Pakistan Youtuber Arslan Naseer Threatens ICC: Last Sunday (01 February), the Pakistan government had announced that their team will take the field for the 2026 T20 World Cup, but will not play the match against India in Sri Lanka on 15 February. Since then this issue is under discussion. Now Pakistani YouTuber and actor Arsalan Naseer gave a controversial statement saying that if the ICC office was in India, they would have bombed it. Apart from this, Pakistani YouTuber also spewed venom against ICC Chairman Jai Shah.
What did the Pakistani YouTuber say?
In a video going viral on social media, Arsalan said, “Stay within your limits. This is your small office of 25 people. Sit there happily and watch YouTube, watch Netflix. ICC’s office is in Dubai, so it is safe. If their office was in India, our people would have bombed that head quarter and the area around it.”
Jai Shah was also targeted
While threatening to blow up the office with a bomb, Arsalan also targeted ICC Chairman Jai Shah. As can be seen and heard in the video. This controversial statement of the Pakistani actor is becoming increasingly viral on social media.
🇵🇰 Pakistani YouTuber Arslan Naseer wants to bomb ICC office
“Our people would blast them if ICC office were relocated to 🇮🇳India. Jay Shah & ICC are safe because the office is in 🇦🇪Dubai.”
What a pathological mindset they have, it only exposes their real mentality pic.twitter.com/lyYEs7qYxG
— Ajay Kashyap (@EverythingAjay) February 3, 2026
World Cup will start from 7th February
It is noteworthy that the T20 World Cup will start from 07 February (Saturday). The first match of the tournament will be played between Pakistan and Netherlands. The thing to be seen is that Pakistan has refused to play the match against India just 06 days before the start of the tournament.
Pakistan not only refused to play the match against Team India, before this Bangladesh team had also withdrawn its name from the tournament. Bangladesh was asked to shift their league matches to a country other than India. However, ICC rejected Bangladesh’s request.

