Pakistan May Boycott T20 World Cup After Bangladesh Ouster, Says PCB Chief

Pakistan Cricket Board chairman Mohsin Naqvi has indicated the government will decide whether Pakistan participates in the upcoming T20 World Cup. His comments follow the ICC's removal of Bangladesh from the tournament after the BCB refused to send its team to India over security concerns. Naqvi strongly criticized the ICC, alleging unfair treatment and double standards towards Bangladesh. Scotland has been named as Bangladesh's replacement in the tournament based on the latest ICC rankings.

Key Points: Pakistan May Rethink T20 WC Participation After ICC Ejects Bangladesh

  • Pakistan reconsidering T20 WC participation
  • ICC ejected Bangladesh over security refusal
  • Scotland replaces Bangladesh in tournament
  • Naqvi accuses ICC of unfair double standards
3 min read

PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi says Govt will decide on Pak participation in T20 World Cup

PCB Chairman Mohsin Naqvi says Pakistan's T20 World Cup participation is under government review, slams ICC's "unfair" treatment of Bangladesh.

"Bangladesh has been treated unfairly... You cannot have double standards. - Mohsin Naqvi"

Islamabad, January 24

Pakistan Cricket Board chairman and the country's interior minister Mohsin Naqvi has indicated that Pakistan could rethink its participation in the T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka after Bangladesh were ejected from the tournament by the ICC, reported Dawn News.

When asked about the potential boycott of the tournament Naqvi said, "We are waiting for the prime minister to return," he said, adding that a final decision would be taken then."

Pakistan has already been given a concession by the ICC and will be playing all its league games including that against India in Sri Lanka.

Meanwhile, Mohsin Naqvi also came out in support of Bangladesh alleging that the ICC had treated the nation unfairly by ejecting it from the tournament.

"Bangladesh has been treated unfairly. I said the same in the board meeting of the International Cricket Council (ICC). You cannot have double standards, where one country can make whatever decision whenever and do the total opposite for another country. That is why we have taken the stand that Bangladesh is being treated unfairly and should be allowed to play the World Cup in any case. They are a major stakeholder and this injustice should not be done."

Mohsin Naqvi's comments follow the ICC's official removal of Bangladesh from the marquee tournament after the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) refused to play matches in India, according to ESPNcricinfo. In place of Bangladesh, Scotland has replaced them.

According to ESPNcricinfo reports, the ICC sent the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) an email on Friday evening informing them of the decision, after the BCB communicated that the Bangladesh government had not granted them permission to travel to India.

The report further added that BCB had taken the issue to the ICC's Dispute Resolution Committee (DRC). However, officical statement regarding BCB taking this matter to the DRC, or what the ICC's response was not come out to the public.

The ICC's decision comes after three weeks of talks between the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) and the ICC over Bangladesh's refusal to send its team to India for the marquee tournament due to security concerns.

Scotland was included based on the latest ICC rankings. Also, the European Nation has previously played in six of the nine editions of the Men's T20 World Cup (2007, 2009, 2016, 2021, 2022, and 2024).

Earlier, the Bangladesh Cricket Board had requested that the International Cricket Council shift their matches outside India to Sri Lanka, citing "security and safety concerns" for their players.

BCB's request came after the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) had instructed the IPL franchise Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) to release Bangladesh pacer Mustafizur from their squad ahead of the 2026 season, amid violence against minorities in Bangladesh.

After this, ICC rejected the BCB's request to move their matches out of India for the upcoming ICC Men's T20 World Cup via video conference, which was convened to discuss the way forward.

The BCB President, Aminul Islam Bulbul, then confirmed that the BCB stands firm in its decision not to play its ICC Men's World Cup matches in India, following the ICC's rejection of its request.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
While I understand security concerns are paramount, the ICC needs to be consistent. If Bangladesh was ejected for refusing to play in India, the same rule should apply to everyone. You can't have different standards for different boards. Naqvi has a point there.
A
Ananya R
As an Indian cricket fan, I just want to see a good tournament. The India-Pakistan match is the biggest spectacle. If Pakistan pulls out, it will be a huge loss for fans on both sides of the border. Hope better sense prevails.
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Vikram M
The whole situation is messy. First Bangladesh, now Pakistan... and Scotland gets a chance. ICC's handling seems poor. But also, why is a country's interior minister doubling as cricket board chief? Maybe keep politics and sports separate?
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Karthik V
Honestly, if a team doesn't want to come, don't come. The World Cup will go on. But the rules must be the same for all. Either allow everyone to pick venues based on "concerns" or enforce the schedule for all. This selective treatment is wrong.
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Priya S
Feeling sad for the Bangladeshi players and fans. They worked hard to qualify. Their board's issues shouldn't cost the team a World Cup spot. Hope there's some resolution. And Pakistan, please don't boycott yaar. We want that match!

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