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"Let there arise out of you a band of people inviting to all that is good enjoining what is right and forbidding what is wrong; they are the ones to attain felicity".
(surah Al-Imran,ayat-104)
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User Name: Noman
Full Name: Noman Zafar
User since: 1/Jan/2007
No Of voices: 2195
 
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And here is what we all were talking about. Dr Nsim shraf has started the real job for which he has been made PCB chairman. Let see will he be able to do ,what USA can't do. can he reduce the so-called Islamic extremism.
this is ridiculous, instead of motivating and appreciating the players, who represent cricket team of Islamic Republic of Pakistan, he is threatening them.
This is a request to all, please don't let this happen. 
 
PCB chairman asked for 'balance'

Pakistan asked to keep religion private

Cricinfo staff

October 21, 2006



The Pakistan team in prayer at Bristol on the recent tour of England © Getty Images
Dr Nasim Ashraf, the new chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board, has called on players to stop displaying their religious beliefs in public. Recently the Pakistan team has made it a point to pray outside the privacy of their own rooms as well as holding religious gatherings in team hotels.

"There is no doubt their religious faith is a motivating factor in the team," Ashraf told Reuters. "It binds them together. But there should be balance between religion and cricket."

And he said that he had discussed the matter with Inzamam-ul-Haq, Pakistan's captain, and that while he had no concerns about personal beliefs, he told Inzamam that Islam does not allow the imposition of views on others.

"I have told him clearly that there should be no pressure on players who don't pray regularly or any compulsion on them to do it. He has assured me there is no pressure on anyone to do anything they don't want to do."

Ashraf said he accepted religious faith was a motivating factor for the national team. "It binds them together," he added. "But there should be balance between religion and cricket."

 Reply:   Israeli Newspaper : Dr. Nasim
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (25/Oct/2006)
Israeli Newspaper had published a news that Dr. Nasim Ashraf along with a team of 8 other Pakistanis had visited Israel and were recommending Pakistan government to recognize Israel (bsyed@y
Those of us who know Dr. Nasim Ashraf, he is PHYSICIAN, and has dual citizenship of Pakistan as well as U.S. It's difficult to understand his role. A few weeks ago, an Israeli Newspaper had published a news that Dr. Nasim Ashraf along with a team of 8 other Pakistanis had visited Israel and were recommending Pakistan government to recognize Israel and start normal diplomatic relation. Their plans were foiled and Israels attacks on Hizbollah in Lebanon put the whole thing in the icebox. His foreign masters are using him to curb the growing Islamization of Pakistani Sportsmen and perhaps thrusting them to extremism (feared by Israelis and their supporters). Thus he has been assigned this new task to influence the Cricketers and dfissuade them away from Islam as reported in Pakistani media. 
Bashir A. Syed

 
 Reply:   'I have never forced anyone to
Replied by(Ghost) Replied on (24/Oct/2006)
has strongly denied accusations that he was putting players in the team under pressure to pray and that the selection process was linked to religion in any way as the debate over the role of

Osman Samiuddin

October 24, 2006



A few Pakistan players offer early morning prayers © AFP

Inzamam-ul-Haq, the Pakistan captain, has strongly denied accusations that he was putting players in the team under pressure to pray and that the selection process was linked to religion in any way as the debate over the role of Islam in the Pakistan team gathers steam.

Talking to BBC's Urdu Service, Inzamam said, "I have never forced anyone to offer prayers in the team or to keep a beard. There are only three players in the team who went to England who have a beard: Shahid Afridi, Mohammad Yousuf and myself. I've never linked team selection to offering prayers and reports suggesting otherwise are all wrong."

And in what appears to be a thinly-veiled response to new PCB chairman Dr Nasim Ashraf's recent comments to a TV channel, where he asked the team to find "a balance" between Islam and cricket and to avoid overtly public displays of religiosity, Inzamam said, "All those talking about our religious activities have never offered prayers and nor do they have any link to Islam."

Last week Ashraf had told CNBC Pakistan that, "There is no doubt their religious faith is a motivating factor in the team. It binds them together. But there should be balance between religion and cricket."

The chairman held a meeting with Inzamam to discuss the issue, in which he was clearly told, according to Ashraf, "that there should be no pressure on players who don't pray regularly or any compulsion on them to do it. He has assured me there is no pressure on anyone to do anything they don't want to do." A board source asserted the meeting's tone was harsher.

Ashraf's comments also attracted the ire of the MMA (Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal), a political conglomerate of religious parties who sit in government in the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) and Balochistan. In a statement, religious leaders strongly condemned the chairman's remarks as damaging to the cricket team and the country's ideology.

Disquiet has been expressed privately by board officials since the end of the tour to England over the growing role of religion within the team. One official said recently, "Inzamam is not leading a team, he is leading a tableegh (missionaries)." And Cricinfo has learnt from sources close to the team that during the England tour players were often up late at night to offer tahajjud (special prayers) and waking up early in the morning to offer prayers before going back to sleep, thus possibly hampering preparations for matches.

But of more concern, as evident in the chairman's comments, is that undue pressure is being put on younger players to offer prayers and adhere diligently to an Islamic code, failing which their place in the team may be affected. Though not explicit, players who didn't attend prayers would be asked later why they didn't, thus leading some to make sure they attended.

Religion within the team has been a talking point since last year and in particular since the conversion of Mohammad Yousuf to Islam. It has been widely attributed by many, including coach Bob Woolmer, as bringing a traditionally fractious team closer together and enhancing performances on the field, a point borne out by Pakistan's success over the last year.

Osman Samiuddin is Pakistan editor of Cricinfo


 
 Reply:   Religous Colour is not accepta
Replied by(webmaster) Replied on (24/Oct/2006)
Related: Religous Colour is not acceptable-Latest target --Cricket Team
This article is also related with this topic.
 
 Reply:   i have read jang newspaper frm
Replied by(webmaster) Replied on (23/Oct/2006)
i have read jang newspaper frm 19-10-2006 till today(23-10-2006) but surprisingly this news is not in any date why?
i have read jang newspaper from 19-10-2006 till today(23-10-2006), but above mention news/ statement of PCB chairman is not in any of these newspapers. this is a prime example of "media ki azadi" and indepedent reporting.
that is why i am telling to all Pakistani, stop reading and believing Paksitani news papers/local media.
even in local media of Dubai, this news is widly spread that Paksitan has announced that Inzimam will not captian the Pakistani team in tour of south africa and in World Cup.
Please dear Pakistani wake up, before its too late.

 
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