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Army Officers Withdrawn From Civil Institutions,

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Guys another good decision by Gen Kiyani, according to reliable sources all the serving army officers currently working in Civilian Institutions on deputation are being sent back to their units.

Gen Kiyani had issued directives in this regard.

wait i am getting more details in this regard.

Hope all those who were against army would now have some change in their thinking.


Regards

Jana
 
This is an excellent move, and I hope the GoP or ISPR can highlight it in the Media. Perception is everything, and the current perceptions about the military will take a concerted effort to root out.

Whats the opinion of your fellow journalists on this? Are they dismissing this move or do they see the value of it?
 
(Here i am with details guys. Should i expect some candies for this :)



In an order to create harmony and remove misconception about the role of army in the civilian affairs among the people massive withdrawal of serving army officers from the civil departments is underway on the directives of COAS Gen Ashfaq Kiyani.
The COAS is in a directive had asked for immediate withdrawal of army officers working on deputations in various government departments, ministries, divisions, corporations and authorities in federal and provincial governments with an objective to being harmony between army and the people and bridge gap between them so that army could fully concentrate on its professional matters.

Reliable sources told that all the serving army officers working in civil departments have been asked to relinquish their charge and report back to the GHQ for further posting.
It has been learnt that withdrawal of army officers from some of the institutions has already been completed while the whole exercise would be completed within a couple of days.



Almost all the army officers working in PR, CDA, WAPDA, NHA, FBR, KPT, PIA and other government departments have gone back to their units while remaining would resume their duties at their respective units shortly.

The spokesman for interior ministry Brig Javed Iqbal Cheema is also being replaced by a civilian spokesman soon as the COAS intends that name of Army should not be linked with any government spokesman and the civilians themselves should do their job.
 
Kiyani is proving to be an outstanding leader.

I look forward to his initiatives towards operations in FATA and equipment procurements as well.
 
It is indeed a good move done by the army chief. It would certainly help in eliminating the negative image on part of army related to corruption and etc.
 
Kayani seems to be keen to bring back professionalism.

A very good move.

But those who have enjoyed the civilian lack of accountability and the wonderful perks of office will surely not be impressed!
 
Guys credit for this goes alike to both Kiyani and Musharraf. Both care about the repute of their institution and the prevailing perception in the public that Army is pervasive in all of these institutions has to be changed. BTW, the actual number of active Army personnel in these institutions is fairly low (but still a very good decision to withdraw them all), with most of the high end posts being occupied by retired officers.
 
General Kiyani is doing what the nation wants him to do. But I hope that our politicians do what the people want them to do.
 
Pakistan military retreats from Musharraf's influence By Tim Johnson.
Fri Jan 18, 3:59 PM ET

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — As President Pervez Musharraf grows more unpopular in Pakistan , his newly named successor as army chief is seeking to distance the institution from the Musharraf regime and pull back its virtual occupation of the top senior ranks of civilian ministries and state corporations.

Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani , who was named to the top military job in late November, took two steps this week. First, he barred all senior military officers from meeting directly with Musharraf without prior approval and prohibited officers from having any direct involvement in politics. Second, he recalled many army officers from civilian job assignments.

Kayani's new path could help restore the image of a military that's bruised by association with Musharraf's excesses during eight years of rule since a 1999 coup and weakened by the worsening domestic security situation.

It also could be the Pakistan military's best chance to defeat an increasingly aggressive Islamist insurgency and check rising political violence in a nation that's fast becoming the central front in the Bush administration's battle with Islamic radicalism.

Musharraf had placed more than 1,000 active and retired officers in lucrative and powerful jobs in various ministries, such as those for education, transportation, railways, sports and culture, as well as semi-autonomous institutions such as the National Highways Authority and the sprawling Water and Power Development Authority .

While senior officers in Pakistan have for decades expected such posts as a reward for their military service upon retirement, Musharraf's embedding of hundreds of active-duty officers in prominent civilian posts sparked cries that the country's bureaucracy was being militarized.

Kayani's ban on senior army officers meeting directly with Musharraf or politicians appeared designed to undercut interference in the upcoming election.

"Some of the commanders were being used by Musharraf to hobnob with politicians," said retired Lt. Gen. Hamid Gul , a former head of Pakistan's intelligence service.

The top army spokesman, Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas, wouldn't confirm how many active-duty officers would step back from civilian posts or how soon it would occur.

"It's not clear. I cannot say anything more," Abbas said.

But Gul said the army chief's office already has notified some active-duty officers in civilian posts that they must return to their military careers.

"Symbolically, it's very important. They (the active-duty officers in civilian posts) have become a symbol of domination of Pakistani civilian affairs," said Absar Alam , chief of the Geo-TV newsgathering bureau in the capital.

"It has brought down the image of the army," added Gul. "The army has gotten into every nook and cranny of the administration of this country."

Retired army Lt. Gen. Kamal Matinuddin said in an opinion column in The News, a national daily, that the retreat from the civilian posts "will also keep the army officers away from certain corrupt practices, which come their way when heading lucrative appointments in the civil sector."

Retired officers are the first to acknowledge that the army's standing has fallen.

"He knows that the army is not popular now. The reason is that it's been in politics so long. It's come under severe criticism," said retired Lt. Gen. Talat Masood , a political commentator.

"The Pakistan nation used to love the army. Now, I will not use the word 'hate,' but there's a true disaffection toward the army," Gul said.

What has political observers peering most into the tea leaves, though, is the evolving relationship between Musharraf, who was forced to shed his uniform and control of the army late last year, partly due to pressure from Washington , and Kayani, the 55-year-old general who now holds the military reins.

It's unclear whether the new army chief is acting with Musharraf's cooperation in restricting the army's role in politics and non-military government agencies.

Musharraf picked Kayani, a member of Pakistan's dominant Punjabi ethnic group, partly because he felt he'd earned Kayani's loyalty. Kayani had taken part in several investigations into assassination attempts on Musharraf's life earlier in the decade.

"On the other hand, Kayani is enigmatic and Musharraf unpopular," said James Revill , a scholar at the Pakistani Security Research Unit at the University of Bradford in England . "Should internal conflicts in the (tribal areas) worsen, or further violent protests occur as the elections get closer, then Kayani may choose to abandon Musharraf for the sake of the army and the country."

Parliamentary elections in early January were postponed after the Dec. 27 assassination of Benazir Bhutto , a former prime minister and the nation's most popular politician. The vote is now scheduled for Feb. 18 , although a spate of suicide bombings and the apparent reluctance of Musharraf to approach elections that may remove him from power have heightened day-to-day uncertainty.

Even as Pakistan's political environment remains chaotic, retired military officers say the army is simply weary of governing.

"I'm quite convinced that the army is rethinking its own policy of involvement in politics. Whether General Kayani is really thinking about that change and can carry along the institution is yet to be seen," Masood said.
 
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