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PPP ~ Development projects and modernisation of Sindh

Qalandari...
Over last few wks and month all you have posted is pictures / news of inauguration of parks, streets, city road(s) and promising projects... and on the same page you do not let go of a single news basing the N-League...
i am a part PTI and part N-league supporter.... so let this thing be clear..
now please explain that in spite of the fact that the PPP has been in power in sindh since last 1.5 decade and was in the centre for 5 years as well... what have they done for improving the economy or for uplifting the local people.
1) has any projects been completed to produce electricity... any coal based, wind, solar etc. mind you provincial governments are free to come up and complete small projects

2) any projects to get fresh water from sea....Karachi especially is always thirsty. If they come up with a dozen projects then water from hub damn can be utilized for agriculture mainly.

3) Any roads especially built for rural areas... or improving them... Even the condition of main roads is like they have been destroyed by contract.

4) Thar fiasco... why is it that all RO plants must be by the company owned zardari's left T.

5) Any upgradation of Hospitals in Tharparkar, Jacoababad, Sanghar, Ghotki, Mirpur etc. what i mean is any children hospital, any cardiac one??

6) Any new brick linning of waterways

7) what about Sehwan barrage

8) Recreational resort near dadu

and many more.. if you have anything concrete to say then please come forward. if not then please stop wasting everyone's time by your childish posts and comments which is like a 3 yr old whining for no particular reason.
 
see army is also appreciating kpk govt
aur besharmo ko sharam nai ahe gi
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PPP is the worst when it comes to development and governance. They just let things happen. When it ruled in centre its performance was disgusting and their provincial government is no delight. All they can do is play with emotional fools using dead bhutto's name, get votes and live life king size.
 
DHQ Hospital in Tando Mohammad Khan

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Newly constructed Digital Library in DOW University

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New Gymnasium in DOW University

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GIMS, Khairpur

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Cadet College, Ghotki

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Administration block, IBA SUKKUR
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SBTA Establishes Committees For Safe Blood Transfusion

Sindh Blood Transfusion Authority (SBTA) has constituted Hospital Transfusion Committees at district level hospitals across Sindh to ensure safe blood transfusion facilities.

SBTA has formed Hospital Transfusion Committees at 29 district level hospitals across the province, which will supervise and ensure the supply of safe blood transfusion facilities in their respective institutions; the notification of these committees has also been issued.

Each committee will be comprised of six members, headed by Medical Superintendent of the district level hospital, while other members would be a surgeon, physician, gynecologist, peadriation and pathologist. Meeting of these committees will be held on monthly basis and later their reports will be sent to Secretary SBTA. The secretary of Sindh blood transfusion authority will furnish these reports to the health secretary.

The Safe Blood Transfusion Program, operating at the federal level, is providing a facilitation and supervisory role, while local expertise is activated and captured and interactive knowledge management processes take place in lieu of traditional external inputs.

The main responsibilities of the SBT program are project implementation and coordination with the donor and provincial partners, development of policy and framework for blood safety reforms and their implementation, development of guidelines – manuals – SOPs, monitoring and evaluation of the project activities and blood safety reforms, blood safety legislation development, enactment and adherence, capacity building program development and implementation,collaboration with International Partners.

The Sindh Blood Transfusion Authority with support of German health support PROGRAM, GIZ had recently organized four training seminars in Karachi, Hyderabad, Jamshoro and Sukkur where all the district level members of hospital transfusion committees participated and got training of new safe blood transfusion procedures.

The goal of the SBT Program is establishment of the core elements of an independent rational structure of a national blood transfusion system that will ensure adequate, efficient and safe blood supply, in a cost effective manner.

- See more at: SBTA Establishes Committees For Safe Blood Transfusion | HTV
 
RO Water filtration plants being installed in remote villages of Badin
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Biometric system to check ghost employees put in place

LARKANA: Members of the Government Secondary Teachers Association (GSTA), Larkana district, observed a boycott of their duties as the education department put in place the biometric system to scrutinise its workers with a view to identify ghost employees and check absenteeism.

Education secretary Dr Fazlullah Pechuho formally inaugurated the system at a ceremony held in the Larkana district education office on Monday.

Speaking on the occasion, Dr Pechuho said the system was being introduced across Sindh starting from Larkana division. With the installation of the biometric equipment, verification of around 35,000 primary and secondary schools’ teachers posted in Larkana division would be carried out under this pilot project, he said.

Later, speaking to journalists at local press club, Dr Pechuho said under an agreement, World Bank had committed $66 million for the verification process.

The system would eventually be hooked to the National Database and Registration Authority (Nadra) network. He said that the data of around 24,000 primary school teachers (PSTs) and about 6,500 secondary school teachers (SSTs) would be scrutinised to see whether they were bona fide employees and whether they attended to their duties according to the prescribed rules.

In Larkana division alone, it would take six months or so to accomplish the task, he said, adding that World Bank would keep on releasing the approved amount in tranches periodically.

In reply to a question, the education secretary said basing on reports pouring in from Qambar-Shahdadkot, Kashmore-Kandhkot, Jacobabad and Ghotki districts, the data was being compiled. The photos and thumb-impressions of all employees would be saved in the system at Larkana and fed into the central data system in Karachi, he said.

He said expert IT professionals would be hired for feeding the data and monitor the system.

Mr Pachuho said he planned to inaugurate the system in Sukkur division on Tuesday. Responding to a question about GSTA’s protest over the introduction of the biometric system, he said it was a social welfare association, and not a workers’ union.

He said there was no logic in opposing the system but if GSTA came up with a positive approach, its views would be heard positively.
 
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World Bank report on BISP


Supported by IDA’s technical assistance since 2009, Pakistan has established the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP), a flagship national safety net system, which is one of the largest in South Asia.


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4.8 million
Beneficiary families reached


Synopsis

Supported by IDA’s technical assistance since 2009, Pakistan has established the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP), a flagship national safety net system, which is one of the largest in South Asia. The program currently provides income support in the form of predictable monthly cash transfers of US$15 to almost 4.8 million families (approx. 18 million people) of the poorest households for consumption smoothing as well as investments in human capital development. Up to the present time more than US$ 2.9 billion has been disbursed to BISP beneficiaries out of whom 93% of beneficiaries receive the cash transfers through technology based payment mechanisms (Debit Cards, Mobile Phones, Smart Cards). The program plans to reach 5.5 million families in the next financial year.

The program has successfully established a National Socio-Economic Registry (NSER) through the use of an objective targeting system, hosting a database of more than 27 million households (approx. 167 million people) – the first in South Asia. More than 30 federal and provincial social sector programs are currently using the Registry to improve their pro-poor targeting performance. BISP has also rolled out the Co-responsibility Cash Transfers (CCT) program, linking cash transfers to primary school education, which is being implemented in 32 districts in all provinces and regions. After a successful pilot in 5 districts, enrolment process is currently underway in 24 districts. To date more than 726,000 children have been enrolled in the program out of which over 329,000 children have taken admission in schools.

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I was living my life in extreme poverty. BISP became my savior. My children are able to receive the formal education.
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BISP beneficiary

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Children of BISP beneficiaries doing their school homework.

World Bank
Challenge

A significant proportion of Pakistan’s population either lives in extreme poverty or is vulnerable to falling into poverty due to any adverse natural or idiosyncratic shock. Before the start of BISP in 2008, the country’s main safety net programs (i.e. Pakistan Bait-ul-Mal, and the Zakat) had limited coverage and were poorly targeted, as around 25 and 32 percent of resources distributed by these programs respectively, were going to non-poor households. Additionally, administration arrangements were inadequate, and implementation and monitoring and evaluation capacity were very weak. Consequently, these programs had little impact on addressing the issue of poverty and vulnerability. The sector also faced fragmentation of various federal and provincial level initiatives due to absence of a platform or credible system, which could support their consolidation. The country’s spending of 0.16% of GDP on the safety nets was also lowest in the region.

Approach

In order to address the above challenges, the Government of Pakistan launched the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP) during the second half of 2008 as its flagship national social safety net initiative. The short-term objective of the program was to cushion the adverse impact of the food, fuel, and financial crisis on the poor, but its broader objective was to provide a minimum income support package to the poorest and to those who are highly vulnerable to the future shocks. Since 2009, the World Bank’s Social Safety Net Project is supporting BISP in establishing an objective targeting system, strengthening the program operations, and putting in place control and accountability mechanisms for transparent delivery of services to the poor. This represents a shift from poorly designed and administered programs to building blocks of a national safety net system with a focus on creating institutions and initiatives capable of delivering tangible results.


Click here to view the full infographic.

Results

  • Establishment of a National Socio-Economic Registry for harmonizing social protection initiatives both at the federal and provincial government levels. More than 30 federal and provincial organizations are already using this registry to improve the pro-poor orientation of various social sector programs.
  • Empowerment of women by providing them access to the National ID cards and making BISP payments to female head of the beneficiary families, enhancing their ability to take decisions on the use of cash transfers. Since the introduction of BISP, the female registration of Computerized National Identity Cards (CNICs) has almost doubled, which can potentially open avenues for their socio-economic and political empowerment.
  • Improved transparency and efficiency of the program with more than 93% of the current 4.8 million beneficiaries of BISP being paid through technology based mechanisms, offering even the poorest women access to branchless banking accounts for the first time ever in their lives (more than 90% beneficiaries collect payments within 72 hours of disbursements).
  • Advancement of human capital development through a scale up of a Co-responsibility Cash Transfers (CCT) program in 24 additional districts after a successful pilot in 5 districts, linking cash transfers to primary school education while incentivizing admission of children of the poorest households out of which nearly 50% are girls.
  • Control and social accountability standards have helped in improving credibility and refining program implementation through third party monitoring systems such as spot checks, process evaluations, impact evaluations and a comprehensive case management system (CMS). The CMS is further enhanced through the inclusion of a Social Mobilization, Accountability, Reporting and Tracking (SMART) structure at the community level by using “mother groups” that are being created to support the CCT program for primary education. These groups will be linked directly to government offices to ensure sustainability beyond project life.
Link to MDGs

  • Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
  • Promote gender equality and empower women
Bank Contribution

The World Bank supported the BISP, initially through Social Safety Net Technical Assistance Project (US$60 million) approved in May 2009. Based on the successful implementation of the project, a Restructuring with Additional Financing (US$ 150 million) was approved in March 2012, which introduced Disbursement Linked Indicators (DLIs) to incentivize performance on results. The SSN project was complemented through a Bank executed Trust Fund TA being financed by the DFID to help the government in further development of SP systems and their wider application at the federal and provincial level. The existing TF was established in 2013 with an allocation £9 million till 2021.

Partners

The World Bank continues to play a lead role in donor coordination for SP and leveraged more than US$ 1.4 billion of other donors’ investment in BISP. In 2009, the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID) approved a World Bank-managed trust fund to support the test phase of the Poverty Score Card and to set up the initial organizational and operational arrangements for implementing the BISP. Following support from the World Bank, other donors such as the Asian Development Bank and the US Agency for International Development also provided US$150 million each to finance cash transfers to beneficiaries identified through the Poverty Score Card targeting system. The partnership between World Bank and DFID further continued with approval of £300 million of DFID’s 8 years (2012-20) support to Pakistan’s National Cash Transfer program by using a common framework with the WB. In 2013, ADB has also approved US$ 430 million with major proportion of financing going to expansion of the coverage of basic cash transfers to eligible families.

Moving Forward

The Bank stays committed to support the Government of Pakistan in advancing the social protection agenda as part of its on-going economic and subsidy reforms, which insulate the poor from any adverse impacts by providing income support as well as access to human development. The federal engagement will continue to focus on SSN system development agenda through, among others, update of the National Socio-economic Registry and scaling-up of the CCTs encouraging federal-provincial partnership. The provincial engagement will support the reforms in existing pro-poor initiatives by capitalizing on the federal SSN systems for effective service delivery to the poor and aligning investments in the complementary areas to allow the poor to graduate out of poverty.

Reaching the Poorest through Strengthening the Social Safety Net System in Pakistan
 
Kidney department, Ghotki civil hospital

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Degree College, Ghotki
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ZAB Agriculture college, Larkana

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Bakhtawar model school, Larkana

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University of Engineering, Science and Technology

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SZABIST
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Another school in Larkana

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Youth Hostel, Larkana

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Shahnawaz public library, Larkana

 
Cadet college, Larkana



Linar cancer hospital, Larkana



 

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