Pakistan to play in Sri Lanka at India-hosted Women's World Cup
Pakistan will play their matches at this year's Women's Cricket World Cup in Sri Lanka under an International Cricket Council deal that allows them to avoid playing in host nation India.
The refusal of India to travel to Pakistan for the men's Champions Trophy earlier this year resulted in the ICC introducing neutral venues to tournaments hosted by either of the neighbouring countries.
Nuclear-armed India and Pakistan were last month involved in a four-day military conflict, their worst since 1999, before a ceasefire was agreed.
Sri Lanka's Colombo will join Indian host cities Bengaluru, Guwahati, Indore and Visakhapatnam in staging matches from September 30 until the final of the 50-over tournament on November 2, the ICC announced late on Monday.
Colombo will be Pakistan's home for seven group games.
The first semi-final will take place in either Guwahati or Colombo, if Pakistan progress that far, on October 29 with the second semi-final a day later in Bengaluru.
The final will be in either Bengaluru or Colombo on Sunday, November 2.
"The venues for the knockouts are dependent on Pakistan qualifying", the ICC said in a statement.
"Two alternative venues have been identified for one semi-final and the final."
Eight teams will contest the World Cup -- Australia, Bangladesh, England, India, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa and Sri Lanka.
Australia beat England by 71 runs in the final of the last Women's World Cup, hosted by New Zealand in 2022.
pjm/dh
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Chicago Tribune
43 minutes ago
- Chicago Tribune
Chicago Stars lose to unbeaten-at-home Portland Thorns as Alyssa Naeher missed a third consecutive match
Pietra Tordin scored the only goal and the Portland Thorns (6-3-4) remained undefeated at Providence Park this season. The Thorns haven't dropped a game at home in nine straight matches dating back to last year. After a scoreless first half, Sam Coffey crossed the ball to the back post for Tordin to smash home her third goal of the season in the 59th minute. Thorns goalkeeper Bella Bixby recorded a team record 27th NWSL clean sheet, making three saves. The Chicago Stars (1-7-3) are winless in their last nine games. Two-time World Cup winning U.S. women's national team goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher missed a third consecutive match for the Stars due to an upper extremity injury. Chicago Stars players started trivia nights for fun. The result was a stronger team Adames scored two goals in the second half and the Seattle Reign beat the Utah Royals 4-1 on Saturday. It was the first multi-goal game of Adames' career, and at 19 years and 79 days old, she became the second-youngest player to ever score two goals in an NWSL match. At America First Field in Utah, the Reign (6-4-3) jumped out to an early 2-0 lead. Ji So-Yun scored from 14 yards out after a headed pass from Maddie Dahlien in the sixth minute. Ji then returned the favor and played Dahlien through on goal for the Reign's second goal in the 16th. Bianca St-Georges scored for the Royals in the 31st as the Canadian forward tapped in from close range after Ally Sentnor's strike rebounded off the post. Ji got her second assist of the match when she slipped the ball to Adames in the 66th and the youngster found the corner with a swift left-footed shot from 12 yards to make it 3-1. Adames converted a penalty kick in the 90th. She leads Seattle with four goals this season. It was the first time the Reign scored four in a game since May 2023. The Royals (1-10-2) extended their winless streak to eight and remain in last place in the NWSL standings as the league heads into a monthlong break. Esther Gonzalez scored her 10th goal of the season and Gotham came from behind to defeat Bay on Saturday. The Spaniard is the top scorer in the NWSL and has already surpassed her total of nine from the 2024 season. Gotham (5-5-3) won its second home match of the season. Penelope Hocking put Bay up 1-0 in the 11th minute. Hocking latched onto a looping pass from Hannah Bebar and poked the ball past Ann-Katrin Berger in the Gotham goal. Gonzalez got Gotham's equalizer in the 29th when she pounced on a loose pass in the box by Alyssa Malonson. Geyse netted the winning goal for Gotham in the 55th. Nealy Martin found the Brazilian with a bending 40-yard long pass out of the defense. It was a second straight loss for Bay (4-6-3). The San Jose-based team has lost all three of its meetings with Gotham since joining the NWSL in 2024. Hannah Betfort scored the winning goal in North Carolina's comeback victory on Saturday. The Courage (5-5-3) are on a two-game winning streak and are up to ninth in the NWSL standings, outside the playoff places on goal difference alone. It was the second consecutive game head coach Sean Nahas missed due to a medical issue, but he was spotted in the stands at WakeMed Soccer Park. The Dash (3-8-2) are winless in their last five games. Avery Patterson put Houston ahead 1-0 in the opening minute of the match. The deflected strike from inside the box came after just 52 seconds and was the fastest goal in Dash history. Acting head coach Nathan Thackeray made a triple substitution in the 66th minute, putting Jaedyn Shaw, Ashley Sanchez and Betfort into the game. Dash midfielder Sarah Puntigam was sent off for a second yellow card for a foul on Shaw in the 70th. Shaw scored the equalizer with a simple finish from the center of the box in the 71st. The goal was Shaw's first for the Courage since joining this past offseason. Manaka Matsukubo spotted Betfort in the box and whipped the ball towards the forward, who got just enough of a touch to score the winning goal in the 81st.

Miami Herald
7 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Judge: Arrests could result from plan to end homelessness in downtown Atlanta before World Cup
ATLANTA - A controversial plan to remove homeless people from downtown Atlanta before the 2026 FIFA World Cup could lead to some arrests "solely to make the city look nice," according to a Fulton County judge. Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney, who co-chairs a justice board that seeks alternatives to incarceration in metro Atlanta, said he's concerned the city's plan to end homelessness in downtown and house hundreds of people by next summer could prompt encounters between police and unsheltered people, leading to arrests. Any increase in the local jail population shouldconcern "everyone in the criminal justice system," because it would tax resources and expose people to an unhealthy, unsafe environment,McBurney told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. As Atlanta prepares for the World Cup and the international attention it will bring, the city's sizable homeless population has emerged as a flash point. Some advocates worry that officials will turn to arrests to clear the streets, with some of the city's homeless ending up in the troubled Fulton County Jail. Partners for HOME, the nonprofit that implements the city of Atlanta's homeless strategy, is leading the effort, known as "Downtown Rising." The initiative is part of a $212 million campaign called "Atlanta Rising" to end unsheltered homelessness in the city. Mayor Andre Dickens said at a news conference on summer safety on Wednesday that his administration has been working to make housing available since long before anyone knew Atlanta would be hosting World Cup matches. He added that encampments under bridges are unsafe and won't be tolerated. "We want to make sure those unsheltered individuals don't come anywhere downtown, and throughout the city of Atlanta, not just during the World Cup, but now," he said. Asked how the city will handle enforcement, Dickens said police would take people who violate city ordinancesto the pre-arrest diversion center, which offers treatment and other services to people who are homeless or have substance use or mental health issues, allowing them to avoid arrest. "If you break the law, we have measures to deal with that like any other lawbreaker," Dickens added. Not focused on arrests Partners for HOME Chief Executive Cathryn Vassell said their plan calls for housing 400 people who are sleeping outdoors in downtownby the end of 2025 and offering them the services they need - not to arrest them if they don't want what is offered. Atlanta Police Maj. Jeff Cantin also said he doesn't envision Downtown Rising resulting in arrests "unless there's something really egregious." "We are not trying to prosecute people for being homeless," said Cantin, who oversees the department's Homeless Outreach Proactive Enforcement team, known as HOPE. "We're trying to get them the help they need." But racial justice advocate Michael Collins objects to the involvement of entities like the Atlanta Downtown Improvement District and the Metro Atlanta Chamber in the Downtown Rising strategy. "A bunch of downtown businesspeople have gotten together and decided that in order for the World Cup to be economically successful to them, they need to eradicate homelessness from the area, even if this means lots of low-income, Black and brown people end up going to the county jail - a death trap that has been deemed unconstitutional," said Collins, senior director of the organization Color of Change. In an investigative report, the U.S. Department of Justice found conditions at the Fulton County Jail "abhorrent" and "unconstitutional." The report is replete with examples of how people have been harmed by the horrific conditions, rampant violence, indifferent supervision and poor medical care. After the report was released, the DOJ and Fulton County reached a legally binding consent decree. Marcus Mister, a vice president of the Atlanta Downtown Improvement District, said the organization added an outreach team in 2020 and is focused on helping refer homeless people to also has an ambassador force supported by off-duty police officers. Mister said the organization's approach toward homeless people has gradually become more empathetic. "That has really required some retraining of our ambassador force," he said. However, if homeless people resist efforts to close downtown to outdoor sleeping, he said, "Then it's whatever ordinance is on the book to enforce." 'This is what I know' Officials in Fulton County in recent weeks have complained publicly that police officers in the city of Atlanta and across Fulton County are taking too many people to jail on minor charges like trespassing, instead of bringing them to the new diversion centerin downtown Atlanta. McBurney said the diversion center could connect people to housing resources but that people can only stay there for up to 23 hours. He added that any effort to relocate dozens of people - who consider their homes to be a tent on sidewalk in downtown - "can be the emotional trigger, the mental health trigger that causes them to do something that gets them locked up," like taking a swing at an officer. "If history is a guide, there would be a significant number of people who are not interested in moving," he said. Twenty-four people declined offers of permanent supportive housing and seven refused shelter during Downtown Rising's first encampment closure, which took place last month on Pryor Street under the Interstate 20 overpass in downtown Atlanta, according to Vassel of Partners for HOME. Another 49 people from the Pryor Street camp moved into housing, 27 moved into shelters, and 74 others were "referred to housing," Vassell said. Some relocated to the Cooper Street area in the nearby Mechanicsville neighborhood - where the city shut down a large encampment last year, Vassel said. Officials said no one was arrested during the Pryor Street encampment's closure. "Most people who are declining (offers of housing) have very complex challenges, whether they're severely mentally ill and can't make a good decision for themselves or aren't lucid enough," Vassell said. Chukey Carter, 42, said he was living at the Pryor Street camp for several months earlier this year. He said he ended up in Atlanta accidentally after he fell asleep on a bus on New Year's Eve and missed his stop in Columbia, South Carolina. He said he recently received an apartment with a one-year lease that doesn't require him to pay rent or utilities. But he said a lot of homeless people will refuse to leave downtown if the city tries to relocate them. They will say: "'I'm going to still stay out here. This is what I know.'" Mandy Chapman Semple, managing partner of Clutch Consulting, which is working with Partners for Home to develop the Downtown Rising plan, said it often takes several offers of housing and services to convince a homeless person to accept them because many are skeptical. For those who don't accept help, Chapman Semple said outreach workers will continue to encourage them to go to shelters. A Partners for Home map shows several "outreach" zones, including at least 10 encampments near Mercedes-Benz Stadium, where the city will host eight World Cupmatches, including a semifinal game on July 15, 2026. "We are not going to a zone and closing it until we know we have sufficient housing to offer to everybody in that particular geography," Vassell said. Robb Pitts, chairman of the Fulton County Board of Commissioners, said he has not been briefed on the Downtown Rising plan but believes it is possible to house 400 people. Providing homes to people sleeping near Mercedes-Benz Stadium, he said, would be "the best of all worlds." "But in the absence of that, I think they will probably be able to relocate them on a temporary basis," Pitts said. "Now the question becomes: What happens after the World Cup if they come back to where they were?" --- (Staff writer Shaddi Abusaid contributed to this story.) --- Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.


Hamilton Spectator
15 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
What is the Lawrence Bishnoi gang? And why do Canadian politicians want them labelled terrorists?
An India-based criminal organization is drawing increasing political scrutiny in Canada, with some saying it needs to be declared a terrorist organization. This week, Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown called on Ottawa to declare the Lawrence Bishnoi gang a terrorist organization, joining a chorus of other voices. 'We must take transnational crime seriously and that means giving law enforcement the investigative tools to combat these sophisticated criminal networks,' Brown said on X. Brown was joined by deputy mayor Harkirat Singh and regional councillors Gurpartap Singh Toor and Navjit Kaur Brar in the request to have the Lawrence Bishnoi gang declared a criminal organization by Ottawa. 'The Bishnoi gang, a transnational criminal network, led from India, has been linked to a growing wave of violence, extortion and intimidation targeting South Asian communities in Brampton and across the Region of Peel,' Brown said in a prepared statement. The statement did not give examples of specific violent incidents. The Lawrence Bishnoi group was also named in the murder of Brampton-based rapper Sidhu Moose Wala, when Wala was in India in 2022. Bishnoi, who is in his early 30s, is the son of a police officer and was educated in a convent school. Now in custody in India on more than two dozen charges, including murder and extortion, he awaits trial. He has been accused of using intimidation tactics to extort business owners in Punjabi diaspora communities in North America, Europe and the Gulf states. The gang is reportedly run by Bishnoi through encrypted cell messages, even though he is behind bars in India. Brown's comments follow similar ones earlier this week, when B.C. Premier David Eby urged the federal government to label the gang a terrorist organization because of extortion and other crimes against the South Asian community on the West Coast. Eby said Tuesday that he was going to write to Prime Minister Mark Carney, asking that the Lawrence Bishnoi group be labelled a terrorist group 'to enable police to be able to use the necessary tools to investigate.' Last fall, the RCMP stated the gang was targeting members of the pro-Khalistan movement who were on Canadian soil, allegedly acting for the Indian government. On the West Coast, the Lawrence Bishnoi group was accused this week of firing bullets into the home of a Punjabi music producer. Last year, shots were reportedly fired at the home of Punjabi music star A.P. Dhillon on Vancouver Island and in 2023, shots were fired outside the West Vancouver home of Bollywood singer and actor Gippy Grewal. Indian media said the Lawrence Bishnoi group claimed responsibility for both attacks. Moves to label the Lawrence Bishnoi gang a terrorist group throw complications into Carney's attempts to rebuild the Canada-India relationship. Eby's announcement on Tuesday was praised by the World Sikh Organization of Canada. 'Canadian law enforcement and intelligence agencies have linked the Bishnoi gang to assassinations, extortions, and intimidation carried out at the direction of Indian government agents including the 2023 murder of Canadian Sikh leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar and other violent crimes,' the organization said. With files from The Canadian Press