Rickshawpuller who set himself on fire in city dies

A rickshawpuller who set himself on fire by pouring kerosene over a family feud last Friday, died while undergoing treatment at a hospital in the capital early Sunday.

 

The deceased is Shymal Chandra Barmon, 33, a resident of Bou Bazar area under Hazaribagh police station of the capital.

 

Sheikh Sajeeb, sub-inspector of the police station, said Shymal set fire to his body following a brawl with his wife at his house around 9am Friday, leaving himself critically injured.

 

He was rushed to Sheikh Hasina National Institute of Burn and Plastic Surgery where the victim succumbed to his injuries while undergoing treatment in the early morning, said Md Bachhu Sheikh, in-charge (inspector) of Dhaka Medical College Hospital (DMCH) Police Outpost.

 

The body was sent to the DMCH morgue for an autopsy, he added.

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh

 

PGCB names 2 suspended officials for power grid failure

Power Grid Company of Bangladesh (PGCB) has released the names of its two officials suspended by the government for their negligence of duty that led to the nationwide grid failure on October 4.

 

According to the PGCB public relations department, the suspended officials are: Allama Hasan Bakhtiar, Sub-Divisional Engineer (SPMD, Dhaka-1) and Md. Mostafizur Rahman, Assistant Engineer (SPMD, Dhaka-1).

 

Earlier, State Minister for Power, Energy and Mineral Resources Nasrul Hamid said that two engineers of the PGCB will be suspended over the recent national grid failure.

 

“The decision will come into effect today,” he told reporters at the secretariat on Sunday after receiving the probe report on the incident.

 

Action has been taken against an assistant engineer and a sub assistant engineer of PGCB on charge of negligence of duty, the state minister said earlier.

 

“Action will be taken against others responsible for the incident by this week after identifying them,” he said.

 

On October 6, the Power Grid Company of Bangladesh formed a seven-member committee to identify the reasons behind the national grid failure on October 4 that caused a seven-hour blackout across most of Bangladesh.

 

The committee had three days to complete the investigation and submit its report.

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh

 

In six weeks, UK leader Liz Truss goes from triumph to trouble

When Liz Truss was running to lead Britain this summer, an ally predicted her first weeks in office would be turbulent.

 

But few were prepared for the scale of the sound and fury -– least of all Truss herself. In just six weeks, the prime minister’s libertarian economic policies have triggered a financial crisis, emergency central bank intervention, multiple U-turns and the firing of her Treasury chief.

 

Now Truss faces a mutiny inside the governing Conservative Party that leaves her leadership hanging by a thread.

 

Conservative lawmaker Robert Halfon fumed on Sunday that the last few weeks had brought “one horror story after another.”

 

“The government has looked like libertarian jihadists and treated the whole country as kind of laboratory mice on which to carry out ultra, ultra free-market experiments,” he told Sky News.

 

It’s not as if the party wasn’t warned. During the summertime contest to lead the Conservatives, Truss called herself a disruptor who would challenge economic “orthodoxy.” She promised she would cut taxes and slash red tape, and would spur Britain’s sluggish economy to grow.

 

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Her rival, former Treasury chief Rishi Sunak, argued that immediate tax cuts would be reckless amid the economic shockwaves from the coronavirus pandemic and the war in Ukraine.

 

The 172,000 Conservative Party members -– who are largely older and affluent — preferred Truss’ boosterish vision. She won 57% of members’ votes to become leader of the governing party on Sept. 5. The next day, she was appointed prime minister by Queen Elizabeth II in one of the monarch’s final acts before her death on Sept. 8.

 

Truss’ first days in office were overshadowed by a period of national mourning for the queen. Then on Sept. 23, Treasury chief Kwasi Kwarteng announced the economic plan he and Truss had drawn up. It included 45 billion pounds ($50 billion) in tax cuts -– including an income tax reduction for the highest earners — without an accompanying assessment of how the government would pay for them.

 

Truss was doing what she and allies said she would. Libertarian think-tank chief Mark Littlewood predicted during the summer there would be “fireworks” as the new prime minister pushed for economic reform at “absolutely breakneck speed.”

 

Still, the scale of the announcement took financial markets, and political experts, by surprise.

 

“Many of us, wrongly, expected her to pivot after she won the leadership contest in the way many presidents do after winning the primaries,” said Tim Bale, professor of politics at Queen Mary University of London. “But she didn’t do that. She actually meant what she said.”

 

The pound plunged to a record low against the U.S. dollar and the cost of government borrowing soared. The Bank of England was forced to step in to buy government bonds and prevent the financial crisis from spreading to the wider economy. The central bank also warned that interest rates will have to rise even faster than expected to curb inflation that is running at around 10%, leaving millions of homeowners facing big increases in mortgage payments.

 

Jill Rutter, a senior fellow at the Institute for Government think tank, said Truss and Kwarteng made a series of “unforced errors” with their economic package.

 

“They shouldn’t have made their contempt for economic institutions quite so clear,” she said. “I think they could have listened to advice. And I think one of the things that they got very wrong was to announce one part of the package, the tax cuts … without the spending side of the equation.”

 

As the negative reaction grew, Truss began to abandon bits of the package in a bid to reassure her party and the markets. The tax cut for top earners was ditched in the middle of the Conservative Party’s annual conference in early October as the party rebelled.

 

It wasn’t enough. On Friday, Truss fired Kwarteng and replaced her longtime friend and ally with Jeremy Hunt, who served as health secretary and foreign secretary in the Conservative governments of David Cameron and Theresa May.

 

At a brief, downbeat news conference, the prime minister acknowledged that “parts of our mini budget went further and faster than markets were expecting.” She reversed a planned cut in corporation tax, another pillar of her economic plan, to “reassure the markets of our fiscal discipline.”

 

Truss is still prime minister in name, but power in government has shifted to Hunt, who has signaled he plans to rip up much of her remaining economic plan when he makes a medium-term budget statement on Oct. 31. He has said tax increases and public spending cuts will be needed to restore the government’s fiscal credibility.

 

Still, Hunt insisted Sunday: “The prime minister’s in charge.”

 

“She’s listened. She’s changed. She’s been willing to do that most difficult thing in politics, which is to change tack,” Hunt told the BBC.

 

The Conservative Party still commands a large majority in Parliament, and -– in theory -– has two years until a national election must be held. Polls suggest an election would be a wipeout for the Tories, with the Labour Party winning a big majority.

 

Conservative lawmakers are agonizing about whether to try to replace their leader for a second time this year. In July, the party forced out Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who led them to victory in 2019, when serial ethics scandals ensnared his administration.

 

Now many of them have buyer’s remorse about his replacement. Under party rules, Truss is safe from a leadership challenge for a year, but some Conservative legislators believe she can be forced to resign if the party can agree on a successor. Defeated rival Sunak, House of Commons leader Penny Mordaunt and popular Defense Secretary Ben Wallace are among the names being mentioned as potential replacements. Johnson, who remains a lawmaker, still has supporters, too.

 

Junior Treasury minister Andrew Griffith argued Sunday that Truss should be given a chance to try to restore order.

 

“This is a time when we need stability,” he told Sky News. “People at home are just tearing their hair out at the level of uncertainty. What they want to see is a competent government getting on with (the) job.”

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh

 

China’s Xi urges military expansion as party congress gets underway

Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Sunday called for faster military development and announced no change in policies that have strained relations with Washington and tightened the ruling Communist Party’s control over society and the economy.

 

China’s most influential figure in decades spoke as the party opened a congress that was closely watched by companies, governments and the public for signs of official direction. It comes amid a painful slump in the world’s second-largest economy and tension with Washington and Asian neighbors over trade, technology and security.

 

Party plans call for creating a prosperous society by mid-century and restoring China to its historic role as a political, economic and cultural leader. Beijing has expanded its presence abroad including a multibillion-dollar Belt and Road Initiative to build ports and other infrastructure across Asia and Africa, but economists warn reversing market-style reform could hamper growth.

 

“The next five years will be crucial,” Xi said in a televised speech of one hour and 45 minutes to some 2,000 delegates in the cavernous Great Hall of the People. He repeatedly invoked his slogan of the “rejuvenation of the Chinese nation,” which includes reviving the party’s role as economic and social leader in a throwback to what Xi regards as a golden age after it took power in 1949.

 

The congress will install leaders for the next five years. Xi, 69, is expected to break with tradition and award himself a third five-year term as general secretary and promote allies who share his enthusiasm for party dominance.

 

The party’s military wing, the People’s Liberation Army, needs to “safeguard China’s dignity and core interests,” Xi said, referring to a list of territorial claims and other issues over which Beijing says it is ready to go to war.

 

China, with the world’s second-largest military budget after the United States, is trying to extend its reach by developing ballistic missiles, aircraft carriers and overseas outposts.

 

“We will work faster to modernize military theory, personnel and weapons,” Xi said. “We will enhance the military’s strategic capabilities.”

 

Xi cited his government’s severe “zero-COVID” strategy, which has shut down major cities and disrupted travel and business, as a success. He gave no indication of a possible change despite public frustration with its rising cost.

 

The congress will name a Standing Committee, the ruling inner circle of power. The lineup will indicate who is likely to succeed Premier Li Keqiang as the top economic official and take other posts when China’s ceremonial legislature meets next year.

 

Analysts are watching whether a slump that saw economic growth fall to below half of the official 5.5% annual target might force Xi to compromise and include supporters of market-style reform and entrepreneurs who generate wealth and jobs.

 

Xi gave no indication when he might step down.

 

During his decade in power, Xi’s government has pursued an increasingly assertive foreign policy while tightening control at home on information and dissent.

 

Beijing is feuding with Japan, India and Southeast Asian governments over conflicting claims to the South China and East China Seas and a section of the Himalayas. The United States, Japan, Australia and India have formed a strategic group dubbed the Quad in response.

 

The party has increased the dominance of state-owned industry and poured money into strategic initiatives aimed at nurturing Chinese creators of renewable energy, electric car, computer chip, aerospace and other technologies.

 

Its tactics have prompted complaints that Beijing improperly protects and subsidizes its fledgling creators and led then-President Donald Trump to hike tariffs on Chinese imports in 2019, setting off a trade war that jolted the global economy. Trump’s successor, Joe Biden, has kept those penalties in place and this month increased restrictions on Chinese access to U.S. chip technology.

 

The party has tightened control over private sector leaders including e-commerce giant Alibaba Group by launching anti-monopoly, data security and other crackdowns. Under political pressure, they are diverting billions of dollars into chip development and other party initiatives. Their share prices on foreign exchanges have plunged due to uncertainty about their future.

 

The party has stepped up censorship of media and the internet, increased public surveillance and tightened control over private life through its “social credit” initiative that tracks individuals and punishes infractions ranging from fraud to littering.

 

Last week, banners criticizing Xi and “zero COVID” were hung from an elevated roadway over a major Beijing thoroughfare in a rare protest. Photos of the event were deleted from social media, and the popular WeChat messaging app shut down accounts that forwarded them.

 

Xi said the party would build “self-reliance and strength” in technology by improving China’s education system and attracting foreign experts.

 

The president appeared to double down on technology self-reliance and “zero COVID” at a time when other countries are easing travel restrictions and rely on more free-flowing supply chains, said Willy Lam, a politics specialist at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

 

Xi was joined on stage by party leaders including his predecessor as party leader, Hu Jintao, former Premier Wen Jiabao and Song Ping, a 105-year-old party veteran who sponsored Xi’s early career. There was no sign of 96-year-old former President Jiang Zemin, who was party leader until 2002.

 

The presence of previous leaders shows Xi faces no serious opposition, said Lam.

 

“Xi is making it very clear he intends to hold onto power for as long as his health allows him to,” he said.

 

Xi made no mention of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which Beijing refuses to criticize. He defended a crackdown on a pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong, saying the party helped the former British colony “enter a new stage in which it has restored order and is set to thrive.”

 

Xi’s government also faces criticism over mass detentions and other abuses against mostly Muslim ethnic groups and the jailing of government critics.

 

Amnesty International warned that extending Xi’s time in power will be a “disaster for human rights.” In addition to conditions within China, it pointed to Beijing’s efforts to “redefine the very meaning of human rights” at the United Nations.

 

Xi said Beijing refuses to renounce the possible use of force against Taiwan, the self-ruled island democracy the Communist Party claims as its territory. The two sides split in 1949 after a civil war.

 

Beijing has stepped up efforts to intimidate Taiwanese by flying fighter jets and bombers toward the island. That campaign intensified further after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in August became the highest-ranked U.S. official to visit Taiwan in a quarter-century.

 

“We will continue to strive for peaceful reunification,” Xi said. “But we will never promise to renounce the use of force. And we reserve the option of taking all measures necessary.”

 

Taiwan’s government responded that its 23 million people had the right to determine their own future and would not accept Beijing’s demands. A government statement called on China to “abandon the imposition of a political framework and the use of military force and coercion.”

 

The Communist Party leadership agreed in the 1990s to limit the general secretary to two five-year terms in an effort to prevent a repeat of power struggles from earlier decades. That leader also becomes chairman of the commission that controls the military and holds the ceremonial title of national president.

 

Xi made his intentions clear in 2018 when he had a two-term limit on the presidency removed from China’s Constitution. Officials said that allowed Xi to stay if needed to carry out reforms.

 

The party is expected to amend its charter this week to raise Xi’s status as leader after adding his personal ideology, Xi Jinping Thought, at the previous congress in 2017.

 

The spokesperson for the congress, Sun Yeli, said Saturday the changes would “meet new requirements for advancing the party’s development” but gave no details.

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh

 

PM urges Brunei to boost trade, investment in Bangladesh

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Sunday asked Brunei Darussalam to enhance its trade and investment in Bangladesh.

 

She made the call at the bilateral talks with Brunei Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah at her office here.

 

“In the meeting, the Prime Minister proposed increasing Brunei’s business and investment in Bangladesh and the foreign ministers of the two countries will work together to this end,” said Foreign Minister AK Abdul Moment while briefing reporters after the official talks.

 

The PM also said if there is any problem here (for boosting business and investment), a joint consultation commission can be formed to take measures for solving it.

 

Hasina invited Brunei businessmen to go for investments in the 100 special economic zones of Bangladesh.

 

The Brunei Sultan has expressed interest in getting information technology (IT) experts, agriculture and fisheries goods, and halal meat from Bangladesh.

 

About the energy cooperation, Haji Hassanal Bolkiah assured that Brunei will extend energy support to Bangladesh as per its needs.

 

Hasina also urged Brunei to recruit more manpower from Bangladesh as there is a good number of highly talented and professional workers in different sectors, including agriculture, fisheries, service and IT.

 

“If Brunei wants it can recruit from them and meet their manpower needs,” the PM was quoted as telling the Sultan.

 

About the Rohingya issue, she said not a single Rohingya has returned to their country in Myanmar since the 2017 influx into Bangladesh. In response, Sultan Bolkiah said it is unfortunate.

 

The Brunei leader agreed to the Prime Minister’s proposal to support Bangladesh to become a partner of the ASEAN Sectoral Dialogue.

 

Hassanal Bolkiah highly appreciated PM Hasina’s leadership in dealing with the Covid-19 pandemic.

 

Hasina said the cooperation should be increased among the eastern and neighboring countries instead of looking only towards the western countries.

 

In this context, she mentioned that if the countries of the region work together with the spirit of cooperation in various fields, everyone will improve their position.

 

The premier herself and on behalf of her younger sister Sheikh Rehana expressed sincere gratitude to the Brunei Sultan for visiting Bangabandhu Memorial Museum at 32 Dhanmondi.

 

Momen said Bangladesh and Brunei work together in various international forums and the two countries are also interested in working together in the field of defense cooperation.

 

He said Brunei has supported Bangladesh in the Human Rights Council in particular.

 

Senior Foreign Secretary Masud Bin Momen and Prime Minister’s Press Secretary Ihsanul Karim were present at the briefing.

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh

 

History won’t forgive Justice Khairul Haque for scrapping caretaker system: Fakhrul

BNP Secretary General Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir on Sunday said history will never forgive former chief justice ABM Khairul Haque for ‘unethically’ creating a ground for the Awami League to revoke the caretaker government (CG) system to conduct general election.

 

Speaking at a discussion, he also said the political and economic future of the people of Bangladesh and their existence are closely related to the issue of a caretaker government.

 

“The parliament passed the law (revoking the caretaker government system), but justice ABM Khairul Haque created the ground for it. History will never forgive him for it. He first gave a short verdict and later unethically gave the full verdict changing the short version as a civilian16 months after his retirement,” the BNP leader said.

 

Sachetan Nagorik Foundation arranged the discussion on the caretaker government issue in the current context of Bangladesh at a city hotel, marking its fresh journey as a civic platform for raising awareness among people about their rights and the welfare of the country.

 

Fakhrul welcome the new platform and hoped it will play a proactive role in creating awareness among people about democracy and the independence of the judiciary as most of its members are involved with the legal profession.

 

About the necessity of the polls-time neutral government, he said the Awami League first came up with the demand for a neutral interim government in 1994 and enforced hartal (general strike) for 173 days to establish their logic that the election could not be fair under a partisan government.

 

Later, Fakhrul said the then BNP government, led by Khaleda Zia, introduced the caretaker government system through the 13th amendment to the constitution considering the political culture in Bangladesh as the democratic institutions were not developed properly after the liberation of the country.

 

He said four acceptable elections were held under the caretaker government, but later it was annulled by Awami League as part of a plot for depoliticisation and staying in power without people’s votes until 2041.

 

Stating that around 65 per cent of the population of the country are youth, Fakhrul said it is necessary to organise the young people for the restoration of the caretaker government to establish peace, stability and a healthy political structure in Bangladesh.

 

He said the misrule of the Awami League government– which has been staying in power by force and using the state machinery– has crossed all the previous colonial and Pakistani rules and HM Ershad’s autocratic regime. “The Awami League government has completely turned Bangladesh into a failed state through its misrule.”

 

Quader should quit:

 

About Road Transport and Bridges Minister Obaidul Quader’s comment that Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) project has turned into a major concern for the government, Fakhrul said commuters have long been facing serious ordeal due to this unplanned project.

 

“I see shops and ticket counters are being made in the middle of the road of the BRT project… I can’t understand what they’re exactly constructing. Mr Obaidul Quader said today (Sunday) that it (BRT) has become a matter of deep worry. It’s a shameless comment. He should have resigned before making such a remark as they themselves took this project,” he taunted.

 

The BNP leader said the government has been inflicting unbearable suffering on Dhaka city dwellers for nearly 10 years through the BRT project from Gazipur.

 

He said the journalist and civil society members are not raising their voices against the misdeeds of the government and the Digital Security Act. “What a terrible situation this government has created that we’re now afraid of expressing their opinions and writing freely. A reign of terror has been established. We never imagined seeing such a situation in Bangladesh.

 

Fakhrul urged the young lawyers to play an active role in freeing the judiciary from politicisation and restoring democracy and people’s rights.

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh

India’s Congress to vote for first non-Gandhi president in 24 years

For the first time in over 24 years, India’s main opposition Congress party will, on Monday, vote to elect a non-Gandhi president.

 

In the electoral fray are 80-year-old Mallikarjun Kharge, considered close to interim Congress president Sonia Gandhi, and a relatively young Shashi Tharoor, a former UN diplomat.

 

A total of 9,000 Congress delegates, representing all Indian states and Union territories, are eligible to exercise their franchise in the poll.

 

“Arrangements have been made for smooth polling,” Madhusudan Mistry, head of the Congress’ election authority, told the local media on Sunday.

 

While Kharge is a staunch Gandhi family loyalist with 50 years of political experience, 66-year-old Tharoor is an articulate leader who joined the grand old party in 2009 after nearly a 30-year stint in the UN.

 

A PhD from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tharoor served as India’s junior Foreign Minister when the Congress was in power from 2004-2014.

 

The results of the Congress presidential poll will be out on October 19.

 

Since Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s nationalist BJP swept to power in 2014, the Congress has witnessed a vertiginous decline. The Congress is now in power only in a handful of Indian states.

 

Often blamed for the party’s poor performance, Sonia’s son Rahul Gandhi has refused to take over the reins of the party in the run-up to the general elections slated for 2024.

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh

 

Inter Services Football Competition begins

Inter Services Football Competition-2022 began at Bangladesh Air Force Base Bashar Football Ground in Dhaka Cantonment on Sunday under the supervision of Bangladesh Air Force (BAF).

 

The final match of the Inter-Services Football Competition-2022 will be held on October 20.

 

Commander of Dhaka Naval Area Rear Admiral Khondkar Misbah-Ul-Azim inaugurated the competition as the chief guest, says an inter service public relations (ISPR) directorate media release.

 

In the opening match Bangladesh Army team drew with Air Force team by 2-2 goals. Bangladesh Army, Navy and Air Force Football teams are participating in the competition.

 

Among others senior officers from three services and other members were present on the occasion.

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Barguna Rifat killing: Wife Minni seeks High Court bail

Aysha Siddika Minni, who was sentenced to death for her role in her husband Rifat Sharif’s murder, filed a petition to the High Court, seeking bail in the murder case.

 

Advocate Jamiul Haque Foysal filed the petition on behalf of Minni with the HC bench of Justice Sheikh Hassan Arif and Justice Biswajit Debnath.

 

Advocate Foysal said “An appeal petition seeking exemption from the death penalty is under trial and that’s why another petition has been filed with the High Court seeking her bail.”

 

On October 6, 2020 Minni moved the High Court challenging the subordinate court verdict.

 

Minni’s counsel Advocate Makkia Fatema Islam filed the petition with the HC bench concerned.

 

On September 30, 2020 Minni and five others were sentenced to death by District and Sessions Judge Md Asaduzzaman over Rifat’s killing in Barguna in broad daylight in 2019.

 

The full verdict of the case was published on October 3, 2020 and the death reference reached the High Court Division the next day.

 

Rifat Sharif, 22, was hacked to death in the district town on June 26, 2019.

 

He was attacked near the main gate of Barguna Government College. Surveillance camera footage showed his wife Minni apparently trying to save him from the attackers.

 

Rifat’s father filed a murder case accusing 24 people. Although Minni was initially named as a witness, she was later arrested on July 16, 2019 and made an accused.

 

Sabbir Ahmed alias Nayon Bond, the main accused, was killed in an alleged gunfight with police on July 2, that year.

 

Minni and nine others were indicted for Rifat’s murder on January 1, 2020.

 

Meanwhile, 14 other underage accused are being tried separately at a juvenile court for the killing.

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh

 

Police must earn public trust: President tells new IGP

President Abdul Hamid has said police must earn the trust of the people and work with the spirit of serving them.

 

The newly appointed Inspector General (IGP) of Police Chowdhury Abdullah Al-Mamun Sunday paid a courtesy call on him at Bangabhaban Sunday.

 

During the meeting, the new IGP sought the guidance and overall cooperation of the president to discharge his duties, President’s Press Secretary Zainal Abedin said.

 

Abdullah Al Mamun was adorned with the IGP rank badge on October 12. He took over as the IGP on September 30, replacing Benazir Ahmed.

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Bangladesh will offer Bengal goats as ‘gift’ to Brunei Sultan: Momen

Foreign Minister Dr AK Abdul Momen has said Bangladesh will present Bengal goats to the Sultan of Brunei Darussalam Hassanal Bolkiah as “gift”.

 

While talking to reporters at the Prime Minister’s Office, Momen said Bangladesh kept Kachchi Biryani made with mutton on the menu for the Sultan, which he supposedly “likes a lot”.

 

In a humorous tone, Momen also shared a possible plan to have a chef accompany goats offered to the Sultan.

 

Though the Sultan’s first state visit to Bangladesh officially wrapped up this evening, he will leave Dhaka via a special flight tomorrow morning, an official told UNB.

 

Bangladesh considers the visit to be “very successful” with the signing of four bilateral instruments, including MoU on energy cooperation.

 

Foreign Minister Momen is scheduled to see off the Sultan at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport at 9:30am on Monday.

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh

India hope to end long title drought at T20 World Cup

Form at the T20 World Cup has been something of an anomaly for India since it won the inaugural title in 2007.

 

India stages cricket’s biggest and most lucrative franchise T20 competition, which regularly features the biggest stars of the international game and homegrown stars such as Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma.

 

The national team boasts some of the finest batters and bowlers in both spin and pace departments, and all-rounders who can make a difference.

 

Yet India have not won the T20 world title since the very first in South Africa and have only reached the final once in the six subsequent editions.

 

Even last year, as host, India did not make it out of the group stage in a surprising run that included losses to arch-rival Pakistan and eventual finalist New Zealand.

 

For context, though, rules in place for the Covid-19 pandemic meant India was host in name and funding only, with all matches played in the United Arab Emirates or Oman.

 

So Rohit’s so-called Men in Blue are desperate to turn things around in Australia.

 

Group

 

After unofficial warm-ups against Australia on Monday and New Zealand on Wednesday in Brisbane, India’s campaign will start with a blockbuster against Pakistan on October 23 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, which is sold out. They will then play Bangladesh and South Africa, as well as two qualifiers from the first round.

 

India have been acclimatising in Western Australia, where they had a win and a loss in practice matches against a West Australian XI.

 

Regroup

 

Following last year’s T20 World Cup embarrassment in the UAE, India made some changes to the composition of the team and coaching staff.

 

Rohit Sharma now leads the team following Virat Kohli’s decision in 2021 to step down as captain. Rahul Dravid has replaced Ravi Shastri as head coach.

 

Under a new captain and coach, India have played 35 T20s at home and away, with 26 wins and eight losses. They hold the record for maximum wins in a calendar year, taking this form into the World Cup.

 

India missed the final of the Asia Cup in the UAE but rallied for 2-1 T20 series wins at home against Australia and South Africa before the top squad headed Down Under for the global tournament.

 

“We can get caught up with what happens during T20 matches in India. The boundaries are shorter there. In Australia, the boundaries are far bigger and give the bowlers a bit of licence to work with,” veteran spinner Ravichandran Ashwin said during the training camp in Perth.

 

Strengths

 

Suryakumar Yadav has been one of the T20 stars for India in recent months. He has scored 864 runs in 26 matches at a strike rate of 180 and is currently ranked No. 2 in the ICC’s Men’s T20 batting charts.

 

He has risen to be the fulcrum of India’s lineup, and its hopes for a second T20 title will rely on Yadav staying in form.

 

India’s batting depth is strong, with Rohit, Kohli and Lokesh Rahul making a formidable top-order, backed up by Yadav at No. 4. Hardik Pandya and Dinesh Karthik are assigned finishers.

 

Rishabh Pant is both a backup opener and wicketkeeper-batsman in the squad. Despite mercurial performances on Australian soil in the past, Pant is not expected to feature regularly in India’s first-choice XI.

 

Setbacks

 

In a major blow to its title aspirations, India will be missing leading fast bowler Jasprit Bumrah and all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja because of long-term injuries, and Deepak Chahar was ruled out with a back injury earlier this week.

 

Bowling remains a concern for India in the absence of Jadeja and Bumrah, who is a brilliant T20 bowler and excels particularly in the late overs.

 

In his absence, young pacers Harshal Patel and Arshdeep Singh have struggled to come to terms with the high-pressure job. Even the experienced Bhuvneshwar Kumar struggled during the recent Asia Cup and against Australia at home.

 

Axar Patel has come in as a left-arm spinner in place of Jadeja, who also will be sorely missed in the field.

 

On Friday, the Board of Control for Cricket in India said Mohammed Shami would replace Bumrah as the 15th player in the squad. Shami already landed in Australia and will join the Indian team in Brisbane for two warm-up matches against Australia and New Zealand next week.

 

Shami has experience playing in Australia and was India’s second-highest wicket-taker during the ODI World Cup in 2019. The right-arm fast bowler was due to play in the home T20 series against Australia and South Africa last month but pulled out after he tested positive for Covid-19.

 

He has not played a T20 international in almost a year since claiming six wickets in five matches during the last T20 World Cup in the UAE.

 

Squad

 

Rohit Sharma (captain), Lokesh Rahul, Virat Kohli, Suryakumar Yadav, Hardik Pandya, Dinesh Karthik, Rishabh Pant, Axar Patel, Yuzvendra Chahal, Ravichandran Ashwin, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Arshdeep Singh, Harshal Patel, Deepak Hooda, Mohammed Shami.

 

Source: United News of Bangladesh