A year ago, Pakistan captain Younus Khan delivered an impassioned appeal to the cricketing community to resume tours of his troubled country after it had won the Twenty20 World Cup at Lord's. Younus is no longer in the team, England now holds the World Cup and Pakistan is still forced to play all its internationals abroad because of the security situation at home. It starts the first of a two-Test series against Australia at Lord's in London Tuesday. Pakistan's current isolation was precipitated by the attack on the Sri Lanka team bus in Lahore in March last year in which gunmen killed seven people and wounded six team members and a coach. No country has toured since and the prospects of any immediate resumption of normal relations remain bleak. “The attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team on March 3, 2009 was the death knell for cricket in Pakistan,” Sajjan Gohel, the international security director of the Asia-Pacific Foundation, a London-based think tank, told Reuters in an email. “For the foreseeable future it is impossible to hold major sports events in Pakistan because of the serious and legitimate concerns regarding Pakistan's security infrastructure and the growth of terrorism that continues to proliferate in the major urban cities.” International Cricket Council (ICC) Chief Executive Haroon Lorgat said the problem was essentially political. “It's not a cricketing issue. There's very little we can do,” he told Reuters by telephone from the world governing body's Dubai headquarters. Wisden cricket almanac editor Scyld Berry suggested in his opening notes in the annual publication this year that a secure fortress containing a cricket stadium might be a solution. In a telephone interview, Berry said the stadium could be placed on the outskirts of a Pakistan city. “Teams could just fly straight in, play and get out again. That might be a particularly claustrophobic week but it's a lot better than nothing,” he said. “You could stage one Test match and three one-dayers or a handful of Twenty20s.” Former ICC president Ehsan Mani, a Pakistani now based in England, said a better option could be to base overseas teams in Dubai and fly them into Pakistan for matches. Mani added the problem was exacerbated by what he said was the Pakistan Cricket Board's (PCB) failure to submit a report on the Lahore shootings to the ICC. PCB chairman Ejaz Butt said Mani's claim that no security report had been sent to the ICC was “absolutely incorrect”. “We have resolved that. Everything has been sorted out and there is no problem on that account at all,” he told Reuters by telephone. However, Lorgat confirmed that no report on the shooting had yet been forwarded to the ICC. Lorgat said the ICC would concentrate on the Pakistan issue following next year's 50 overs World Cup which will be staged in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. “We must play cricket back in Pakistan, they are passionate about cricket, they have enormous talent,” he said. Butt said he was optimistic about current negotiations involving the PCB and political authorities. “In a year, or 18 months, we think something will come about,” he said. “I am hopeful, very hopeful. I think very soon we will hear good news.” Gohel remains a pessimist. “You could have a cricket pitch with a fortress surrounding it, and even place it on top of a hill, but if those that are providing the security are in collusion with the radicals and extremists then it does not really matter,” he said. Gohel said more than 90 people had been killed in an attack on a local volleyball match on Jan. 1 this year in the Lakki Marwat district of the North West Frontier Province. “This was only a local volleyball game and yet it was targeted. A high profile game of cricket with teams from England or Australia would be even more of a target,” he said.