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Fake Degrees Scandal

Islam kay name per banney walla country in kay sarey minister ko Islam kee tu Ilf Bay tak ka nahi pata
or kehtey hain Islamic Republic of Pakistan .

Kab Allah Pakistan ko Hazrat Omar R.A Sallah ud din or Mohammad Bin Qassem ke tara ka sarbara dey ga
 
BU declares degrees of two parliamentarians as fake

July 12, 2010

Balochistan University declared the degrees of Deputy Speaker Balochistan Assembly Syed Matiullah Agha and FATA MNA Jawad Hussain as fake on Monday.

The Higher Education Commission had sent 58 degrees of parliamentarians to the university for authentication.

Earlier in the day Karachi University (KU) completed the verification of 106 degrees of parliamentarians on Monday, where it was revealed that three degrees could not be verified.

Pro-vice chancellor of KU confirmed that three degrees, including those of Yaqoob Bazinjo and Jamil Malik could not be verified.

The chancellor added that the degree of Senator Faisal Raza Abidi was not sent to the university to be verified. He claimed that Abidi only submitted a marks sheet, and the university degree cannot be verified on the basis of just that.

Higher Education Commission directed all universities to verify the degrees of politicians by July 13th.

HEC has so far received feedback on 234 degrees of members of parliaments after verification from 22 universities. The Commission says 36 of the degrees issued by foreign universities are pending verification reports.

A number of degrees belonging to parliamentarians sent to Punjab University for verification were found to be missing, sources stated.

The degrees of as many as 313 parliamentarians were sent to the Punjab University, out of which 200 degrees have been verified while the record of some of the degrees has been found missing.
 
Shujaat asks PML-Q fake degree holders to resign voluntarily
PML-Q chief Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain has appealed his party’s fake degree holders to tender resignations voluntarily and directed his party’s MNAs to submit their degrees in Muslim League House.
PML-Q chief Ch. Shujaat Hussain said that any department, Election Commission, Higher Education Commission or media can check degrees of members elected on PML-Q ticket. He said that these steps are being taken to restore confidence of people on public representatives.
:devil::devil:

Dunya TV - Pakistan | Shujaat asks PML-Q fake degree holders to resign voluntarily



Fake degree issue being politicized: Fauzia Wahab
Information secretary to Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Fauzia Wahab has alleged that Chief Justice of Pakistan Iftikhar Muhammad Chadury did not hoist the issue of fake degree’s during the past, she said that the fake degree’s issue is being politicized.
Fauzia Wahab was addressing to women wings of the PPP where she alleged that Pakistan Muslim League-N Chief Nawaz Sharif is just trying to cover up the matter of the resolution against the media.
Fauzia Wahab cleared that PPP was not part of anti-media resolution which was introduced in the Punjab Assembly on Friday. The resolution was only initiated by Punjab ruling party, she added.
PPP information secretary said PPP believes in freedom of media. She said this was clearly evident from the fact that the PPP government has not imposed any curb on media. She said that operation in Southern Punjab will not be an easy task.
:devil::devil:

Dunya TV - Pakistan | Fake degree issue being politicized: Fauzia Wahab

Liers n jokers :rofl::rofl:
 
ISLAMABAD: Chairman Higher Education Commission (HEC) Dr Javed Laghari’s brother Farooq Laghari is missing from Hyderabad, according to reports received on Monday.

According to Dawn sources, it is believed that Dr Laghari is under tremendous pressure on the issue of fake degrees and his stern stance on it. Therefore, misplacement of his brother could be linked with this subject.

On Monday afternoon, Farooq Laghari was taken into custody by Hyderabad police; however, police and officials denied this report.

Chairman HEC confirmed his brother’s absence while he remained silent when he was asked whether the incident highlights government’s involvement to pressurize him. — DawnNews
:eek::eek::eek:
 
ISLAMABAD: Chairman Higher Education Commission (HEC) Dr Javed Laghari’s brother Farooq Laghari is missing from Hyderabad, according to reports received on Monday.

According to Dawn sources, it is believed that Dr Laghari is under tremendous pressure on the issue of fake degrees and his stern stance on it. Therefore, misplacement of his brother could be linked with this subject.

On Monday afternoon, Farooq Laghari was taken into custody by Hyderabad police; however, police and officials denied this report.

Chairman HEC confirmed his brother’s absence while he remained silent when he was asked whether the incident highlights government’s involvement to pressurize him. — DawnNews
:eek::eek::eek:
HEC chief’s brother picked up
Tuesday, 13 Jul, 2010

HYDERABAD: Former DCO of Tando Mohammad Khan Dr Farooq Leghari, who is the brother of Higher Education Commission chairman Dr Javed Leghari, was picked up by plain-clothed policemen and Anti-Corruption Establishment (ACE) officials here on Monday.

Former provincial minister Dr Irfan Magsi told Dawn that he had seen Farooq Leghari being taken away in a police mobile on Fatima Jinnah road.

“I was on going to GOR colony in a car when I saw this. By the time I took a U-turn to reach the mobile, it had gone from there”, Irfan Magsi told Dawn over phone.

Before the incident, Farooq Leghari had met his cousin at his office located off Fatima Jinnah road.

“On Sunday he expressed apprehension that he might be arrested,” his cousin said. No official confirmed the arrest. Deputy Director, ACE, Hyderabad, Aftab Mujaddid Isran, denied the arrest and said that no inquiry was being conducted against Farooq Leghari.

However, sources in the ACE said that the anti-corruption committee-I had approved registration of cases against Farooq Leghari pertaining to a plot of land and parks in Tando Mohammad Khan district.

The ACE-I approves case of government officers working in BPS-17 and above for prosecution. The office of the ACE deputy director located in Shahbaz building here had remained opened on Saturday and Sunday.

An ACE source said that the arrest is not being confirmed because some other officials would also be picked up in the cases. “Normally, the ACE picks up somebody before registering an FIR against them,” he said.

Farooq Leghari has been awaiting posting after leaving the charge of the DCO of Tando Mohammad Khan a month ago.

Despite repeated attempts, Dr Javed Leghari could not be contacted on cell phone. However, according to sources, he has consulted a senior lawyer in Islamabad.
 
Warriors of the status quo

Tuesday, July 13, 2010
S Khalid Husain

The fake-degree issue, far from national soul-searching, has caused a bevy of politicians, including the country's president, to rise in defence of holders of such 'degrees'.

The president is said to have alleged that the Quaid-e-Azam was 'not a graduate' before he started practising law in England. Using the Quaid-e-Azam's name must come easily to the president who lives, and seeks to survive, on names, such as of his late wife, and of her late father.

Surely, the president must know, and if he does not his law minister, who has decorated himself with a 'doctorate' from a fake 'university' in the US, must know, that in England barristers are not called to the Bar by the Election Commission of Pakistan, but by a body, which has been known, for over a hundred years, to distinguish the eligible from the ineligible, and the fake, be it a person or his degree, from the real.

The chief minister of the largest province, in area, with wide open spaces, has all but publicly 'declared', that he has the same in his head between his ears, by claiming 'a degree is a degree, real or fake'. He has a point, though. If the question is only of possessing a degree document, then the real and the fake are both documents. Just as if the purpose is only to draw money from the bank, why should it matter if the money is drawn through writing a cheque, using the ATM card, or by pointing a gun?

The federal minister, for education of all things, says fake-degree holders are the same people who the electorate will vote for regardless of degrees, real, none, or fake. So, he asks, what is the problem?

Yes, indeed, what is the problem? Unless it is the federal education minister's mindset, which long years of living off the fruits of the sweat and toil of his electorate, and off its votes, has been conditioned to accept both as natural right.

The problem is the traditional and hereditary powerlessness of the minister's, and the rest of his feudal colleagues', electorates. Illiteracy breeds poverty, which creates powerlessness. Such powerless electorates have served for generations as rock-solid bulwarks against any erosion of feudal influence and power. It is where the minister's, and other feudals', political power comes from, and also the votes at election time.

The feudals will not easily let go of this power, nurtured by them with deliberate care, over generations. It would be being one-dimensional to expect the minister, even if he is supposedly looking after education, to come down hard on fake-degree holders when in his mind, literacy, education, degrees, are all unnecessary, and irrelevant issues in his constituency.

The politicians' argument, that the graduation proviso is undemocratic, is valid. However, the politicians would have served the cause of democracy better if they had declined to participate in elections, instead of attempting to evade the degree requirement through falsehood, and fake documents. In doing so, the politicians have further blackened their not-altogether-tidy reputations.

As if individual discolouring of reputations was not enough, the parliamentarians have gone in for collective discolouring. The Punjab Assembly has passed a resolution attacking the media. In 'no holds barred' speeches on the floor, they have, literally, screamed, raved and ranted why only the parliamentarians are being singled out for their fake degrees.

A more juvenile tirade by grown-up men and women gracing the assemblies is hard to imagine. As people's elected representatives, the parliamentarians, in any democracy, are deemed to have a higher national purpose than journalists, generals, bureaucrats, judges and any others. By their raving and ranting, the Punjab parliamentarians have shown themselves to be exceptions.

Clearly, the self-denigrating and demeaning actions of our parliamentarians are a result of their ignorance of their own most significant relevance to the country's growth and progress. This is understandable, as most politicians enter the field, not on the strength of their popular appeal, but entirely on strength of their land holdings and illiterate, poverty-ridden, powerless electorates, and on hereditary footsteps, inherited as next in line.

Until this situation is corrected, and it is hoped the correction would be peaceful, there is no chance of the overall quality of our politicians and parliamentarians improving. They are 'warriors' of the status quo, and they have, in the past, successfully warded off threats to any change in the social, political and economic structure of Pakistani society, under which they loll, and rule. There is no threat to their status on the horizon, the 'warriors' have blocked all possible approaches to such threats.

If the politicians will not bring quality to politics, the answer probably lies in taking some semblances of quality to the politicians. One way to do so could be to make it mandatory, for contestants of elections to the national and provincial assemblies, to attend a course, not necessarily pass one. There need not be an exam, but attendance has to be certifiable, before they are eligible to file nomination papers.

The course can be designed to introduce candidates to the Constitution, to the role of parliament, to their role within parliament, to the magnitude of their role as an elected member of an assembly. It can cover benefits to the country, and indeed to themselves, of their fulfilling the roles well, and of the costs to the country, and to them, of their failing to do so.

The course emphasis should also be on parliamentary rules, decorum, conduct, language, and all the rest. The course content, and the modalities, such as frequency, locations, language, costs, can be developed to make the course accessible to any citizen of Pakistan, anywhere.

An independent arrangement, through an autonomous body, or through reputable existing institutions, such as LUMS, IBA, or any other, for a suitable duration course (up to four weeks perhaps) at different locations, to be conducted every quarter, appears feasible.

The course, by a long shot, would not result in production of ideal parliamentarians. However, the exposure in the course, to the magnitude of their responsibility as MNAs or MPAs, and to the significance of their roles, will sober many incoming ones enough to take themselves, and their responsibility, more seriously than most do now.

Hopefully, the course exposure will also develop a level of self-worth in parliamentarians, something the current crop has been shown to lack.



The writer is a former corporate executive. Email: husainsk@cyber.net.pk


novel idea!
 
novel idea!

PILDAT organizes an "introductory session" for the new parliamentarians.

Moreover, this role has now been overtaken by the newly established Pakistan Institute for Parliamentary Services which will be organizing the necessary courses besides being the parliamentary research body. But like most things, they are better said than done and rosy legislation are our hallmark. If PIPS can take the job effectively, then it would be certainly good.
 
PU declared six more degrees bogus
Updated at: 1245 PST, Tuesday, July 13, 2010

LAHORE: Six more degrees declared bogus by Punjab University on Tuesday.

According to Punjab University sources, out of 314 degrees of parliamentarians, sent by the Higher Education Commission (HEC) for verification purposes to the university, a verification report regarding 217 degrees was sent to HEC on Tuesday, out of which six degrees have been declared bogus.

The university has already returned the photocopies of degrees of eight parliamentarians, which were very vague and illegible. The verification report regarding the remaining 97 degrees will be sent to the HEC at earliest possible time, sources added.

PU declared six more degrees bogus
 
Warriors of the status quo

Tuesday, July 13, 2010
S Khalid Husain

The fake-degree issue, far from national soul-searching, has caused a bevy of politicians, including the country's president, to rise in defence of holders of such 'degrees'.

The president is said to have alleged that the Quaid-e-Azam was 'not a graduate' before he started practising law in England. Using the Quaid-e-Azam's name must come easily to the president who lives, and seeks to survive, on names, such as of his late wife, and of her late father.

Surely, the president must know, and if he does not his law minister, who has decorated himself with a 'doctorate' from a fake 'university' in the US, must know, that in England barristers are not called to the Bar by the Election Commission of Pakistan, but by a body, which has been known, for over a hundred years, to distinguish the eligible from the ineligible, and the fake, be it a person or his degree, from the real.

The chief minister of the largest province, in area, with wide open spaces, has all but publicly 'declared', that he has the same in his head between his ears, by claiming 'a degree is a degree, real or fake'. He has a point, though. If the question is only of possessing a degree document, then the real and the fake are both documents. Just as if the purpose is only to draw money from the bank, why should it matter if the money is drawn through writing a cheque, using the ATM card, or by pointing a gun?

The federal minister, for education of all things, says fake-degree holders are the same people who the electorate will vote for regardless of degrees, real, none, or fake. So, he asks, what is the problem?

Yes, indeed, what is the problem? Unless it is the federal education minister's mindset, which long years of living off the fruits of the sweat and toil of his electorate, and off its votes, has been conditioned to accept both as natural right.

The problem is the traditional and hereditary powerlessness of the minister's, and the rest of his feudal colleagues', electorates. Illiteracy breeds poverty, which creates powerlessness. Such powerless electorates have served for generations as rock-solid bulwarks against any erosion of feudal influence and power. It is where the minister's, and other feudals', political power comes from, and also the votes at election time.

The feudals will not easily let go of this power, nurtured by them with deliberate care, over generations. It would be being one-dimensional to expect the minister, even if he is supposedly looking after education, to come down hard on fake-degree holders when in his mind, literacy, education, degrees, are all unnecessary, and irrelevant issues in his constituency.

The politicians' argument, that the graduation proviso is undemocratic, is valid. However, the politicians would have served the cause of democracy better if they had declined to participate in elections, instead of attempting to evade the degree requirement through falsehood, and fake documents. In doing so, the politicians have further blackened their not-altogether-tidy reputations.

As if individual discolouring of reputations was not enough, the parliamentarians have gone in for collective discolouring. The Punjab Assembly has passed a resolution attacking the media. In 'no holds barred' speeches on the floor, they have, literally, screamed, raved and ranted why only the parliamentarians are being singled out for their fake degrees.

A more juvenile tirade by grown-up men and women gracing the assemblies is hard to imagine. As people's elected representatives, the parliamentarians, in any democracy, are deemed to have a higher national purpose than journalists, generals, bureaucrats, judges and any others. By their raving and ranting, the Punjab parliamentarians have shown themselves to be exceptions.

Clearly, the self-denigrating and demeaning actions of our parliamentarians are a result of their ignorance of their own most significant relevance to the country's growth and progress. This is understandable, as most politicians enter the field, not on the strength of their popular appeal, but entirely on strength of their land holdings and illiterate, poverty-ridden, powerless electorates, and on hereditary footsteps, inherited as next in line.

Until this situation is corrected, and it is hoped the correction would be peaceful, there is no chance of the overall quality of our politicians and parliamentarians improving. They are 'warriors' of the status quo, and they have, in the past, successfully warded off threats to any change in the social, political and economic structure of Pakistani society, under which they loll, and rule. There is no threat to their status on the horizon, the 'warriors' have blocked all possible approaches to such threats.

If the politicians will not bring quality to politics, the answer probably lies in taking some semblances of quality to the politicians. One way to do so could be to make it mandatory, for contestants of elections to the national and provincial assemblies, to attend a course, not necessarily pass one. There need not be an exam, but attendance has to be certifiable, before they are eligible to file nomination papers.

The course can be designed to introduce candidates to the Constitution, to the role of parliament, to their role within parliament, to the magnitude of their role as an elected member of an assembly. It can cover benefits to the country, and indeed to themselves, of their fulfilling the roles well, and of the costs to the country, and to them, of their failing to do so.

The course emphasis should also be on parliamentary rules, decorum, conduct, language, and all the rest. The course content, and the modalities, such as frequency, locations, language, costs, can be developed to make the course accessible to any citizen of Pakistan, anywhere.

An independent arrangement, through an autonomous body, or through reputable existing institutions, such as LUMS, IBA, or any other, for a suitable duration course (up to four weeks perhaps) at different locations, to be conducted every quarter, appears feasible.

The course, by a long shot, would not result in production of ideal parliamentarians. However, the exposure in the course, to the magnitude of their responsibility as MNAs or MPAs, and to the significance of their roles, will sober many incoming ones enough to take themselves, and their responsibility, more seriously than most do now.

Hopefully, the course exposure will also develop a level of self-worth in parliamentarians, something the current crop has been shown to lack.



The writer is a former corporate executive. Email: husainsk@cyber.net.pk


novel idea!

Education System itself is Fake:



"Degree is Degree; Whether it is Fake or Genuine!": CM Balochistan



Regards!
 
PU declared six more degrees bogus
Updated at: 1245 PST, Tuesday, July 13, 2010

LAHORE: Six more degrees declared bogus by Punjab University on Tuesday.

According to Punjab University sources, out of 314 degrees of parliamentarians, sent by the Higher Education Commission (HEC) for verification purposes to the university, a verification report regarding 217 degrees was sent to HEC on Tuesday, out of which six degrees have been declared bogus.

The university has already returned the photocopies of degrees of eight parliamentarians, which were very vague and illegible. The verification report regarding the remaining 97 degrees will be sent to the HEC at earliest possible time, sources added.

PU declared six more degrees bogus

where will it end - PML-N are the worst offenders!
 
where will it end - PML-N are the worst offenders!

Hope this does not end without cleaning of the guilty ones. It's good that this settles once and for all and every two-bit cheating scum is thrown out. The civil charges and possible criminal prosecution can follow later.
 
Islam kay name per banney walla country in kay sarey minister ko Islam kee tu Ilf Bay tak ka nahi pata
or kehtey hain Islamic Republic of Pakistan .

Kab Allah Pakistan ko Hazrat Omar R.A Sallah ud din or Mohammad Bin Qassem ke tara ka sarbara dey ga

apnay amal theek kar lo tu ho satka hai kay Allah humain nawaz dey!
 
:disagree:

If that is the case, i will buy my khansama a doctorate and you let him perform open heart surgery on yourself?

Get real yar.

You ppl ... i.e. supporters of 'authentic' degrees are not able enough to come to the point and refute my points --- to the point.

Degree Holders basically cannot prove themselves at their own. They need a "paper" to tell others that they are also competent.
 

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