muhammadhafeezmalik
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Jan 21, 2015
- Messages
- 5,417
- Reaction score
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He is State Minister for Energy while Federal Minister for Energy was present there.Because
1- The weather and climate in those countries is completely different from us. They can afford to go out in the afternoon, we cannot.
2- The household (women, older people) can venture out by themselves to get groceries and other things. In Pakistan, the onus is primarily on the man of the house. Moreover, combine this with the extreme living disparity, most people live far away from where they work. Adha Pindi Islamabad ata hai kaam karnay. It takes an hour to go back in the evening, even more. If you leave office at 6 you reach home by 7:30, and then pick up your children and go outside.
3- The concept of markets and stores in those countries is very different from us, and is much more concentrated.
Where is the pharmacist who pretends to be an energy minister?
As for raised as pharmacist and working in energy sector, I would adopt arguments of your favorite Khawar Ghumman:
One of his colleagues wonders how he became an advisor to governments on the critical energy sector when his academic records qualify him best to work in the medical sector.
Dr Malik agrees that Pharmacy was his initial education. But later on went into policy making. “Very few people know I have done MBA and that in my post-doctoral fellowship I focused more on economics and public policy making. Then onwards I worked with major public policy making consulting firms,” he said.
His CV shows that most of his professional career was built in oil-rich Middle Eastern countries, particularly Saudi Arabia, Oman and Bahrain. There, besides teaching, he advised governments on formulating strategies for education, economic transformation, industrial development, labour reforms, employment generation and healthcare.
Parliament Watch: Nawaz Sharif’s new spokesperson a man of many talents
Dr Mussadik Malik belongs to a genre ever in demand; whatever system of governance may be in vogue.
www.dawn.com