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FBR invites religious scholar to ‘motivate’ customs officers

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FBR invites religious scholar to ‘motivate’ customs officers
THE NEWSPAPER'S STAFF REPORTER — PUBLISHED about 3 hours ago
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555a8be376cf1.jpg

.—Courtesy: FBR website
555a8cc520ed3.jpg

A member of the Tableeghi Jamaat, Maulana Jamil is a well-known orator.—Courtesy: Facebook page

A member of the Tableeghi Jamaat, Maulana Jamil is a well-known orator.—Courtesy: Facebook page


KARACHI: A motivational lecture by a religious scholar was organised for customs officers at the auditorium of the directorate general of training and research in Customs House here on Monday morning.

Renowned religious scholar Maulana Tariq Jamil delivered the lecture on ‘Morality and Ethics and Public Service Delivery’, organised by the Federal Board of Revenue.

In his early 60s and a member of the Tableeghi Jamaat that subscribes to the Deobandi school of thought, Maulana Jamil is a well-known orator.

The FBR had issued a communication (C.No: 152879/S (HRD)/2014) from Islamabad on May 14. It was addressed to all chief commissioners, chief collectors, and directors general so that they could inform their subordinate officers about the lecture.

A few customs officers, who had been in service for five to 15 years and with whom the reporter spoke, said that this was the first time such a lecture was organised by the customs here.

Responding to Dawn queries, Human Rights Commission of Pakistan chairperson Zohra Yusuf said that religion should not be introduced into state affairs.

She said the topic was relevant but she would have preferred if some technically qualified professional was invited to give the lecture. She said that morality and ethics should be linked to humanity and not to religion. She said that she would also have preferred if some professional relating to the field of the customs was called to lecture so that the customs officers would have sharpened their professional skills.

This, however, was not the first time that the government had invited a religious scholar to lecture government officials. Over a decade ago former chief minister Dr Arbab Ghulam Rahim also used to arrange lectures of Maulana Tariq Jamil at CM House for the secretaries to the government, departmental heads and other high-ranking government officials during his tenure, remembered a former forests and environment secretary Shams-ul-Haq Memon while talking to Dawn.


@Horus, @rockstar08, @WAJsal, @Junaid B, @Pomegranate, @Color_Less_Sky, @Zarvan, @xyxmt, @SipahSalar, @Bratva, @Stealth, @Rashid Mahmood,
@syedali73, @Leader, @DESERT FIGHTER, @Jazzbot, @Spring Onion, @chauvunist,
@Pakistan Shaheen, @karakoram, @syedali73, @rockstar08, @haviZsultan, @Gufi @Muhammad Omar, @graphican, @Gazi, @Donatello, @Hyperion, @Pak_Sher, @Sage,
 
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As long as the content is vetted prior then it doesn't matter who delivers it.
 
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As long as the content is vetted prior then it doesn't matter who delivers it.

Don't worry Tariq Jameel Sb. even said positive words for Veena Malik when all of us were condemning her.

@jamahir

Human Rights Commission of Pakistan chairperson Zohra Yusuf

:rolleyes: Technical people heading these organisations pass their civil services exams, get trained in academies but still seem to remain tempted.
 
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In his early 60s and a member of the Tableeghi Jamaat that subscribes to the Deobandi school of thought, Maulana Jamil is a well-known orator.

So the state does pander to one religious sect over another. Problem there... How did they assume all those workers were deobandis?
 
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Once A haram khor always haram khor jitna lecture dedo inko they will never change :-D :-D
 
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FBR invites religious scholar to ‘motivate’ customs officers
THE NEWSPAPER'S STAFF REPORTER — PUBLISHED about 3 hours ago
WHATSAPP
2 COMMENTS
PRINT
555a8be376cf1.jpg

.—Courtesy: FBR website
555a8cc520ed3.jpg

A member of the Tableeghi Jamaat, Maulana Jamil is a well-known orator.—Courtesy: Facebook page

A member of the Tableeghi Jamaat, Maulana Jamil is a well-known orator.—Courtesy: Facebook page


KARACHI: A motivational lecture by a religious scholar was organised for customs officers at the auditorium of the directorate general of training and research in Customs House here on Monday morning.

Renowned religious scholar Maulana Tariq Jamil delivered the lecture on ‘Morality and Ethics and Public Service Delivery’, organised by the Federal Board of Revenue.

In his early 60s and a member of the Tableeghi Jamaat that subscribes to the Deobandi school of thought, Maulana Jamil is a well-known orator.

The FBR had issued a communication (C.No: 152879/S (HRD)/2014) from Islamabad on May 14. It was addressed to all chief commissioners, chief collectors, and directors general so that they could inform their subordinate officers about the lecture.

A few customs officers, who had been in service for five to 15 years and with whom the reporter spoke, said that this was the first time such a lecture was organised by the customs here.

Responding to Dawn queries, Human Rights Commission of Pakistan chairperson Zohra Yusuf said that religion should not be introduced into state affairs.

She said the topic was relevant but she would have preferred if some technically qualified professional was invited to give the lecture. She said that morality and ethics should be linked to humanity and not to religion. She said that she would also have preferred if some professional relating to the field of the customs was called to lecture so that the customs officers would have sharpened their professional skills.

This, however, was not the first time that the government had invited a religious scholar to lecture government officials. Over a decade ago former chief minister Dr Arbab Ghulam Rahim also used to arrange lectures of Maulana Tariq Jamil at CM House for the secretaries to the government, departmental heads and other high-ranking government officials during his tenure, remembered a former forests and environment secretary Shams-ul-Haq Memon while talking to Dawn.


@Horus, @rockstar08, @WAJsal, @Junaid B, @Pomegranate, @Color_Less_Sky, @Zarvan, @xyxmt, @SipahSalar, @Bratva, @Stealth, @Rashid Mahmood,
@syedali73, @Leader, @DESERT FIGHTER, @Jazzbot, @Spring Onion, @chauvunist,
@Pakistan Shaheen, @karakoram, @syedali73, @rockstar08, @haviZsultan, @Gufi @Muhammad Omar, @graphican, @Gazi, @Donatello, @Hyperion, @Pak_Sher, @Sage,
He has changed life of thousands. He was the guy who brought peace in Gilgit between Shias and Sunnis I hope he is successful here too.
 
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Responding to Dawn queries, Human Rights Commission of Pakistan chairperson Zohra Yusuf said that religion should not be introduced into state affairs.

she is very right.

Don't worry Tariq Jameel Sb. even said positive words for Veena Malik when all of us were condemning her.

@jamahir

and what did he say?? :)

by the way, tableeghi jamaat is the "door-to-door bible preachers" of the muslims... they are sometimes sneaky, most times aggressive.

Technical people heading these organisations pass their civil services exams, get trained in academies but still seem to remain tempted.

that is simply a matter of the state unable to fulfill people's material comforts... if the state had make basic facilities ( housing, electricity, water, medical system, education, justice ) free, and abolished certain cultural events like weddings with hundreds of guests, and made high-quality food available at low cost... and everything was guided by socialism... then these economic/social corruptions wouldn't have existed.

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sorry for my reply only now... i was tired in the day and only the other thread kept me energized.
 
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Lectures are good and may bring about change slowly and gradually to eradicate corruption, if that is the primary reason for these lectures. "Chitrol' on the other hand is pretty effective in quick turnaround of the "lost souls"
 
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So now they will not touch bribes when in Wudu and prefer them to be simply kept in their pockets?
 
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