Protesters burnt cricket sports good
Cricket organizers demand PCB Chairman resignation.
Islamabad: (Mudassar Chuhdary)
Cricket organizers across the country held a big demonstration in Islamabad, demanding the restoration of regional associations and the dismissal of the Chairman Pakistan Cricket Board Rameez Raja and also they burnt the Cricket sports goods.
According to detail the thousands of cricketers from across the country and the organizers demonstrated in front of the National Press Club demanding the resignation of the Chairman PCB and marked his posting on political grounds. The protesters claimed that the constitution of 2014 should be restored. On this occasion slogans were raised against Ramiz Raja. On the occasion the Cricket Organizer Shakeel Sheikh said that we have come out for the restoration of cricket and will remain in protest until the constitution is restored. He said that more demonstration would be launched in Karachi, Lahore. The protesters demanded the rights of cricketers and the restoration of regional associations. The protesters marched and burnt cricket sports goods. Ex-Member Gulzada from KPK, Shafiq Kazmi from Karachi, Gul Mohammad Kakar from Balochistan, Imtiaz Abro from Lal from Sindh participated in the protest. Former president of Larkana region Tanveer, Agha Javed Ahmed, president of Sukkur, Niaz Ahmed Lashari, secretary of Sukkur, Shafi Mohammad Adnan Shah, Parvez Ahmed Chandio from Dadu, Faisal Ahmed from Jacobabad, Sarfraz Sheikh, Nazir from Khairpur, ex-Bahawalpur region. President Tariq Sarwar, Shahid Laghari from Dera Ghazi Khan, Khursheed Butt from Jhelum, Ishrat Alvi from Gujarat, Malik Zaheer from Attock, Nadeem Butt from Kasur.
Rana Anees from Faisalabad, Shoaib Butt from Chakwal, Hafiz Shehbaz from Lahore, Mubasher Kasuri and Sobhi Azhar from Rawalpindi, Former President Kamran Haider from Leyah, Asadullah Khan from Mardan, Baba Sansar Zafar from Gujranullah, Nasir Iqbal from Islamabad, Mirpur from Azad Kashmir. Former President Nasserbut and others also participated in protest.
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