruntled Kenyans went to the streets in deadly protests that erupted over unpopular tax hikes, and which exposed a deep rift between Ruto and Gachagua.

Gachagua now stands accused of undermining the work of the security agencies in the wake of remarks he made at the time blaming the intelligence agency.

[BBC]

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