Alam sees progress for Pakistan cricket
November 26, 2010 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
ABU DHABI: Manager Intikhab Alam on Thursday expressed confidence that Pakistan cricket was heading in the right direction after drawing the two-Test series against South Africa.
Both Tests were drawn and Alam believes this will establish a solid platform for his team to build upon following a turbulent last four months.
Pakistan cricket was rocked by spot-fixing allegations which led to the suspensions of former Test captain Salman Butt and bowlers Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamer, leaving them to rebuild their system.
The International Cricket Council directed the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) to take serious measures to curb corruption and disciplinary problems in their cricket or face crippling sanctions.
Alam said Pakistan cricket was progressing both on and off the field.
“We have put in a lot of efforts and I think with a good result in
Malaysia Opposition Make Unity Pledge
December 20, 2009 by Trend PK
Filed under World News
KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s opposition alliance pledged not to let infighting thwart its ambition of seizing federal power within the next few years.
More than 1,500 opposition officials endorsed a document that spelled out their common goals late Saturday after a daylong convention aimed at patching up rifts that have plagued the three-party alliance since it made unprecedented inroads in March 2008 general elections.
“The three parties made a sincere effort to find common ground, to craft an agenda and policies that will menace the government,” said opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim.
Other opposition figures gave speeches declaring confidence in winning the next general elections, due in 2013. Some political observers speculate that Prime Minister Najib Razak may call snap polls in 2011 if he sees signs of recovering support for his ruling coalition, which lost control of several states to the opposition last year.
The opposition’s gains were attributed to widespread anger over the government’s handling of problems such as graft, racial inequality and public sector inefficiency. However, the barely 2-year-old opposition alliance fears that persistent bickering over how to administer the states it won have eroded its popularity.
The spats stem largely from ideological differences among the three opposition parties: a conservative Islamic group that caters to the Malay Muslim majority; a secular, left-leaning party whose members are mostly from the ethnic Chinese and Indian minorities; and Anwar’s multiracial party, considered the bridge between the other two partners.
Disputes have included criticism by ethnic Chinese officials of an Islamic party lawmaker who proposed that the sale of alcohol be severely curtailed in parts of a central state. In another opposition-controlled state, officials battled over plans to demolish a pig slaughterhouse.
The joint policy statement did not provide specific strategies to prevent such problems. It mainly reiterated pledges to scrap a law that allows detention without trial, reform state contract procedures to curb corruption and expand affirmative action policies to include the poor of all races instead of mainly Malays.
Anwar said the document should help dispel claims by Najib’s National Front — which has governed Malaysia since 1957 — that the opposition was a fragile alliance that shared no clear direction. Other opposition leaders played down their spats as troubles that would naturally affect any coalition.
Malaysia Opposition Make Unity Pledge was first posted on December 20, 2009 at 1:46 pm.

