LAHORE: International cricket returned to Pakistan after a six-year absence on Friday amidst exhilarating scenes at a sold-out Gaddafi Stadium for the first Twenty20 international between the hosts and Zimbabwe.
The match, taking place with a huge security presence of 4,000 policemen, is the first in Pakistan since gunmen attacked the Sri Lankan team bus in Lahore on March 3, 2009, killing eight people and injuring seven visiting players.
Pakistan president Mamnoon Hussain opened the match by shaking hands with both teams´ players as the crowd rose to a glittering firework.
Cast into sporting exile following the 2009 attack, Pakistan have incurred financial losses amounting to $120 million by having to play their "home" games on neutral venues like the UAE, according to an official estimate.
Beyond the finance, Pakistan´s younger crop of players -- including established batsmen Umar Akmal, Azhar Ali and Asad Shafiq, all of whom have played 50 or more internationals -- have never experienced the inspiring effect of a hometown audience or pitch.
Pakistan is desperate to revive sporting fixtures at home, and must ensure this is the first of several incident-free tours to restore confidence.
The series, comprising two Twenty20s and three one-dayers, was almost scuppered last week after militants killed 45 minority Shiites in an attack on their bus in Karachi.
But Zimbabwe Cricket (ZC) finally gave its green light with a week to go, and since then the two sides have exchanged expressions of mutual brotherhood. (AFP)
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