Pakistan cricketer Azhar Mahmood has been honoured by a leading Anglo-Asian charity set up at the suggestion of Britain's Prince Charles. All-rounder Mahmood has become an official ambassador of the British Asian Trust, the first Pakistani cricketer to be given such an appointment.
He joins fellow cricketers in India's Rahul Dravid and Sri Lanka's Muttiah Muralitharan in supporting the work of the Trust, which was set up at the suggestion of Prince Charles - the eldest son of Queen Elizabeth II and heir to the British throne - in 2007 to help disadvantaged people across South Asia.
"Supporting charitable projects has always been important to me, wherever I have played," said Mahmood in a statement. "But it is through the British Asian Trust that I am looking forward to getting involved in the very best work being done across South Asia, tackling the most difficult issues, and achieving incredible things," added Mahmood, who has played for team right across the sub-continent.
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