Airstrikes Shatter Dreams: Three Afghan Cricketers Perish in Pakistan’s Border Onslaught
Pakistan Airstrike Kills Three Afghan Cricketers: ACB Withdraws from Tri-Nation Series in Protest
In a heart-wrenching development amid rising tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan, a Pakistani airstrike killed three young Afghan cricketers late Friday night in Paktika province. The incident, which also left four others injured, has sent shockwaves through Afghanistan’s sporting community and cast a dark shadow over ongoing peace talks in Doha.
The Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) condemned the attack in the strongest terms and announced it would withdraw from the upcoming tri-nation T20 series scheduled in Lahore and Rawalpindi.
Ceasefire Violated, Civilians Targeted
The tragedy unfolded just hours after a 48-hour ceasefire was declared between the two nations. However, the truce was short-lived. Pakistani forces allegedly carried out heavy shelling in Arghun and Barmal districts of Paktika, targeting residential zones.
Among those killed were Kabeer, Sibghatullah, and Haroon, promising domestic-level players who had just returned from a friendly match in Sharana, the provincial capital. Their gathering in Urgun was hit directly by airstrikes, turning a peaceful evening into a devastating nightmare.
Cricketing World in Mourning
The ACB described the three as “heroes of the community”, mourning the loss as “a devastating blow to the spirit of sports and youth in Afghanistan.”
Prominent Afghan cricketers expressed their grief and fury online.
Star pacer Fazalhaq Farooqi condemned the “evil act” and prayed for divine justice, while captain Rashid Khan called the attack “barbaric and disgraceful.”
He said, “The bombing of our youth and civilians is beyond humanity. Our national pride is above all.”
In solidarity, the national team backed the ACB’s decision to boycott the November tri-series, marking a powerful protest against what they termed a “slaughter of innocents.”
Durand Line Dispute Fuels Tensions
This tragedy is the latest in a week-long escalation along the Durand Line, a colonial-era border that continues to divide Pashtun tribes and fuel cross-border animosity. Skirmishes between Pakistani troops and Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militants reportedly triggered the retaliation that broke the fragile ceasefire.
Observers warn that the Doha peace process — already on shaky ground — could now collapse entirely as Kabul vows a response and global outrage mounts over civilian deaths.
When Cricket Meets Conflict
Cricket, long seen as a symbol of hope and unity across South Asia, now finds itself overshadowed by violence and nationalism. The deaths of three rising stars have turned a game of peace into a story of heartbreak and anger.
As the Afghan cricket fraternity grieves and the diplomatic crisis deepens, the haunting question remains:
Can the spirit of cricket — the sport that once bridged nations — survive the bitterness of war?

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