Shehbaz shareef exposed using foreign aid to buy votes - telegraph - must read

jagga9

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
[h=1]Pakistan politicians accused of squandering money on school laptops as British aid rolls in[/h] [h=2]Millions of pounds of British taxpayers' money is being spent to encourage children to go to school in Pakistan's Punjab province, at the same time as local politicians are accused of squandering their education budget to buy votes with free laptops for students.[/h]
thomson-cake.jpg


The UK's Department for International Development (DFID) has given the Punjab government about 63m for education since 2009, as part of a grant that will eventually total 77m.


Critics believe the foreign cash has made it easier for Punjab's leaders to raid their own education budget to buy votes ahead of a general election expected early next year.

So far they have spent about 26m on 100,000 free computers – and have promised to distribute another 300,000, worth a further 78m.

Imran Khan, the former Pakistani cricket captain and a contender to be the country's next president, said the laptops were a political gimmick.

"Time and again aid is a curse for Third World countries," he said. "It stops us making reforms. Rather than forcing the government to balance their budgets, in this case it is being used in election year to buy votes."


British aid officials insist that their cash is carefully monitored and is not being spent on laptops.
The controversy illustrates the fraught nature of giving aid to Pakistan. The country has one of the lowest rates of tax collection in the world – at about 10 per cent of gross domestic product, compared with about 29 per cent for the UK - yet spends billions of dollars on a growing nuclear arsenal while collecting billions more in aid from donors.
Despite concerns about corruption, the country is to become the biggest recipient of British aid by 2015 – receiving 446m in 2015.
The links are so tight that DFID has even installed Sir Michael Barber, former head of Tony Blair's Downing Street "delivery unit", as education adviser to Shahbaz Sharif, Punjab's chief minister.
At the same time, the laptop giveaway is hugely controversial in Pakistan, a country where 17m children are not in school and half the adult population is illiterate.
Shahbaz Sharif, the chief minister of Punjab, is accused of bribing the electorate ahead of elections expected next year when his brother, Nawaz, will be one of the candidates for prime minister.
Some enterprising students have put their computers up for sale on the internet or sold them to electrical stores, while education experts say Punjab should be spending its money on classrooms or blackboards.
Professor Pervez Hoodbhoy said a digital giveaway was not the answer to Pakistan's education crisis,
"The virtues that an education system ought to have – integrity, outreach, basic necessities - those have to be fulfilled before one gets into hi-tech glitzy stuff," he said.
However, supporters of the programme dismiss allegations of corruption.
They say laptops are only distributed to those who meet stringent criteria based on exam results and that each computer benefits an entire family not just an individual.
Mian Naseer, who sits in the Punjab Assembly for the PML-N party of Nawaz Sharif, said the criticism was motivated by political jealousy. Only students who hit exam targets were being given computers, he said.
"There is no corruption," he said. "This is something that should be done and should be done all over Pakistan."
A DFID spokesman said British cash was being used to fund stipends for girls so they can afford to go to school and being put towards low-cost schooling for the poorest.
"UK funding is not substituting Government of Punjab spend on education," he said. "In fact, the Government of Punjab has actually increased the amount it spends on education by around 13 per cent this year, thanks in large part to the work it has been doing with DFID."







Telegraph Uk
 
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jagga9

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
azaaad stupid media . why the hell u don't speak about this? Why the hell are you pushing us to drag bloooody anchors on the roads before we take on zardari, nawaz and co?
 

VivaPakistan

MPA (400+ posts)
Professor Pervez Hoodbhoy said a digital giveaway was not the answer to Pakistan's education crisis,
"The virtues that an education system ought to have – integrity, outreach, basic necessities - those have to be fulfilled before one gets into hi-tech glitzy stuff," he said.

Dear Professor, to understand and to work for what you are saying, one has to have some vision or at least have some brain or common sense. But unfortunately, not only Shareef's and Zardaries, majority of us lack that.



 

adeel ahmed1

MPA (400+ posts)
The primary education fund re-allocated by Punjab Govt. for laptop Scheme. Kia yai Primary School kai bachon kai sath ziadati nahi hai
 

truthinworld

MPA (400+ posts)
Critics believe the foreign cash has made it easier for Punjab's leaders to raid their own education budget to buy votes ahead of a general election expected early next year.

Telegraph Uk


It is Job of a CRITIC,
Nothing New.
What you can expect from a CRITIC?

And the case is already in Court.
 

Sedqal

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Shehbaz shareef exposed using foreign aid to buy votes - telegraph - must read
The title is deliberately misleading as the article only mentions different point of views they offer no proofs of using laptops for votes only narrate the accusation from one seat champion Immo. By the way Telegraph has written about Imo and his past debaucheries they never get mentioned by these self professed patriots (bigsmile)
 

insaf-seeker

Minister (2k+ posts)
Haroon ur Rashid nay 1 article likha tha jiss mein yeh inkishaaf kia tha keh Nawaz Sharif nay Zakat fund ka paisa bhi khaya tha, aur yeh baat Haroon ur Rashid nay buhat sey talk shows per bhi kahi hai, ager yeh jhoot hai tao PMLN ko Haroon ur Rashid ko court mein ley ker jana chahiye aur ager yeh sach hai tao lannnat hai un sab per bhi jo PMLN ko support kertay hain!!!
 

Bilal_Mushi

Minister (2k+ posts)
Pakistan politicians accused of squandering money on school laptops as British aid rolls in

Pakistan politicians accused of squandering money on school laptops as British aid rolls in

Millions of pounds of British taxpayers' money is being spent to encourage children to go to school in Pakistan's Punjab province, at the same time as local politicians are accused of squandering their education budget to buy votes with free laptops for students.

ImranKhanrii_2093470b.jpg

Pakistani cricketer turned politician Imran Khan Photo: RII SCHROER










By Rob Crilly, Islamabad




8:00PM BST 07 May 2012





The UK's Department for International Development (DFID) has given the Punjab government about 63m for education since 2009, as part of a grant that will eventually total 77m.



Critics believe the foreign cash has made it easier for Punjab's leaders to raid their own education budget to buy votes ahead of a general election expected early next year.



So far they have spent about 26m on 100,000 free computers and have promised to distribute another 300,000, worth a further 78m.



Imran Khan, the former Pakistani cricket captain and a contender to be the country's next president, said the laptops were a political gimmick.



"Time and again aid is a curse for Third World countries," he said. "It stops us making reforms. Rather than forcing the government to balance their budgets, in this case it is being used in election year to buy votes."



British aid officials insist that their cash is carefully monitored and is not being spent on laptops.
The controversy illustrates the fraught nature of giving aid to Pakistan. The country has one of the lowest rates of tax collection in the world at about 10 per cent of gross domestic product, compared with about 29 per cent for the UK - yet spends billions of dollars on a growing nuclear arsenal while collecting billions more in aid from donors.
Despite concerns about corruption, the country is to become the biggest recipient of British aid by 2015 receiving 446m in 2015.


The links are so tight that DFID has even installed Sir Michael Barber, former head of Tony Blair's Downing Street "delivery unit", as education adviser to Shahbaz Sharif, Punjab's chief minister.


At the same time, the laptop giveaway is hugely controversial in Pakistan, a country where 17m children are not in school and half the adult population is illiterate.

Shahbaz Sharif, the chief minister of Punjab, is accused of bribing the electorate ahead of elections expected next year when his brother, Nawaz, will be one of the candidates for prime minister.


Some enterprising students have put their computers up for sale on the internet or sold them to electrical stores, while education experts say Punjab should be spending its money on classrooms or blackboards.


Professor Pervez Hoodbhoy said a digital giveaway was not the answer to Pakistan's education crisis,
"The virtues that an education system ought to have integrity, outreach, basic necessities - those have to be fulfilled before one gets into hi-tech glitzy stuff," he said.


However, supporters of the programme dismiss allegations of corruption.
They say laptops are only distributed to those who meet stringent criteria based on exam results and that each computer benefits an entire family not just an individual.


Mian Naseer, who sits in the Punjab Assembly for the PML-N party of Nawaz Sharif, said the criticism was motivated by political jealousy. Only students who hit exam targets were being given computers, he said.


"There is no corruption," he said. "This is something that should be done and should be done all over Pakistan."
A DFID spokesman said British cash was being used to fund stipends for girls so they can afford to go to school and being put towards low-cost schooling for the poorest.


"UK funding is not substituting Government of Punjab spend on education," he said. "In fact, the Government of Punjab has actually increased the amount it spends on education by around 13 per cent this year, thanks in large part to the work it has been doing with DFID."

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...n-school-laptops-as-British-aid-rolls-in.html