he added, the department was trying to remove the kinks in the system and take stock of the resources and understanding the educational landscape of the country. “It’s extremely important to bring all the relevant officials and stakeholders on the same page and complete our own homework for achieving the goal of providing free and fair education,” he said. “Once that has been achieved, the Rules of Business would enable smooth functioning of the system of education delivery as a whole. Otherwise, it too would get caught in red-tapism.”
Relying on the winds
Mehtab Akbar Rashidi, a former journalist who is now an MPA of the Pakistan Muslim League-Functional and has also served as the secretary education, said it was wrong to rely so much on foreign aid.
“I, for one, would not mind seeing donors disappear because then it would be the authorities themselves searching for solutions to their own problems instead of others telling them what to do and how to do it,” she said.
“So much of what is being done is driven by foreign donors and their policies are applied blindly without any thought as to whether or not they would sit well in the local environment. This is reflected in the ad hoc way used in dealing with matters so far.”
Except for a couple of times a year in the provincial assembly, debate on education and related matters remains absent even though it is perhaps the biggest challenge facing the country.
The assembly’s standing committee on education too remains without anything to do. Though it is merely an advisory body and can only take up matters if they are referred to it, the department can unload some of its deliberations on the committee especially because it is critically short of qualified personnel. “The secretariat never consults us while making decisions,” said a member quite candidly. “Though the committee only has an advisory role, but it’s still a legitimate forum to discuss issues.”
According to Ahmad Ali, the implementation of Article 25-A is also a great way to address a myriad of other important issues in Sindh, such as the rural-urban divide. “The province needs to come up with a clear-cut and clean strategy for its implementation,”he said.
“The implementation of Article 25-A should reflect in all policy documents, whether they are financial or administrative, and disseminated to the public and the relevant education officials.”