LAHORE-UNS: Pakistan Cricket Board PCB and Punjab Government controversy is over after both side agreed on to share cost of lighting routes during PSL matches in Lahore. Chairman Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), Najam Sethi on Sunday announced that HBL Pakistan Super League (PSL) matches in Lahore and Rawalpindi would “continue as scheduled”.
Sethi expressed his gratitude to Punjab caretaker Chief Minister Mohsin Naqvi for being “kind enough to agree to share cost of lighting routes during PSL matches in Lahore”.
The Punjab government and PCB had remained locked in negotiations over security arrangements for the matches in Lahore and Rawalpindi with the former demanding Rs450 million for security.
The Punjab government had previously agreed to light up the route from the team hotels to the Gaddafi Stadium, but its standoff with the PCB had continued to drag on, making it seem like the PSL would be shifted from Lahore and Rawalpindi to Karachi after an agreement on security expenditure eluded the two sides, on Saturday.
The Punjab government had lowered its demand for security funds — from Rs450m to Rs250m — but the PCB was refusing to flinch, stating that it was the obligation of the government to provide protection to the teams, as per the agreements signed in 2014 for the restoration of international cricket in Pakistan.
The PCB had taken its patron-in-chief Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif in the loop as well.
Mansoor Qadir, focal person for the Punjab government ministerial committee, had told Dawn that the lights would remain installed as the government did not want to snatch the glitzy T20 extravaganza away from the citizens of Lahore. However, he had maintained that the provincial cabinet would not enter into further negotiations with the PCB until the latter committed to pay Rs250m for the purchase of security lights, for future use.
After the Punjab cabinet met on Saturday to formalise its stance on the issue, the PCB had held a meeting of its own to discuss the issue. Sources in the board had confirmed that it had received a verbal offer from the government to reduce the amount to Rs250m but the board did not agree.
Sources had said the PCB was clear in its stance, but the government was not. “First, it sent a budget asking the PCB to pay Rs900m, then gradually reduced it and has now come down to Rs250m,” the source had said.