20 years from a poverty stricken village joined PVTC institute in her area not to get skill training but because she wanted Rs500 stipend per month that is provided to each student.
However, she learnt the skills as well and after graduating was provided with two stitching machines. With her better skills, she started earning more than the average monthly income of males in the area. He said the girl remained single at the age of 20 when girls in the area got married at 15-17 years. Once she started earning there were several suitors who wanted to marry the ‘old maid’.
However, he added now the mother of the girl was reluctant to marry her because her income ensured that her sons started going to school.
Citing another case Khan said when he visited an institute in a hilly area, he asked each student the distance they travelled to attend the training sessions daily.
He said some students were coming from 10 and some from 15 kilometres. One boy said he travels 40 kilometres daily to come to the institute and then goes back the same distance. “How is it possible, I asked?” Khan said the student asked have you ever starved sir.
On hearing a negative, the boy told that he and his family went without a meal several days in a week. He said he leaves house daily at 4 am and returns back at 8 pm.
He said he was attaining skills for motorcycle repairs. The boy pointed out that there were numerous tricycle motor rickshaws in his village. The drivers took these machines to a nearby town since there was motorcycle mechanic in his village.
He said when these rickshaws need repair they hand them over to his mother. He said when he goes back from the institute; he repairs these machines and tells the repair bill to his mother. She takes the amount while handing back the tricycle motor rickshaws to the owners. “I and my family do not starve and my younger brothers go to school,” the trainee added.
Khan said such is the state of poverty in Pakistan and we should make all efforts to arm our youth with skills. He said unemployment rate in Pakistan was already very high. He said 30 percent of the population was aged 25-30, and the highest rate of unemployment was among them.
There is a dire need to engage them in productive economic activities.
Providing them competence in skills demanded by the industries, he added is the only solution to this problem.