Monday, February 24, 2020

#Pakistan - #Balochabad and Female Education


By: Nadil Baloch
Films have been produced to represent the social, political, economic, health and educational problems, family and religious conflicts in the world. World had experienced numerous social changes and a number films have been made on these social changes, thereafter, impacts of films on social life of the society. Films are the easiest way of discriminating the message to the large masses due to which film culture is always promoted by the state and society for bringing social equilibrium in the society.
Very few films are available in Balochi film industry but most of them were made for the sack of comedy rather than presenting the social issues of the society. Many short or feature films have been made by Baloch filmmakers but the purposes were to fascinate the masses or only a source of entertainment for the people. They were never serious films which could provide a purposeful message for social reform or social restructuring.
In Balochi Film industry only the films of Dr. Hanif Sharif or some other filmmakers are considered serious, which represent the social issues of the Baloch society due to which most of the viewer considered them worth watching. The reasons not producing good film vary such as lack of institution and economic constrains. Despite these all, Balochi film industry has improved as compare to past because new emerging Balochi filmmakers coming forward and producing films which are far better and the need of present society. 
Balochabad, a film directed by Shakir Shaad and his colleague Arif Badal, is going to be screened in Pakistan as well as in board. It is the only film which is made on the situation of female education in Balochistan. I may not be wrong to say that it is the first Balochi film which is made on female education and women empowerment. After coming of its official trailer, it was supported and appreciated by people and political figures of Balochistan as well people in foreign countries.
It is the only Balochi film produced within the country in which Baloch female actress is playing her actual role. Baloch females were never allowed to perform in films because it is considered a social taboo in the society. Women who performed at films were considered negative. But Shantul Film Production changed this mindset by releasing Balochabad in which female played her actual roles. If we have a glance on female participation in Balochi films, we can find little or no place for females in Balochi films. In history, a women performed in Hammal-o-Mahganj film released in 1976 which was directed by Anwar Iqbal. Before screening, the common masses had resisted and protested against this film and they believed that it was defaming the respect of Baloch society.
After that very rare women had participated in Balochi films. Baloch women who were in foreign countries like Golf countries or Iran could participated but no in Pakistan. The films made in Pakistan were mostly male oriented and females role were played by males by wearing female cloths or dressing. This culture has greatly affected the Balochi Film industry. Both women and directors of the film were always in fear while selecting the women for films due to the social pressures. Indeed, women participation in film is very important. Film has a great effect on the lives of common masses because it has power to manipulate the mind of people. Film direct the minds of the people what to think and what to not.
Balochabad film also has great sociological significance for Baloch society. It promotes the gender equality and women participation in film making where women were always neglected or presented with negative connotation. This film shows the real situation of female education and it would be a tool for the people of the province to get a lesson and promote female education. This film also pave the way of females who want to work in the films but they were not allowed or had fear to work in Balochi film industry.
Films like Balochabad should be promoted because it is perpetuating the women empowerment and participation. Such films are very important in terms of Balochistan where the female literacy rate is 33.5% which is very low and the volumes of social taboos are very high in regards to female participation in film making. The social taboos created many impediments in the ways of female education in the province.
Enhance such film should be appreciated and promoted. People have to participate in screening so that the producers, actors, actresses, directors and others should be encouraged for making such films in future. 

Is Pakistan prepared to deal with the possible economic impact of #coronavirus?



Pakistan is clearly ill-prepared to deal with the possible impact of the epidemic crisis in China that may take time to subside. It can lead to supply chain disruptions, amplify the inflation and suppress consumer and business confidence, rattling the fragile economy and dragging the low GDP growth rate further down.
There is an uneasy calm in business circles. Private companies are exploring alternatives to source their raw material and merchandise, despite the price differential as reports of growing global anxieties over the epidemic trickle through media. All efforts are directed to minimising the chances of panic in the retail market, securing the market share and keeping manufacturing units operational.
Prime Minister Imran Khan has offered to assist China in the fight against the virus but back home his government has yet to absorb the gravity of the risk to the struggling economy. There is a halfhearted effort to assess the impact but the requisite strategy is not even in the works.
The Planning Commission has yet to initiate an exercise to quantify the possible impact on trade, manufacturing, the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor and GDP growth. The focus in the finance ministry is on the expected savings in the oil import bill with the price dip and using it to improve the fiscal balance. If that deprives the people and businesses of the price benefits, so be it.
Imran Khan has offered help to China in the fight against coronavirus but back home his government has yet to absorb the gravity of the risk to the struggling economy
The market watchers believe that if the government fails to put its house in order and pool resources to prepare diligently to manage the unfolding situation then there is danger of panic in the consumer market by mid-March as inventories have started depleting and products arriving from other sources will be priced 10 per cent higher, at the least. How will this act with the galloping inflation? Your guess is as good as mine.
“If the crisis subsides quickly there is a possibility that inventories built to cover the New Year holidays in China provide the buffer and the market in Pakistan broadly stays immune to the business stress. However, if the issue prolongs there is no chance for Pakistan to dodge the negative fallout completely. It’s not just the trade and the manufacturing sectors that will be affected, its toll will be felt by the entire economy”, commented a leading businessman with strong Chinese links, anonymously.
“The government seems too self-consumed to monitor, assess and strategise to deal with the possible fallout. Instead of taking preemptive measures they tend to wait till the problem assume crisis proportions and then react in haste, missing out on better more sustainable options. People and businesses, in the end, pay the price for the administrative failures,” he added hinting at the commodity and power sector issues.
Anjum Nisar, president of the Federation of Pakistan Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said the private sector is already making alternate arrangements though it costs them more. “China is too big a player. When the world rises with the Chinese tide how can it be impervious if the tide recedes? Pakistan sources about 30pc ($16.5 billion) imports from China and exports close to $1.5bn worth of merchandise there. The manufacturing and shipment adjustments in China will certainly affect us. The private sector can’t afford to wait for the government. Our members are in contact with their Chinese partners but evaluating other import options simultaneously”, he said over the phone from Lahore.
Dawn’s investigation reaffirmed that no structured exercise to identify the most vulnerable sectors/segments or quantify the possible impact on trade, manufacturing and growth has officially been undertaken so far. Most officers in the Ministry of Planning, industry, Federal Board of Revenue and customs were caught unaware when Dawn approached them.
When quizzed, sources in customs agreed to share the data of the arrival of containerised cargo. This year in January 33,395 TEU (twenty-foot equivalent unit) of cargo from China was unloaded at ports compared to 33,515 TEU in 2019. In the first three weeks of February 17,565 TEU arrived compared to 20,970 TEU in 2019. They attributed the fall, however, to a more protective import policy and expected the impact of the Chinese crisis to hit cargo traffic in March. “These ships must already be seaborne when the crisis struck China”, a source said referring to cargo ships that arrived over the past month and a half.
Customs received instructions to alert the health staff at the ports to not clear cargo arriving from affected areas without fumigation and closely monitor and adhere strictly to safety standards in January. Later, an advisory note of Port Health Establishment specified second-hand clothing/used shoes and other worn articles as cargos that can’t be cleared without fumigation. They also received travel advisory to not permit entry to any person on board the ships without clearance of health authorities.
Through a note in the first week of February, the additional requirement of fumigation in cargo ships was withdrawn but the complete ban on the import of animals and birds still holds. The copies of these advisories are with Dawn.
A senior officer in the Ministry of Commerce told Dawn that it is not their mandate to carry out a macroeconomic assessment as they are tasked only to implement the trade policy. The officers in the planning ministry said they monitor growth and its drivers and have not been tracking the issue. They assumed that the impact would be limited to trade.
However, top guns in the government accepted that the evolving situation in China could pose serious challenges for Pakistan. They contested the perception though that the government is not alive to the issue. In a response to Dawn queries the office of the advisor to the prime minister Razzak Dawood mailed a reply. The comment states: “Pakistan has significant reliance on China as it sources the bulk of its raw material, intermediate and capital goods from there”.
The note informed that a meeting to assess the situation was held last Thursday to take stock of the situation. It had participation from all relevant departments including Trading Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) and the Commercial Counselor in Beijing (via a video link). The note says, “they deliberated on the possible effects on domestic production and exports by taking into account recent global and bilateral trade trends, possible bottlenecks in supply chains, availability of stocks and supply of raw materials and intermediate goods. “The Commercial Counselor, Beijing, apprised that on slight delays in shipments, however, except for Hubei Province, normal trading activities are expected to resume in the next 10 days. Secretary TDAP informed that the intermediate goods’ stock was sufficient for six to eight weeks. Besides this, a monitoring and evaluation mechanism is being put in place”.
Some multinationals, including fast-moving consumer goods companies, are understood to be reassessing their supply chains to reduce their production footprints in China. When approached, the embassies of the United Kingdom, the United States and Japan (countries with a strong corporate presence in Pakistan) declined a formal comment. Either they have not been approached by their companies or did not wish to share their concerns for diplomatic reasons at this stage.

Pakistan: Terror And Impunity – Analysis

By Ajit Kumar Singh
Backed by ‘all-weather friend’ China, Pakistan again escaped the ignominy of being put into the ‘club’ of High-Risk Jurisdictions, commonly referred to as the ‘blacklist’, by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF). The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) and Iran are the two present members of the ‘club’.  
Despite Islamabad’s continued attempts to deceive FATF by taking superficial action and come out of the Jurisdictions under Increased Monitoring, the ‘grey list’, however, FATF decided to keep Pakistan in this listing, along with 17 other countries. Pakistan has been on the ‘grey list’ since June 2018.  
FATF President Xiangmin Liu of China chaired the FATF Plenary held on February 19-21, 2020, at Paris, France. In a release dated February 21, 2020, FATF noted that “all deadlines in the action plan have expired” and the FATF “again expresses concerns given Pakistan’s failure to complete its action plan in line with the agreed timelines and in light of the TF [terrorist financing] risks emanating from the jurisdiction”.
The FATF warned, “To date, Pakistan has largely addressed 14 of 27 action items, with varying levels of progress made on the rest of the action plan. The FATF strongly urges Pakistan to swiftly complete its full action plan by June 2020. Otherwise, should significant and sustainable progress especially in prosecuting and penalising TF not be made by the next Plenary, the FATF will take action, which could include the FATF calling on its members and urging all jurisdictions to advise their FIs [Foreign Investors] to give special attention to business relations and transactions with Pakistan.”
Interestingly, in a release dated October 18, 2019, FATF had raised a similar warning,
All deadlines in the action plan have now expired. While noting recent improvements, the FATF again expresses serious concerns with the overall lack of progress by Pakistan to address its TF risks, including remaining deficiencies in demonstrating a sufficient understanding of Pakistan’s transnational TF risks, and more broadly, Pakistan’s failure to complete its action plan in line with the agreed timelines and in light of the TF risks emanating from the jurisdiction. To date, Pakistan has only largely addressed five of 27 action items, with varying levels of progress made on the rest of the action plan. The FATF strongly urges Pakistan to swiftly complete its full action plan by February 2020. Otherwise, should significant and sustainable progress not be made across the full range of its action plan by the next Plenary, the FATF will take action, which could include the FATF calling on its members and urging all jurisdictions to advise their FIs to give special attention to business relations and transactions with Pakistan.
In June 2018, Pakistan had made a high-level political commitment to work with FATF and the Asia Pacific Group (APG) to strengthen its Anti-Money Laundering (AML)/ Countering Financing of Terrorism (CFT) regime and to address its strategic counter-terrorist financing-related deficiencies. It had submitted a 27-point action plan.  
Given the international community’s indifference towards Islamabad’s tacit support to terrorism and China’s brazen support to Islamabad in all its acts of ‘sponsoring terror’, for instance Beijing’s support at UN proceeding to Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) leader Maulana Masood Azhar, it is highly unlikely that Islamabad will be put under the ‘black list’ in the near future, if ever.  
Pakistan was on FATF’s ‘grey list’ between 2012 and 2015 as well. Nevertheless, United States’ aid to Pakistan recorded increase between 2013 and 2015: USD 813 million (2013), USD one Billion (2014), USD 1.1 Billion (2015). Islamabad even received an International Monetary Fund (IMF) ‘bail-out’ in 2013. More recently, in a release on May 12, 2019, IMF stated that “the Pakistani authorities and the IMF team have reached a staff level agreement on economic policies that could be supported by a 39-month Extended Fund Facility (EFF) for about US $6 billion.” The release, however, went on to add that “this agreement is subject to IMF management approval and to approval by the Executive Board, subject to the timely implementation of prior actions and confirmation of international partners’ financial commitments”. Among other “commitments”, Pakistan was expected to continue “anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism efforts.” Interestingly, on July 3, 2019, the Executive Board of the IMF approved the arrangement.  
It is pertinent to recall here that Pakistan has now been on FATF’s ‘grey list’ since June 2018.  
It is not, therefore, surprising that Pakistan is no particularly deterred by the threat of continued grey or possible black listing, and the threat of dubious ‘sanctions’. Islamabad’s agenda of using terror as a “strategic asset”, and choosing between ‘good terrorists’ and ‘bad terrorists’, remains unaltered.  
Pakistan has acted vigorously against domestic terrorists, even as it continues to instrumentalize terrorism against its neighbours. According to partial data compiled by the South Asia Terrorism Portal (SATP), Pakistan recorded a total of 370 fatalities (142 civilians, 142 Security Force, SF, personnel, and 86 terrorists) in 2019 as against 694 such fatalities (359 civilians, 160 SF personnel, and 161 terrorists) registered in 2018. The trend of declining fatalities established since 2014 has thus been maintained through 2019. At peak in 2009, Pakistan recorded 11,317 fatalities, including 2,154 civilians, 1,012 SF personnel, 7,884 terrorists, and 267 in the ‘unspecified’ category. Other parameters of domestic violence have also witnessed significant decline.  
Pakistan’s use of terror as US and its allies, as well as other major powers, to concede to its demand of giving Islamabad a central role in the Afghanistan peace process. The Four-Party Joint Statement on the Afghan Peace Process released on July 12, 2019, stated,
On 11th July 2019, the representatives of China, Russia, and the United States held their 3rd consultation on the Afghan peace process in Beijing. China, Russia, and the United States welcomed Pakistan joining the consultation and believe that Pakistan can play an important role in facilitating peace in Afghanistan.
This was the first time Pakistan joined the US, Russia and China’s trilateral consultations on the Afghanistan peace process, though it has been pivotal to the Afghan talks at various stages in the past, even as it has continued with its support to terrorist formations such as the Taliban and the Haqqani Network. This has been repeatedly emphasised by Afghanistan and, most recently, Afghan President Ashraf Ghani reiterated, on February 16, 2020, “We haven’t seen any notable developments and concrete anti-terrorism step taken by Pakistan.
Islamabad’s continued support to terrorism in India’s Jammu and Kashmir and the resultant turmoil in the region has helped it keep the Kashmir issue constantly at the fore front both of its domestic discourse, and at international fora. Unsurprisingly, US President Donald Trump, on quite a few occasions in recent past, has made gratuitous offers to mediate between the India and Pakistan to ‘resolve’ the Kashmir issue, proposals that have been summarily rejected by New Delhi.   
Pakistan hosts five broad types of Islamist terrorist groups – globally oriented terrorists, Afghanistan-oriented, India- and Kashmir-oriented, sectarian and domestic terrorists. Its leaders believe that they have learnt to deal with the consequent risks and can continue with this policy without facing any extraordinary reverses in the foreseeable future.  
Nevertheless, using terror as a “strategic asset” has its own inherent dangers. According to the SATP database, the SF: terrorist kill ratio in 2019 stood at 1.65:1 in favour of the terrorists. This is the second instance since 2000 that an adverse ratio has been recorded, with the previous instance way back in 2001, when it stood at 1.19:1. In 2020, the ratio has worsened to 1.5:1. During the first 54 days of 2020, Pakistan has recorded a total of 91 fatalities (36 civilians, 33 SF personnel, and 22 militants) in 21 incidents of killing, as against 54 fatalities (13 civilians, 23 SF personnel, and 18 militants) recorded in 19 incidents of killing during the corresponding period of 2019. Some of the major incidents of terrorism in 2020 include:
February 19, 2020: At least 16 Army personnel were killed in an attack by Balochistan Liberation Tigers (BLT) at an army post in the Singsila area of Dera Bugti District of Balochistan. BLT militants also seized all weapons and ammunition kept at the post and subsequently set the post on fire.February 17, 2020: At least 10 persons were killed and another 35 sustained injuries in a suicide blast near the Quetta Press Club in Quetta, the provincial capital of Balochistan. Three Police personnel were among those killed in the blast. The suicide bomber wanted to target rally of a religious group, Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat, but blew himself up when Police stopped him, according to Quetta Police Chief Deputy Inspector General (DIG) Abdul Razzaq Cheema.January 10, 2020: A suicide bomber blew himself up inside a Taliban-run mosque-cum seminary, Darul Uloom Al Sharia, in the Ghosabad area of Satellite Town in Quetta, killing at least 15 persons and injuring another 20. Those killed included the head cleric of the mosque and a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP). The Islamic State (IS) claimed responsibility for the attack.
The domestic ‘overflow’ of terrorism, despite its relative decline from the peaks of 2008-14, has also inflicted tremendous political and economic costs on the country. However, as long as Islamabad is ready to bleed its own people for the sake of an imagined ‘strategic depth’ in Afghanistan and to create unrest in India, there is little reason to believe that it will abandon its use of terrorism as an instrument of state policy. Unless, of course, the international community can find the consensual will to inflict crippling sanctions on Islamabad – a solution that has remained elusive despite decades of Pakistani terrorist

خیبرپختونخوا میں گھوسٹ سکولوں کو دوبارہ فنڈز جاری ہونے کا انکشاف

اظہار اللہ
ایک انکوائری رپورٹ کے مطابق برطانوی ادارے ڈیپارٹمنٹ فار انٹرنیشنل ڈولپمنٹ (ڈیفیڈ) کے پراجیکٹ کے تحت کچھ ایسے سکولوں کو فنڈز دیے گئے ہیں جن کا کوئی وجود نہیں ہے، یا ایسے طلبہ کو سکیم کے تحت وظیفہ دیا گیا ہے جو جعلی انرولمنٹ کے تحت رجسٹرڈ تھے۔
بر طانوی ادارے ڈیپارٹمنٹ فار انٹرنیشنل ڈولپمنٹ (ڈیفیڈ) کی جانب سے خیبر پختونخوا میں تعلیم کے فروغ کے لیے تعلیمی واؤچر سکیم پراجیکٹ کے فنڈز ایسے سکولوں کو دوبارہ جاری ہونے کا انکشاف ہوا ہے، جنہیں حکومتی ادارے پہلے سے ہی ’گھوسٹ سکول‘ قرار دے چکے ہیں۔
یہ معاملہ 2019 میں اس وقت سامنے آیا جب اس پراجیکٹ کو چلانے والے ادارے ایلیمنٹری ایجوکیشن فاؤنڈیشن نے ایک انکوائری رپورٹ صوبائی حکومت کو پیش کی، جس میں کیا گہا کہ اس پراجیکٹ کے تحت کچھ ایسے سکولوں کو فنڈز دیے گئے ہیں جن کا کوئی وجود نہیں ہے، یا ایسے طلبہ کو سکیم کے تحت وظیفہ دیا گیا ہے جو جعلی انرولمنٹ کے تحت رجسٹرڈ تھے۔
اس سکیم کے تحت خیبر پختونخوا کے مختلف اضلاع میں سکول کے ایسے بچوں کو پرائمری سطح پر ماہانہ 500 روپے، مڈل سکول کے بچوں کو 600 روپے جبکہ ہائی سکول کے بچوں کو 800 روپے دیے جاتے ہیں، جن کے گھر سے ایک کلومیٹر کے فاصلے پر کوئی سرکاری سکول نہ ہو۔
انڈپینڈنٹ اردو کے پاس موجود دستاویزات، جس میں گھوسٹ قرار دیے جانے والے سکولوں کو فنڈز جاری کرنے کا انکشاف کیا گیا ہے، کے مطابق ایسے 76 نجی گھوسٹ سکولز ہیں جہاں جعلی طلبہ کو رجسٹر کیا گیا ہے اور ان پر 2015 سے لے کر 2019 تک سات کروڑ 30 لاکھ کی خرد برد کا الزام ہے، کو جنوری2020  تک دوبارہ چھ کروڑ20  لاکھ روپے واؤچرز کی مد میں ادا کیے گئے ہیں۔
دستاویزات کے مطابق پچھلے سال جب یہ معاملہ سامنے آیا تو صوبائی حکومت نے اس کی انکوائری کا آغاز کیا اور وزیراعلیٰ خیبرپختونخوا کی صوبائی انسپیکشن ٹیم نے خود جاکر ایسے سکولوں کو چیک کیا، جنہیں فنڈز ادا کیے گئے تھے اور ان پر مبینہ خرد برد کا الزام تھا۔
صوبائی انسپیکشن ٹیم کی رپورٹ میں گھوسٹ یا ایسے سکول جہاں رجسٹرڈ طلبہ کم اورفنڈز زیادہ دیے گئے تھے، کی نشاندہی کی گئی تھی۔ اسی طرح صوبائی حکومت کی جانب سے آڈٹ رپورٹ میں بھی ایسے سکولوں کی نشاندہی کی گئی۔
تاہم ان رپورٹس میں موجود گھوسٹ سکولوں یا جعلی انرولمنٹ والے سکولوں کے ناموں کا جب حالیہ سکولوں کے ناموں سے موازنہ کیا گیا تو ان میں وہ سکولز بھی موجود تھے جن پر خردبرد کا الزام تھا اور صوبائی اداروں 

کے رپورٹس کے مطابق ان سکولوں سے ریکوری کرنی تھی۔

صوبائی حکومت کی اس وقت کی ایلیمنٹری ایجوکیشن فاؤنڈیشن کی فائنڈنگ رپورٹس میں ایسے 116  سکولوں کی نشاندہی کی گئی تھی جن پر خردبرد کا الزام تھا۔
ان سکولوں میں مانسہرہ میں51، پشاور میں 32، کوہاٹ میں نو اور سوات میں 24 سکولز شامل تھے جن سے تقریباً 11 کروڑ کی ریکوری کی سفارش کی گئی تھی۔ اس سارے معاملے کے بعد صوبائی حکومت نے پورے صوبے میں ان سکولوں کو خود جاکر چیک کرنے کا فیصلہ کیا تاکہ طلبہ کو چیک کیا جاسکے۔
انڈپینڈنٹ اردو کو دستیاب ضلعی تعلیمی محکموں کی رپورٹ کی فائنڈنگ کے مطابق 2019 تک 71 ہزار سے زائد واؤچرز طلبہ کے نام جاری کیے گئے، جن میں سے ضلعی محکموں نے51  ہزار طلبہ کی تصدیق کی جبکہ باقی 20 ہزار واؤچرز جعلی طلبہ کے ناموں پر جاری کیے گئے۔
برطانوی غیر سرکاری ادارے ڈیفیڈ نے اس پراجیکٹ کے لیے خیبرپختونخوا حکومت کو چھ ارب روپے سے زائد کی رقم دی ہے۔ اس پراجیکٹ کا اجرا 2014  میں کیا گیا تھا۔ پہلے اسے پشاور کے پانچ یونین سکولوں میں شروع کیا گیا اور بعد میں اس کا دائرہ کار بڑھا کر پشاور، مانسہرہ، کوہاٹ، ڈی آئی خان اور سوات کو بھی  شامل کرلیا گیا لیکن اب اس کو پورے صوبے تک بڑھا دیا گیا ہے۔
ایلیمنٹری ایجوکیشن فاؤنڈیشن جو حکومت کا ایک خود مختار ادارہ ہے اور اس پراجیکٹ کو دیکھ رہا ہے، کے سربراہ جاوید اقبال نے انڈپینڈنٹ اردو کو بتایا کہ اس سکینڈل کے سامنے آنے کے بعد فاؤنڈیشن نے خود سکولوں اور طلبہ کو چیک کیا اور ایک ہزار سے زائد سکولوں میں سے 628 کی تصیدیق کی ہے۔
انہوں نے بتایا کہ ہم نے صرف ان سکولوں کو پراجیکٹ میں شامل کیا ہے جو پرائیوٹ سکولز ریگولیٹری اتھارٹی کے ساتھ رجسٹرڈ تھے جبکہ باقی سکولز اتھارٹی کے ساتھ رجسٹرڈ نہیں تھے۔
جب جاوید اقبال سے پوچھا گیا کہ پہلے سے گھوسٹ قرار دیے جانے والے سکولوں کو دوبارہ کیوں فنڈز دیے گئے ہیں، تو انہوں نے جواب دیا کہ گھوسٹ سکولوں کے نام کا استعمال تو ختم ہوگیا کیونکہ ابھی ہم نے600  سے زائد سکولوں کی تصدیق کی ہے لیکن جن سکولوں نے جعلی طلبہ کے نام واؤچرز جاری کیے ہیں، ان کے جنوری2018  سے مارچ 2019 تک کے فنڈز ہم نے روکے تھے لیکن اب ہم نے ان کو فنڈز اس لیے جاری کیے تاکہ جو بچے رجسٹرڈ ہیں ان کا تعلیمی سلسلہ متاثر نہ ہو۔
ان سے جب پوچھا گیا کہ اگر ایک سکول مالک نے غلط تعداد بتائی ہے اور جعلی طلبہ کے نام واؤچرز جاری کیے ہیں تو ان کے خلاف تو انکوائری کرنی چاہیے بجائے اس کے کہ ان کو مزید فنڈز دیے جائیں؟ جس پر جاوید اقبال نے بتایا کہ ہم ان سے ریکوری کریں گے اور ان کا معاہدہ بھی مارچ 2020 میں منسوخ کر رہے ہیں۔
انہوں نے مزید بتایا کہ ہم نے مجبوراً ان سکولوں کو فنڈز جاری کرنے شروع کیے، وجہ یہ تھی کہ بچوں کے والدین خود سوزی کرنے پر مجبور ہوگئے تھے کیونکہ وہ سکولوں کی فیس ادا نہیں کرسکتے تھے۔
بچوں کا بھی جعلی ناموں سے اندراج
پراجیکٹ کے حوالے سے آگاہ ذرائع نے انڈپینڈنٹ اردو کو بتایا کہ سکولوں میں ’جعلی انرولمنٹ‘ چھپانے کے لیے بچوں کے اصلی کی بجائے جعلی نام درج کیے گئے تھے تاکہ انسپکشن ٹیم کو اصلی نام کی بجائے سکول کا نام بتا سکیں اور جاری کیے گئے جعلی واؤچر کو تصدیق شدہ تسلیم کرنے کا راستہ ہموار کیا جائے۔

#Pakistani #Christian Asia Bibi asks France for asylum

Asia Bibi, the Pakistani Christian woman who spent years on death row after a 2010 conviction of blasphemy, said Monday that she was seeking political asylum from the French government.
"My great desire is to live in France," Bibi said in an interview with RTL radio, her first trip to France since fleeing with her family to Canada in 2018.
Her visit comes a few weeks after the publication of her book "Enfin Libre!" (Finally Free) in French last month, with an English version due in September.
"France is the country from where I received my new life... Anne-Isabelle is an angel for me," she said, referring to the French journalist Anne-Isabelle Tollet, who waged a long campaign for her release and later co-wrote Bibi's book.
On Tuesday, Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo is to bestow an honorary citizenship certificate granted to Bibi by the city in 2014, when she was still behind bars.
She said she did not have any meeting scheduled with President Emmanuel Macron, but "obviously I would like the president to hear my request." In her book, Bibi recounts the nightmare conditions she was subjected to in prison until her release in 2018, amid an international outcry over her treatment.
The acquittal sparked fierce rioting in Muslim-majority Pakistan, where Christians are often the target of persecution.
She later fled with her family to Canada, where she has been living in an undisclosed location under police protection.
"Obviously I am enormously grateful to Canada," Bibi said, adding that she now wanted to work "hand in hand" with Tollet to urge Pakistan authorities to free others imprisoned over the country's anti-blasphemy laws.
- 'Exile forever' -
The allegations against Bibi date back to 2009, when Muslim field labourers who were working alongside her refused to share water because she was Christian.An argument broke out and a Muslim woman later went to a local cleric and accused Bibi of committing blasphemy against the Prophet Mohammed.But despite her dramatic acquittal by Pakistan's chief justice, activists warned that freedom for Bibi would likely mean a life under threat by hardliners who have long called for her death.Last May, she was spirited away to Canada, where Tollet was the only reporter to have met with Bibi since her arrival.
In her book, Bibi tells of the humiliating and horrendous conditions in prison, and the daily torments suffered by the country's Christian minority.
She also recounts the difficulty of adjusting to her new life, and the pain of having to leave without seeing her father or other members of her family.
"Pakistan is my country. I love my country but I am in exile forever," she wrote.
https://www.france24.com/en/20200224-pakistani-christian-asia-bibi-asks-france-for-asylum