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Funds meant for needy students land in Islamabad’s elite club

muhammadhafeezmalik

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Funds meant for needy students land in Islamabad’s elite club


Two senior bureaucrats are in hot water and four key officials of the National Endowment Scholarships for Talent (NEST) have been dismissed from service for splurging at least Rs25 million to acquire membership in the elite Islamabad Club.


NEST is a programme for eligible and deserving students. It is an autonomous body and an additional secretary of the Ministry of Education and Professional Training heads this entity by virtue of designation.


As per documents available with Dawn, the board of directors (BOD) of NEST in its meeting held on Nov 3, 2021 approved corporate membership for NEST and initially nominated four executive officers, namely Athar Hussain Zaidi, Faysal Qasim, Qamar Safdar and Quratulain Talha for issuance of complimentary cards for the club membership. The BOD had also approved that the “monthly subscription charges [of the executives] shall be paid by the company [NEST]”.


On March 8, 2022, the Administration and Human Resources manager wrote a letter to the chief financial officer (CFO) to implement the BOD’s direction.


Two senior bureaucrats in hot water, four officials sacked after Rs25m spent on Islamabad Club membership

The CFO forwarded this request to then-CEO Mohiyuddin Wani and the approval was granted accordingly. Mr Wani was later posted out to Gilgit-Baltistan as the chief secretary.


His successor, Asim Iqbal, sanctioned the release of Rs25 million to the management of Islamabad Club for membership. Shortly after, he was transferred to the Cabinet Division as its additional secretary.


Since Mr Iqbal released the amount to the Islamabad Club, the Ministry of Education wrote to the Establishment Division for Mr Iqbal’s suspension.


A senior official of the Establishment Division also confirmed that the letter had been received. When approached for comments, Mr Iqbal’s assistant said that he was in a meeting.


The Ministry of Education and Professional Training shared the documents with the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) for forensic analysis to ascertain whether the signatures of Mr Wani were genuine or not, the sources in the Establishment Division said.


Talking to Dawn, Mr Wani said that he was not the board chairman that allegedly approved the memberships. “I did not release even a single penny for the corporate membership of the Islamabad Club,” he said, adding that the NEST officials sought complimentary cards in a request that he approved.


It may be mentioned that the BOD on Nov 3, 2021, approved the corporate membership for NEST officials; in March 2022, they had sought complimentary cards for four senior officials initially; in June, funds were allocated; and in September, NEST transferred Rs25m to the management of the Islamabad Club.


Case in IHC


As far as the issue of four ex-employees of NEST is concerned, they challenged their termination from service before the Islamabad High Court (IHC). Their counsel, Shuaib Shaheen, told Dawn that these four officials had no role in acquiring the club membership.


IHC Justice Miangul Hassan Aurangzeb sought a reply from the Ministry of Education and Establishment Division and adjourned the hearing of this matter till Jan 25.


The court also stopped the ministry from making new appointments to the posts vacated by the above-mentioned employees.


When contacted, the incumbent CEO of NEST and Additional Secretary, education ministry, Waseem Ajmal Chaudhry confirmed these developments.


He said the ministry had taken action against four employees and imposed major penalties on them. He further said the competent authority also ordered an inquiry against senior bureaucrats which would be concluded soon.


According to him, the ministry has also asked the management of Islamabad Club to refund Rs25 million, as this amount was not issued in a transparent manner.

 
NEST was established by Prof. Ehsan Iqbal in 2017 and was providing international scholarships to over 2500 students.

1673419967328.png


PTI abandoned that project and money was spent for luxuries of top bureaucrats.

1673420265467.png
 
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No f****** bureaucrats should be involved in ANY merit-based scholarship decisions. They have no clue what globally competitive merit even looks like.

Second, the most brilliant students are given competitive, merit-based scholarships by the world's best universities (e.g., Clarendon scholarships at Oxford, or any top PhD program in the US, which is always fully funded). Therefore, only the not-so-brilliant need these scholarships, which means it's not a great use of funds.
 
سور لھانے والے ممالک میں خوشحالی اور امن اس لیے ہے کہ وہ سوروں کو حاکم بنانے کی بجائے انکو کھا جاتے ہیں
انور مقصود

:lol:
 
No f****** bureaucrats should be involved in ANY merit-based scholarship decisions. They have no clue what globally competitive merit even looks like.

Second, the most brilliant students are given competitive, merit-based scholarships by the world's best universities (e.g., Clarendon scholarships at Oxford, or any top PhD program in the US, which is always fully funded). Therefore, only the not-so-brilliant need these scholarships, which means it's not a great use of funds.

Need based scholarships for the students who do not have access to quality education.

When TF did he become a professor?

He served as a professor of management at Mohammad Ali Jinnah University, Islamabad, between 2000 and 2007.
 
Nice. Pakistan doing what it does best.
 
Corrupt practices have a stranglehold on each and every institution in the country. Government must takeover all such clubs before violence spreading from economic hardships will certainly do.
 
NEST was established by Prof. Ehsan Iqbal in 2017 and was providing international scholarships to over 2500 students.

View attachment 910849

PTI abandoned that project and money was spent for luxuries of top bureaucrats.

View attachment 910850
prof of management is a jackass who doesnt know that HEC is doing the same thing. why establish a separate organization? simply expand HEC's program. oh wait, that is how the shehbaz model works, setting up corporations after corporations with overlapping mandates, and appointing own guys there.
 
He served as a professor of management at Mohammad Ali Jinnah University, Islamabad, between 2000 and 2007.

To become a professor you have to go through a long process, where you are first an Associate prof, then Assistant, then a Prof.

You have to have research, publications, and much more. After doing an MBA and being adjunct faculty or something at MAJU of all places makes him a professor?

No wonder our education is in shambles.
 
To become a professor you have to go through a long process, where you are first an Associate prof, then Assistant, then a Prof.

You have to have research, publications, and much more. After doing an MBA and being adjunct faculty or something at MAJU of all places makes him a professor?

No wonder our education is in shambles.
First Assistant then associate
Also lecturer at start
 
prof of management is a jackass who doesnt know that HEC is doing the same thing. why establish a separate organization? simply expand HEC's program. oh wait, that is how the shehbaz model works, setting up corporations after corporations with overlapping mandates, and appointing own guys there.
They have 'planting a seed' fetish so there is something they are remembered for when they are gone other than their haramzadgis.
 
Can someone just blow up and/or destroy that fucking club?
Na hoga, na loag waha jainge

People fighting over flour yet these fat bureaucrats want club memberships
Its really time to behead these mofos!! Execute these fucks with their entire families
 

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