On Monday 28 November, the British High Commission hosted a reception to welcome the return of the England Test cricket to Pakistan. In attendance were notable sports and media personalities, political figures, representatives from the ECB and PCB as well as cricket players who are set to play Test cricket in Pakistan for the first time in 17 years.
The return of the England Test team comes amid a standout year for UK-Pakistan sporting and cultural ties, coinciding with the 75-year anniversary of UK-Pakistan relations, the Birmingham Commonwealth Games, the England T20 Pakistan cricket tour and the World Cup T20 England-Pakistan final. The Tests mark a highpoint, as 2022 draws to a close.
The return of England cricket has coincided with a strong focus on the power of sports diplomacy – with both tours taking place following devastation caused by floods. Both the ECB and cricketers contributed to the UK’s DEC Pakistan flood appeal during the T20s which raised over £30m to provide lifesaving aid to those affected. England Test Captain, Ben Stokes, has also generously announced that he will be donating his match fees for this Test series to the DEC appeal. In addition the ECB in collaboration with the Lord’s Taverners, BA, IAG Cargo, Football for Peace and the Sarwar Foundation are shipping in 1 tonne of cricket kit to enable schools affected by flooding to rebuild their sports curriculums and help children return to a sense of normality.
This sports diplomacy drive compliments a wider UK Government focus in supporting Pakistan’s resilience in the aftermath of the floods via education development. Through its programmes, the UK is currently supporting 40,000 marginalised children with back to school kits including essential textbooks, providing 8,000 dignity kits for adolescent girls, and delivering an accelerated learning programme to 30,000 children to help them catch up on lost learning due to flood disruption. These efforts will safeguard girls in particular, and in the coming months the UK is set to expand its educational drive even further with a ‘Girls and Out of school children: Action for Learning (GOAL)’ programme which will support 20,000 flood-affected students (at least 60% female) to return to education in 235 schools.
The British High Commissioner, Dr Christian Turner said the following:
‘Cricket teaches us to play hard, accept defeat and respect our opponents. The players, PCB and ECB are great ambassadors for their sport and it is a pleasure to welcome them to the High Commission. The generous donations to flood victims is a sign of the deep ties and affection between our two countries.’
England Batter, Ollie Pope, said:
‘We’re delighted to return to Pakistan for this historic Test tour after such an exciting T20 series earlier this year. We’re grateful for the warm welcome we have received but also know that many communities have been impacted severely by the floods. It’s great to see so many different organisations coming together to arrange this donation of cricket equipment and hopefully it will go a small way to ensuring that children in some of the affected areas can still benefit from all the good that cricket can do as they try to recover.’
Notes to editors:
1. UK has provided £26.5m in aid to assist flood relief efforts in Pakistan plus £30m through DEC public. The UK Military also flew in essential equipment (8 boats, 10 generators) to support flood relief efforts. UK Private sector has also been offering support with BA and IAG Cargo flying in humanitarian cargo for free as part of a humanitarian commitment.
2. Pakistan faces an unprecedented challenge in education in particular, more than 26,000 schools have been damaged or destroyed, disrupting the education of an estimated 3.5 million children. At least 7,063 schools are currently being occupied as emergency shelter for internally displaced people. Learning poverty has long-lasting implications for human capital and Pakistan’s economic trajectory.
3. A survey by UNICEF has found that 35% of children affected by the floods are reporting depression and poor mental health. A forthcoming paper by the World Bank has found that half of children affected by the floods have had a negative change in their behaviour and mind-set.
4. The Lord’s Taverners, a UK charity that uses cricket to positively impact the lives of young people facing the challenges of inequality, have donated a total of 2,733 cricket related items which are being shipped (for free by IAG Cargo via British Airways) to Pakistan ahead of the Test Matches. This kit includes: 70 cricket bats, 132 balls, 98 pairs of cricket pads, 71 pairs of cricket gloves, 32 helmets, other protective equipment including wicket keeping pads and gloves and cricket clothing (trousers, shirts, jumpers, hats). On arrival these items will be transported to four flood affected schools in Baluchistan and six schools in Sindh by the Sarwar Foundation and Football for Peace (both of which are UK registered NGOs).
5. John Cheetham, Chief Commercial Officer at IAG Cargo commented:
We are glad to support donation efforts in response to the humanitarian flooding crisis in Pakistan. As a cargo industry we have a role to play in delivering a range of essential goods every day and at IAG Cargo we are proud to use our global network and capacity to help children affected by the floods and bring some normality back to their lives.