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Fake Degrees Scandal

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Hey i just read this article in Jang news. i dont believe in astrology but reading this gives us hope and we should work for the betterment of this country. The point here is not to read this article and wait and see what happens in future, but in order to chnage our destiny we need to do something practical, each and every one of us.
As we see from this article the supreme court will change all the mess.. CJ zindabad... slowly and slowly this govenment will collapse...

jang.com.pk/jang/jul2010-daily/13-07-2010/col5.htm
 
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Question mark on degrees of Talpur, Gabol, Abidi
Updated at: 1900 PST, Wednesday, July 14, 2010

KARACHI: Universities of Sindh including Karachi have sent their scrutiny reports on suspected degrees of parliamentarians to Higher Education Commission (HEC).

It has been learnt that these reports have put a question mark on degrees of Faryal Talpur and many other important government dignitaries.

Separately, Chairman HEC Dr. Javed Leghari has assured that he would neither resign nor will he proceed on long leave.

Sources told Geo News that HEC found suspected the degrees of MNA Faryal Talpur, State Minister Nabil Gabol, Senator Faisal Raza Abidi, Provincial Minister Mukesh Chawla, MPA Shamshad Bachani among other parliamentarians. The HEC also said that the procedure of sending some of the reports was also not according to the rules and regulations.

HEC noted that some of the degrees did not even have stamp of the Vice Chancellor and returned the reports to the universities of Karachi and Sindh with instructions that the process of verification be carried out in accordance with the specified formula.

Meanwhile, HEC has sent additional 107 degrees of parliamentarians for scrutiny to various universities.

So far 33 out of 36 universities have forwarded reports to HEC.

Punjab University has compiled and sent reports of 217 degrees of the parliamentarians to HEC and sought more time for verification of 93 degrees.

Question mark on degrees of Talpur, Gabol, Abidi
 
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Arm-twisting




Thursday, July 15, 2010
As our leading judges comment on the need to pursue the matter of fake degrees as a way of restoring our honour and dignity – in part if not in whole – the government seems unimpressed and bent on continuing its old ways. The Leghari brothers Farooq and Javed are having their arms twisted. Javed is the chairman of the Higher Education Commission, and is currently heavily engaged in the verification of the academic credentials of members of parliament and the provincial assemblies. Last Monday his brother Farooq 'disappeared' only to reappear at a local court in Hyderabad charged with a variety of offences allegedly committed when he was the DCO at Tando Allahyar. Well isn't that a coincidence? The brother of the man currently causing pain in the joints of many parliamentarians suddenly finds himself arrested and charged with alleged offences that are at least two years in the past.

The details of the charges need not concern us immediately and they will doubtless be examined in a court of law – or not, depending on how the government interprets the response to Farooq Leghari's arrest. However, the timing of it concerns us considerably. There is speculation – an old friend in any understanding of life in our political pond – that President Zardari has a dislike of Javed Leghari dating back to his appointment by his wife Benazir Bhutto, to the Senate in 2006. Mere speculation does not a case prove, but the arrest of Farooq Leghari at a time when the investigations of the HEC into fake degrees is reaching a crescendo reeks like a ******* fish. Javed Leghari has made a robust response to the matter and has stated his resolve to perform his duty in respect of the verification process without fear or favour, and that he does not feel threatened and that he rests his faith in God. Well he might, for if he rests his faith in seeing fair play from the current dispensation, he will be sorely disappointed.
 
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Although the probability that Farrooq Leghari was arrested only because of alleged corruption is less than 1 in 10 as far as I see, the self-styled analysts of our media have forgotten that Dr. Javed Leghari was a PPP senator until he resigned to become Chariman HEC. Ansar Abbasi yesterday gave this a new twist stating that he had resigned in "mysterious circumstances". He resigned from the Senate on July 22, 2009 and was appointed Chairman, HEC on August 26, 2009. Since a public office holder cannot be a member of the Service of Pakistan, he had to resign from the Senate. Had there been some serious fist-fight with the party high-ups his nomination would have been withdrawn but his nomination was approved. Ansar Abbasi gave it the usual lie-twist. Leghari's seat was later filled by Tarin and now is occupied by Hafeez Sheikh. Since the nation suffers from mass amnesia and there's no fact checking from the public, people'll believe whatever lies are fed to them.

However, it is totally imaginable that Leghari faces pressure even though he has served as a senator for the ruling party earlier. But the way with which the media selectively highlights the issue is annoying giving all credit to CJ and not to Abid Sher Ali for initiating this. However I'm still unsure whether Abid Sher Ali realized what would be the results on a massive scale or whether he was acting on somebody else's advice, but anyways he cannot by fired by the Sharif brothers for the destruction he hath brough on his own party since it'll make them look very, very bad.
 
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A fake crisis
July 16th, 2010
By Cyril Almeida

THE pious and the righteous have pronounced judgement: it’s fire and brimstone for the sinners. For eternity, the holders of fake degrees will pay for their sins, having refused to self-flagellate or fall on their swords.

It’s a joke.

With sins aplenty on all sides here, let’s start with the original sin. Why were the fake degrees part of the official record in the first place?

Well, a long time ago, a dictator named Musharraf wanted to usher in a new era of politics. It was supposed to be out with the old, in with the new.

One shortcut: declare everyone without a bachelor degree ineligible to contest elections and voila! Just like that you have a new era of bright-eyed, bushy-tailed, degree-clutching legislators who would transform us into the Asian tiger we have always dreamed of becoming.

We know how that turned out.

Fast forward to the next general election, in 2008. As the deadline for filing of nominations approached, the bachelor degree requirement was still on the books. It was patently unconstitutional, morally indefensible in a purported democracy with literacy rates as low as ours, and would have been struck down in the blink of an eye had we an independent judiciary.

Oh, the irony. Now that we have an independent judiciary and independent media, they’ve got the legislators by the scruff of their necks — all because of a Musharraf-era law that is no longer on the books.

They think they’re oh-so-clever because they haven’t accused the legislators of not having degrees, they’ve accused them of perpetrating fraud by filing fake degrees with their election nomination papers.

But go back to late 2007, when the deadline approached, and put yourself in a candidate’s shoes. (I know it’s difficult, but give it a try.)

You have a choice: opt out of the political process because you don’t have a degree or produce a fake degree and allow the voters a genuine choice.

A managed, staged election versus one in which the voters decide reasonably legitimately who they want to represent them.

I know which one I’d take every day of the week and twice on Sundays.

Alas, we are a land of black and white, but where black is white and white black. The rabble lining up to nail the Class of 2008 to the Musharrafian cross are among the ones who would personally hang Musharrraf if they got the chance.

Fraud is against the law, they yelp. Politicians must learn they are not above the law, they scream.

Absolutely. So let’s go after them for breaking the law. Our election laws are detailed and sound — and observed more in the breach than anything else.

Hello, Mr MNA, did you know that you were only allowed to spend a million and a half on your election? Yeah, you, the guy who spent tens of millions on your campaign.

Hey, Mr MPA, did you know that the law prohibits you from transporting any voter other than a family member? Yeah, you, the guy who bussed in voters.

Hey, Mr Minister, did you know that that the maximum size of campaign posters, hoardings, banners and pamphlets is stipulated? Yeah, you, the guy who put up giant, illegal hoardings in your constituency and plastered every inch of available wall space with oversized posters.

Let’s not kid ourselves, it would be impossible to ensure overnight that every candidate in every constituency adheres to the rules.

But by trying to police more tightly the rules on, say, campaign spending, at least the possibility opens up of altering the political class in the country.

In the cities and towns, if MNA candidates are kept somewhere in the ballpark of the Rs1.5 m spending limit, new candidates could be tempted to try their luck. The vast majority of people can’t compete with candidates who are politically entrenched and can spend hundreds of millions.

How exactly is anyone supposed to compete with the duo who were rumoured to have spent over a billion rupees in a bitterly fought election in Gujrat in February ’08?

If nothing else, stricter checks on campaign spending can dampen some, some, of the appetite for corruption among the political class. Moralists are loath to admit this but the need to recoup campaign ‘expenses’ drives up corruption across the board.

Still, what’s the harm in going after the fake degree lot, some ask. They’ve clearly lied, they broke the law and they’ve been caught. Let them off now and it would only reinforce the message that they are unaccountable, above the law, elected dictators.

Admittedly, a trickier area. Start, though, with this question: what is democracy strengthening, system enhancing?

Is it going after candidates who claimed to have degrees they didn’t? The Supreme Court wants them prosecuted, pushing out of the political arena for five years.

Assume they are. Does parliament become more sovereign or cleaner as a result? Will those who replace the ousted lot file genuine asset declarations? Will the replacements abide by the election laws still on the books? Will they be better legislators?

For answers, have a look at any of the by-elections held since the ’08 elections. Actually, don’t bother. You already know the answers.

There hangs in the Great Hall in Lincoln’s Inn a portrait that would gladden the hearts of even the most jaded and cynical of Pakistanis: that of Muhammad Ali Jinnah.

That his successors don’t hold a candle to the great man is inarguable. That the present parliament consists of degenerates, law-breakers and pompous clowns whom decent people would hesitate to invite into their homes is also quite clear.

Yet, this parliament of louts and degenerates with their fake degrees is also quite possibly the most democratic parliament we’ve had in decades. The government has not thrown any of its rivals in jail, nor has the opposition sunk its teeth in the government’s neck in a frenzied bid for power.

For sure, if Pakistan is ever to be a better place, some in the present lot will have to be pushed out. Change, though, must be of the kind that holds the promise of a better system, a stronger democracy emerging. Not something that just pleases the pious and the pompous.

While public anger is necessary for cleaning up a dirty system, it needs to be anger with a purpose, smart anger, as it were. Forget the honesty of the intention: the road to hell is paved with good intentions. And we’ve already tasted more than our fair share of hell.

cyril.a@gmail.com
 
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Time shortage reason for acceptance of fake degrees: PML-N
:lol:
Staff Report

ISLAMABAD: In a surprising explanation of the fact that a number of PML-N leaders possess fake educational degrees, party Information Secretary Ahsan Iqbal has said that the reason for the same was the little time the party had for scrutinising candidate's academic records before the 2008 elections. :lol:

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan

This is a joke. This is probably why they begged mercy from the Taliban ... everything is due to time shortage
 
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“The parliament is ours and we have to guide the nation towards morality,” the chief justice observed.

Justice Ramday said he felt ashamed reading headlines about fake degrees during his recent stay in Singapore.

Those aspiring to contest elections always state on oath before returning officers that they were not concealing any fact, the bench said.

DAWN.COM | National | Courts trying to restore dignity of parliament: CJ

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I am glad to see that there is no evil design behind this issue as all concerned Pakistanis want to get this issue resolved for the sake of Pakistan.

This will be the first time in the history of Pakistan that a whole bunch of Parliamentarians will be convicted for fraud. The evidence is so clear that there is no need for lengthy trials. :pakistan:
 
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Who’s who on the fake degrees list
PML-N leads the pack with 11, PPP second with seven, so far
Friday, July 16, 2010
By Usman Manzoor

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz tops the list of fake degree holders as so far eleven of its parliamentarians have been caught by Higher Education Commission (HEC) for possessing fake degrees. The Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) is second with seven.

Others include PML-Q with five, Mutahida Majlis-e-Amal has four, Awami National Party and PML-F have one each, two from Fata MPs and other parties and independents share six fake degree holders among them.

According to a report of Higher Education Commission dated July 14, 2010 (copy available), out of the ten MNAs having fake degrees, two are from PML-N, three from PPP, two from the Fata and one each from PML-Q, MMA and PML-F.

These MNAs include Syed Muhammad Salman Mohsin, Mazhar Hayat of PML-N; Hayatullah Khan Tareen, Nasir Ali Shah and Mir Hamayun Aziz of PPP; Syed Akhundzada Chitan and Syed Javed Hussain from the Fata, Ghulam Dastagir Rajar of PML-F, Molvi Rozziuddin of MMA and Mir Ahmadan Khan of PM-Q.

The Senators having fake/non-recognized degrees include Israrullah Khan Zehri of BNP-A and two independents Nawabzada Muhammad Akbar and Wali Muhammad.

Nine out of fourteen MPAs from Punjab hail from PML-N. These include Yasir Raza Malik, Shafiq Ahmad Gujar, Saima Aziz, Muhammad Safdar Gill, Zulfiqar Ali, Sardar Meer Badshah Khan Qaiserani, Afshaan Farooq, Farah Deeba and Shamaila Rana.

The three PML-Q legislator having fake degrees are Samina Khawar Hayat, PML-Q, Seemal Kamran and Syeda Majida Ziadi. While Wasim Afzal Gondal and Safina Saima Khar are from PPP in Punjab Assembly who have fake degrees so far declared by the HEC.

In Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa Assembly two members of MMA Kiswar Kumar and Gulistan Khan have fake degrees while the PPP and the ANP have only one such member so far. They are Haji Sher Azam Khan Wazir and Syed Aqil Shah. One independent member Abdul Qayyum Khan has also been declared to be a fake degree holder by the HEC.

The MPAs from Balochistan Assembly having fake degrees include Haji Ali Maddad Jattak of PPP, Abdul Samad of JUI, Shama Parveen Magsi of PML-Q, Rubina Zafar Zehri of Like-minded group and Nawabzada Tariq Mugsi, an independent member.

However, MPs with suspected degrees include Senator Ms Ratna Bhagwandas, MNAs Dewan Syed Ashiq Hussain Bukhari, Mir Amir Ali Khan Magsi, Syed Ghulam Mustafa Shah, Ramesh Lal and Nauman Islam Shaikh. MPAs from Sindh Assembly including Nadeem Ahmed, Haji Muzaffar Ali Shujra, Nusrat Bano Seher Abbasi and Salim Khursheed Khokhar and MPA from Balochistan Muhammad Bakhtiar Khan Domki. HEC sources say that the degrees of these MPs have been challenged in the courts therefore the universities have not verified these degrees on the basis of cases being sub judiced.
 
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This is awesome. ROFL !

PML-N MP caught with two bogus degrees

Saturday, July 17, 2010

By Usman Manzoor

ISLAMABAD: A PML-N MNA has been caught with his feet in two fake boats; he submitted two fraudulent degrees for two elections and now does not know which one to own.

In an interesting twist of events, the MNA submitted one degree of the Punjab University when he contested the 2002 polls and the other, a Balochistan University degree, for the 2008 election.

Documents available with The News reveal that Rana Zahid Hussain Khan, Member National Assembly from NA-166, Pakpattan, submitted these two degrees for his two elections. He won in 2008 but lost the 2002 polls.

Rana Zahid first admitted that he graduated in 2007 but later changed his stance saying he had graduated long ago. Documents say that in the 2002 election, Rana Zahid Hussain Khan submitted a graduation degree from the Punjab University bearing roll number 066539 and registration No 2002-z-27760. The examination for this certificate was held in April-May 2002.


The Punjab University on 03-10-2002 cancelled this certificate on the grounds of non-provision of intermediate certificate. Rana Zahid’s degree was challenged in the court and despite cancellation of his graduation degree by the Punjab University, no criminal proceedings were initiated against him.

In the election of 2008, Rana Zahid submitted a graduation certificate of the Balochistan University, which he claimed he had passed in 2007. His second graduation certificate bears Roll No 2600 and registration No 2002/UB-2006/A-94103. On 16-06-2010, the Balochistan University vide letter No 69/4-Reg/10 declared that the registration number on the certificate of Rana Zahid was fake.

The letter states: “This is to certify that as per the record of this office, the registration bearing No 2002-UB-06/A-94103 has been allotted to Aurangzeb Magsi, S/o Muhammad Akram Magsi, not to Rana Zahid Hussain, S/o Rana Muhammad Sharif Khan.”

Rana Zahid had submitted an intermediate certificate of the Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education, Karachi, to Balochistan University. The Karachi Board could not find the record of the certificate that Rana Zahid claimed to have passed in 2004. The matriculation certificate of Rana Zahid is also from Karachi, which he passed in 2002.

Rana Zahid Hussain Khan, when contacted, said that the Higher Education Commission (HEC) was verifying the degrees and let the process be completed. “My case is also subjudice, therefore, it should not be discussed,” said the PML-N MNA. To a question about the year of graduation, Rana Zahid said it was 2007 when he had passed the exam but when asked if his graduation was of 2007, then how he contested the 2002 election as graduation degree was a must for it, Zahid thought for a while and said, “My case is subjudice.”

He kept on insisting that let the verification process be completed and everything would become clear. When asked about his two graduation certificates, one from the Punjab University and the other from the Balochistan University, the PML-N MNA replied, “I had passed BA much earlier than 2002.” When told about his own statement of 2007 graduation, Rana Zahid mentioned that it was a slip of the tongue.
 
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Convicted fake degree holders to face eight-year ban

Sunday, July 18, 2010

By Tariq Butt

ISLAMABAD: A phony degree holding federal or provincial legislator, who would be awarded three-year imprisonment for this corrupt practice, would stand debarred from contesting elections for at least eight years, legal experts say.

Previously, such a convict faced an extended ban on being a candidate for any elected body but the bar has been significantly curtailed courtesy the 18th Amendment, said one expert. The Article, 63(h), inserted into the Constitution by the 18th Amendment, says a person shall be disqualified from being elected or chosen as, and from being a member of parliament if he has been, on conviction for any offence involving moral turpitude, sentenced to imprisonment for a term not less than two years, unless a period of five years has elapsed since his release.

This means that there would be disqualification at all to vie for an elected slot if the sentence is less than two years. Additionally, a lawmaker, after undergoing his three-year sentence imposed on him for possessing a bogus degree, would become qualified to contest elections five years after his release from prison on the exhaustion of his term. Immediately after the enactment of the 18th Amendment, this and some other clauses of Article 63 evoked a sweeping attack from public circles for giving a clean chit to those convicted on highly serious criminal charges, including murder and rape, and for acting in any manner prejudicial to the ideology of Pakistan or sovereignty, integrity or security of Pakistan or integrity or independence of the judiciary or for defaming or bringing into ridicule the judiciary or the armed forces.

Experts say that the Representation of People’s Act (RPA) 1976 provides three-year sentence to be awarded by a district and sessions judge for the “corrupt practice” of having a counterfeit degree. Such a convict has the right to file an appeal before a division bench, comprising two judges of the high court. After that, he can also approach the Supreme Court.

Idrees Ashraf, advocate, says the Section 100 of the RPA, which deals with disqualification of MPs on account of certain offences, allows the Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) to make an order that a legislator having been convicted by a court of law for any offence specified in the law would be disqualified for such a period not exceeding five years from being or from being elected as a member of an assembly.

Experts point out that the earlier conviction under the National Accountability Bureau (NAB) Ordinance also carried a 21-year disqualification to contest elections. This period was later reduced to 10 years through an amendment in the NAB law.

However, they say, this provision of the NAB ordinance has become redundant after the promulgation of the 18th Amendment, in the case of those disqualified under this law.

If, for example, someone is sentenced to one year under the NAB law, he would not stand disqualified to contest elections for 10 years. In fact, he would not be disqualified at all because the term of sentence is less than two years. However, in case of his conviction for two or more years under the NAB ordinance, he would be qualified five years after his release from prison.
 
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The early birds to fall in snowballing fake degrees scam

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

By Ansar Abbasi

ISLAMABAD: The Higher Education Commission (HEC) has sent its first list of four MPs, including one federal and one Balochistan minister and a senator, with foreign degrees, which look hilarious.

The HEC has revealed that, at least, two of these MPs were allowed to contest the 2008 polls by the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) despite the HEC’s non-verification of their degrees in Nov 2007.

In its report sent to the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Education, the HEC declared foreign degrees of four MPs, including a Senator, an MNA/federal minister and two members of the Balochistan Assembly having been acquired from non-chartered foreign universities that are unknown and even sound hilarious.

According to the sources, all these MPs, hailing from Balochistan, have shown their degrees acquired from some unknown foreign universities, which are non-chartered and, therefore, not recognised by the HEC.

These parliamentarians include BNP Senator Mir Israrullah Khan, PPP MNA and Federal Minister for Livestock and Dairy Development Mir Humayun Aziz and two MPAs from Balochistan Assembly, including Minister for Information Technology and provincial coordination on NGO programmes and universities, Law and Parliamentary Affairs Ms Shama Parveen Magsi and Ms Rubina Zafar Zehri.

Official documents, which include copies of the suspected degrees, also reveal that Assistant Director HEC Syed Asim Hussain wrote to M Rasheed Bhatti, Assistant Election Commissioner (HQ), officer of the Provincial Election Commissioner, Quetta, on Nov 30, 2007 and conveyed six cases of suspected degrees from non-recognised institutes, etc.

These cases included the names of Ms Shama Parveen Magsi, whose BBA degree from “International University of America-London” was even not recognised on Nov 30, 2007 but still the ECP allowed her to contest the elections. Similarly, Ms Rubina Zafar Zehri’s BBA degree from MiTech Institute of Management & Information Technology, Defence, Lahore, was also not recognised but like Ms Magsi, she too was allowed to contest the polls by the Election Commission.

Mir Israrullah Khan is shown to have done his “Bachelor of Business Administration” in 2004 from “International University of America (London)”. The HEC declared it as “Non-Chartered University”. Mir Israrullah Khan is a member of the Senate.

Yet another Mir from Balochistan — Mir Humayun Aziz — who is a member of the National Assembly, has declared to have done “Bachelor of Business Administration in Marketing” in 1999 from “Fire International University”. The HEC declared it too as Non-Chartered University.

Ms Shama Parveen Magsi, an MPA of Balochistan Assembly, has submitted her BBA degree to have got in 2005 from the “International University of America (London), which too has been declared as Non-Chartered University”. Another lady MPA from Balochistan Assembly Ms Rubina Zafar Zehri did her BBA from “Mitech Institute of Management & Information Technology, Lahore” in 1999. This degree has been embossed by the Lahore based “duly authorised officers” of the university.

Copies of all these degrees are also available with The News. In case of Ms Rubina Zafar Zehri, the apparently foreign degree makes an interesting statement, which reads as: “Rubina Zafar Zehri having completed the prescribed studies and satisfied the requirement for the degree of Bachelor of Business Administration has accordingly been admitted to that degree with all the rights, privileges and immunities thereunto appertaining In witness whereof, the Trustees of Mitech Institute of Management & Information Technology have caused this degree to be signed by the duly authorized officers of the Institute and embossed with its corporate at Lahore, Pakistan.”

wel i think not only degrees but also moral values 2 r important for a leader,,,,,,,,,but ,,,any how these ppl should b ban forever
 
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Owning up to our fake degrees
Saturday, July 17, 2010
Mosharraf Zaidi

When the nation was aflame with moral outrage last year in November, it was because our collective anger about corruption in Pakistan had seemingly boiled over. The NRO was leading the headlines, and the PPP's lashkar-e-haq, led by the venerable religious and legal scholar, Dr Babar Awan, was producing a steady stream of some of the most creative legal arguments we've ever heard in this, the most creative of Islamic Republic endeavours, ever.

Then, in April this year, Pakistani morality came to know and hate the name Jamshed Dasti. Dasti, an otherwise nothing politician from Southern Punjab, had to resign for having a fake degree, but was still nominated by the PPP, backed by the prime minister, and pulled out another win in the bye-election for NA 178.

The Dasti saga has now generated an entire industry of moral outrage over fake degrees. Pakistan's moral compass is, once again, in full bloom. Fake degrees are the new NRO. Perhaps seeing a smiling Jamshed Dasti's virtual middle finger is not enough for the urban middle class's insatiable appetite for undignified political awakenings. Which is just as well. The PPP-PML-N--PML-Q nexus of incredibly resourceful political operators are just fine with being labelled village idiots by the uber-sophisticated and morally righteous, newspaper-reading city-folk that hate them. If the Dastis of this world are laughing it is for good reason. The three mainstream political parties in this country are not in any way in short supply of Jamshed Dastis. In fact, there are plenty more where he comes from but there are none of where the moral outrage over fake degrees comes from. The joke is on us.

What is the outrage over fake degrees really all about? It is about two dangerous and depressing trends. First, it is about demonising politics and politicians. Second, it is about evading individual and collective political responsibility in Pakistan's urban centres. Both trends threaten to keep Pakistan locked up in the 19th century -- where banning Facebook, destroying the Universal Service Fund, taxing the transactions of the urban middle class, and empowering people like Jamshed Dasti all make eminent economic, political and social sense. Getting our understanding of the fake-degree outrage is essential not because of its moral semantics. It is essential because allowing ourselves to be carried away by our emotions about cheating and corruption is to the detriment of this country's future.

We are outraged by the fake degrees and the fake apologies that accompany them because we feel morally obligated to remonstrate. Corruption, lying, cheating, stealing and deception are all deplorable. But the issue of the corruption of politicians, while an important challenge for public policy in this country, is really a red herring. When it enters the national conversation in Pakistan, corruption has little to do with moral probity in the public space.

If it did, we'd be obsessing just as much about the rent-seeking and contract-fat in banking and finance, the military, the judiciary, the fast-moving consumer goods industry, journalism and the business of religion. Why did the snack boxes PIA serves on domestic flights become as big as cartons recently? Why do roads keep getting dug up and re-carpeted in Defence? How many judges have been prosecuted for taking bribes since March 2009? Why doesn't the ISPR publish the process of land and plot allotment for military officers on its website? And why doesn't the Establishment Division do the same for all APUG officers? Why should journalists, rather than nurses, be more deserving of government largesse when it comes to plots? Where would PMA Kakul rank on HEC's rankings, in terms of the quality of its bachelor's programme? Where do religious groups get all this money to put up banners and posters? Why do those groups seem more active during certain news cycles than others? Why don't municipal services managers prosecute graffiti religious groups? How many successful businessmen will tell you honestly that they've never paid a bribe?

We don't ask these questions because we have programmed ourselves into a small box where the only morally repugnant group of Pakistanis worth taking to task are politicians. A demonised and degraded political class is to the benefit of many politically sterile groups of people: military officers who pine for the days of Gen Musharraf, technocrats who will only move to Pakistan if they are made heads of organisations, senior DMG officers who occupy the only win/win space in Pakistan's complex landscape, and judges that are keen to make suo moto the new mode of institutional governance in Pakistan. These folks could never beat Jamshed Dasti in a democracy. And as long as we keep demonising politicians, they won't have to.

Talking about fake degrees and doing so ad infinitum means that you are either so emotional that you've lost sight of reason or it means that you actively wish to aid and abet the demonisation and de-legitimisation of Pakistani politicians. Neither is acceptable. We cannot do without politicians, or without politics. And we definitely can afford no further irrationality in our public discourse.

This brings us to the second trend that the fake degrees brouhaha highlights: evading individual and collective political responsibility. Sure, shehri babus -- both of the English medium, and Urdu medium variety -- despise the politics of the thaana-kuthchehri, and the gulli-mohalla. Their contempt is not unjustified. Yet, we seem to be capable of nothing more than ad infinitum condemnations of politicians. This is lazy and arrogant at best and an approbation of the status quo at worst. Pakistani politicians might indeed be overwhelmingly made up of people with whom decent, educated city-folk want nothing to do with. But neither the politicians, nor our 35 million Pakistani brothers and sisters that voted for them in February 2008 particularly care. In short, this moral outrage is generating a grand total of zero positive outcomes.

If we cannot do without politics and politicians, and we've determined that these politicians and their politics are unacceptable, then the only possible solution to our conundrum is to change the politics and the politicians.

This requires courage and action. Not mere words. Not everybody has to join a political party or run for office. But at least the moral class -- those literate, urban-dwellers that the entire television news industry caters to -- should know who their representatives are. And their representatives should know who they are too. Call them. Go meet them. Tell them what you like and dislike. Of course, if you live in any kind of housing society (you know who you are Defence-wallahs) you won't be surprised to learn that you don't have representation. Think about that too. You choose to disengage from the galli and naala in this country. What grounds do you have for your moral outrage?

And while we ponder that, perhaps let us take a break from the hyperventilating about fake degrees. We must stop letting feelings dictate our behaviour. A society's politicians are a reflection of the morals and ethos of the society itself. Perhaps we are angry at ourselves, perhaps at the Dastis, perhaps at the tens of thousands of brothers and sisters that voted for him. This anger is useless. We have fake degrees in our politics because we have fake degrees in our society. We choose these things, they do not fall from the sky. This is our society, these are our politicians. Let's not demonise them too much. We are only demonising ourselves.

The writer advises governments, donors and NGOs on public policy. www.mosharraf zaidi.com
 
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Panic as PPP fears fall of govt in Sindh
Monday, July 19, 2010
By Tariq Butt

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) has strong fears that its comfortable numerical strength in the Sindh Assembly will be seriously hit as the fake degrees issue will result in large scale disqualification of its MPAs.

By now the PPP has a fair idea about the precise number of its MPs who used counterfeit degrees, its leaders say on condition of anonymity, adding that is why concerted efforts have been launched to stop, by hook or crook, the Higher Education Commission (HEC) Chairman Dr Javed Leghari from going ahead honestly and promptly with the process before further damage is done.

According to them, the PPP also apprehends that its fragile numerical position in the National Assembly will also be greatly upset in case of large-scale disqualifications on account of the phony degrees.

These leaders say primarily it is the strong fear in the PPP that its grip on the Sindh Assembly will be significantly harmed, which has compelled its provincial government to decisively proceed against brothers and other family members of Dr Leghari.

However, some of these leaders do admit that the arrest of the HEC chairman’s brother, a Grade 19 civil servant, on a trumped up charge, presents a case of victimisation by this government, which keeps boasting that it doesn’t believe in persecution and follows reconciliation.

“I have no idea about the number of Sindh MPAs who have bogus university degrees, but one thing is sure that the stern official action against Dr Leghari’s family raises valid fears and apprehensions that there is something very significant that the government wants to hide,” PPP’s estranged Senator Safdar Abbasi told The News.

He said if everything was in order and had been done as per the law of the land and there were no skeletons in the cupboard, resorting to repressive methods against the Leghari family was mindless, to say the least. The campaign against it leaves not an iota of doubt that the government wants to make the HEC chairman fall in line and give up the process of authenticating the degrees of the MPs.

Dr Abbasi said that the fact that the University of Sindh has not verified a large number of degrees as per the procedure laid down by the HEC, which all other universities did follow, also raises doubts that the institution has not acted lawfully and as per the rules and is under pressure to do so.

Another PPP leader said that since it was clear that a majority of feudals, who are in a large number in the Sindh Assembly, “completed” their education by doing A or O Levels (or matriculation or intermediate) from elite institutions, including Aitcheson College, Lahore, and did not go for further studies, the government was worried that they acquired fake university degrees to qualify for the elections. It feels that they would be thrown out of the assembly as a result of the ongoing process of verification of their educational certificates.

However, on the other hand, quarters close to the presidency believe that the unrelenting official pressure on the Leghari family, which has no relation with the PPP’s nemesis former President Farooq Leghari of Dera Ghazi Khan or former PPP Railways Minister Zafar Ali Leghari of Dadu, will make Dr Javed Leghari succumb to the campaign very soon and call it a day.

There is nobody in the Sindh government who is ready to raise voice against the strong-arm methods being employed by the provincial administration against the Leghari family. The Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), which is an important coalition partner in the Sindh government and which has no fake degree holders in its ranks, is also silent.

Panic as PPP fears fall of govt in Sindh
 
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Another MNA’s degree found fake

ISLAMABAD: The degree of Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q) member of the National Assembly (MNA) Nauman Langrial has been declared fake on Sunday.

According to a private TV channel, Langrial was elected to the National Assembly from NA-163, Sahiwal. He had obtained his BA degree from the Punjab University, which now had been proven bogus.

Earlier, the degree of his father, Iqbal Langrial, was also declared fake. Iqbal was elected to the Punjab Assembly from PP-226, Sahiwal and had provided a degree of an unregistered seminary, which had been declared invalid. app

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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