Showing posts with label Pakistan Affairs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistan Affairs. Show all posts

Monday, 17 October 2011

No small matter By Hajrah Mumtaz


MOST people would, at least initially, tend to shrug the matter away. Concerns about people’s ability to question the great and the good in government?
People’s ‘right’ to gain access to information about what public entities and departments are doing? Dream on, they’d say.
Let’s start with the right to food, water and a generally decent life; let’s start with some human rights.
Thought about just a little more deeply, though, the fallaciousness of this line of reasoning becomes clear. Why don’t a lot of people have access to food or potable water, for example? In general terms, because of mismanagement, the lack of planning and — here one can hear lots of voices piping up — that scourge of Pakistan, corruption. Most will get this far and start calling
for accountability. Fewer, though, will pause and think about what accountability means.
In the very first instance, someone who does something for which they ought to be held accountable later is a person who does not expect to be found out. In other words, certain knowledge that information can be withheld can allow dishonesty of purpose. Veils of secrecy make shady deals and wheels within wheels, or just plain inefficiency or even laziness, much more likely. The ability to keep information from getting out is the first box to tick on the list of any potential fraudster; the first crutch of those guilty of the dereliction of duty.
‘Knowledge is power’ is just about the oldest aphorism in the book. And a people with access to knowledge about those that rule over their lives and country — knowledge about how that task is accomplished — are very powerful indeed. So it is that access to information has always been at the heart of the tussle between bureaucracies the world over and the people: the latter want it, the former doesn’t want to cough it up because unsavoury secrets may come to light; accountability may occur.
Realising the role that access to information plays in fostering improved and more honest governance, many countries have enacted legislation making public access to certain sorts of information mandatory — the ‘transparency’, in short, that every Pakistani craves.
Technically, Pakistanis too have the right to freely access information. In fact, we were the first South Asian country to come up with a law in this regard, the Freedom of Information Ordinance 1997 which was later fine-tuned by the Musharraf government into the Freedom of Information Ordinance 2002.
However, many have argued that although this did, at least technically, give Pakistanis the legal tool to demand information from governmental bodies, it remains merely that: a technicality. In practice, the legislation is riddled with clauses that allow secrets to remains under wraps.
Its detractors — and there are a great many of them (the few proponents seemingly comprising stakeholders in secrecy in the bureaucracy itself) — say that exemptions and procedures given to governmental departments under the 2002 ordinance
are such that they render it virtually and practically ineffective.
There are other points of criticism as well, such as that it deals with only federal ministries and divisions (although two provinces subsequently passed their own legislation, i.e. the Balochistan Freedom of Information Act 2005 and the Sindh Freedom of Information Act 2006). Other criticisms are that the 2002 ordinance’s implementing mechanisms — means through which reluctant bureaucracies can be prodded into actually producing the information demanded — are such that they invite evasiveness, and that there is no protection for whistleblowers.
The civil bureaucracy wields considerable power anywhere in the world; it is a machine that runs under its own weight and is notoriously averse to letting any information out. Political circles everywhere seek to control it; as permanent secretary Sir Humphrey Appleby smirked during an episode of Yes, Minister, “ministers come and go, but I go on forever”. Transparency, one route to which is the right to information, is important in this regard. Pakistan has not been lacking in those demanding better legislation on people’s right to information, though one could wish there were a few more voices. Amongst them are a number of activists and reformers, some of whom have argued for this cause on these pages.
Amongst politicians, a staunch proponent has been former information and broadcasting minister Sherry Rehman. Last week, she submitted a draft of her Right to Information Bill before the National Assembly, a project she initiated in 2004 with the submission of an initial draft that called for deep-reaching amendments to the 2002 ordinance. Updated versions of the bill were also submitted for review in 2006 and 2008.
The 2011 Right to Information Bill seeks a repeal of the 2002 legislation and tries to close some of the gaps. There are more stringent implementing mechanism clauses, whistleblower-protection clauses and most interestingly, a clause that seeks to bring large private companies within the ambit of the law if and when it is approved.
If the new proposals do become law, they are likely to have at least some positive effect. Sporadic articles published in various newspapers over the years have documented individuals’ (failed) efforts, under the 2002 ordinance, to obtain information from various departments. In most cases, these people cited the loopholes in the legislation itself that allowed bureaucracies to retain their secrets.
On March 29, 2008 — soon after receiving a unanimous vote of confidence in parliament, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani set out his administration’s 100-day priorities.
Amongst those that remain unfulfilled well past the 100-day deadline is a new freedom of information law. And the 18th Amendment inserted Article 19(A) into the constitution, which explicitly recognises that every citizen shall have the right to have access to information in all matters of public importance (subject to regulation and reasonable restrictions imposed by law).
It’s about time these promises were fulfilled.

Saturday, 15 October 2011

Draft of new visa accord with India finalised


NEW DELHI: The Joint Working Group of Pakistan and India finalised a draft of a new visa agreement after examining modalities for streamlining visa procedures at a two-day meeting that concluded here on Friday.
The agreement is meant to ease travel between the two countries, said a joint statement issued after the second meeting of the working group.
The finalised draft of the agreement will be submitted to the two governments for approval for signing of the accord at an early date.
The meeting was a follow-up to the deliberations of the JWG’s first meeting held in Islamabad on June 2-3. It took place in pursuance of the decision taken during the India-Pakistan home/interior secretary-level talks held in New Delhi on March 28-29.
Anil Goswami, additional secretary (foreigners), ministry of home affairs, led the Indian delegation and Nasar Hayat, additional secretary, ministry of interior, headed the Pakistani team at the meeting.
“The discussions were held in a friendly and cordial atmosphere. The two sides finalised the draft text of the agreement which will be submitted to the respective governments for obtaining necessary approval in order to sign the agreement at an early date,” the Indian side was quoted as saying by Times of India in a statement.—APP

Fighting the dengue epidemic By Prof Dr Arif Nawaz


Dengue fever has continued to haunt mankind for the last several centuries with historical accounts of this disease from Africa which are between five to six hundred years old. The first outbreaks of dengue fever reached Asia, South America and Africa concurrently in the 1780s. Now this disease is endemic in several regions including Southeast Asia, Latin America, Asia, and the Caribbean; areas with a high vector population of the mosquitoes that causes the disease, theAedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. Dengue fever has become aprominent infectious disease with outbreaks in as many as 120 countries of the world. The annual disease burden of this disease has reached 40 million with dengue becoming the second-most prevalent mosquito-borne infection after malaria in recent decades.
The illness causes significant morbidity with the cases of dengue haemorrhagic fever (which is a complicated form of this disease) touching several thousand a year. This disease was eliminated from Pakistan in the 1970s only to reappear in 1994. The recent epidemic of dengue fever in the country has been one of the biggest in the history of this country. Attention has been refocused on this condition due to the scale of devastation it has caused, in terms of health care related and economic costs.
Several countries including Sri Lanka have taken measures including case surveillance, research and interventions designed to eradicate the vector for this disease. Unfortunately, Pakistan has lagged behind in this respect. Health and economic research specific to dengue is urgently needed to ensure informed decision-making on the various options for controlling and preventing this disease. Several organisations, including various academic institutions and non-governmental organisations have initiated projects designed to address the menace of dengue fever. One such effort is the research being conducted by the Fatima Memorial System and Hospital in Lahore in collaboration with the University of Punjab.
While significant effort is on at the global level to institutionalise health research within the health care systems of countries, the developing countries are not benefitting from these endeavours owing to their severe health research capacity constraints. Pakistan too has to date not benefitted from the global initiatives to strengthen health research in developing countries. More than ever before our country needs to develop informed policies and implement evidence-based interventions to protect and promote the health of its people, curtail wasteful expenditure and thus accelerate its economic development.
The options for controlling this disease at this time include vector control and optimal medical therapy for the effected patients. Both these interventions are limited in several ways in their ability to eliminate this disease. A dengue vaccine would fill a substantial need as almost 3.6 billion people are at risk from this potentially fatal infection. Vaccines are in the process of development at this time and preliminary trials have given us hope of being able to control this disease. Development of vaccines has, however, been complicated by the need to immunise against all four serotypes of this virus simultaneously. There are currently at least six vaccines in various phases of clinical trials. It is anticipated that a safe and effective vaccines will be licensed for dengue fever in the next five years.

Dawn Editorial - Crime and terrorism + Polio Cases


MILITANCY and terrorism in Pakistan is a hydra-headed monster. Experience has shown that even when the security forces achieve success in one area, their efforts do not succeed in killing the monster. By necessity, therefore, countering the threat requires concerted, multi-pronged efforts that target various aspects simultaneously, across the law and order spectrum. How crucial this last aspect is can be gauged from increasing evidence about links between the Pakistani Taliban and street crime as described in a recent news report. Increasingly, insurgents are raising funds for their activities through bank heists, kidnappings for ransom and extortion. Drawing upon a network of malcontents and for-hire criminals across the country, they are blamed for masterminding or carrying out crimes to fund their insurgency. In doing so, they add to the crime wave and contribute to further erosion of the people`s confidence in the state and intensification of fear. The Taliban hand, through the `Black Night` group, is said to have been behind a June raid on a Dera Ismail Khan bank; in Karachi, the Taliban are thought to have been behind three of four bank robberies carried out this year which netted $2.3m. Similar links have been found in numerous abduction and extortion cases.
The shift in sources is a simple equation. US and Pakistani military offensives have killed or sidelined many mid-level and senior commanders who were, in a number of cases, men with links to international funding networks. Meanwhile, greater scrutiny of money transfers has made it harder to send funds around the world. Countering this phenomenon will require cooperation and intelligence-sharing between the civil and military law-enforcement agencies. Only if both are equally well-equipped and trained, and are working in tandem to combat a common enemy, can there be any hope. Without that, both arms of the security forces will continue to address the problem in a piecemeal and ultimately ineffective fashion. As for the Taliban, the logic under which they justify their turning to crime is despicable. Although they advertise their war as being one of a religious hue, their tactics expose the hollowness of their ideology.
New polio cases
A REPORT in this newspaper on Thursday says five fresh polio cases have been detected in Balochistan, bringing the number of children affected by the virus in Pakistan this year to over 100. Balochistan leads this unfortunate count with nearly 50 cases. Another alarming development is that a boy in Karachi`s Gadap Town, who reportedly received anti-polio drops seven times, is among the recent victims. It is worrisome that there are increasing reports of children in different parts of the country contracting polio despite receiving numerous doses of the vaccine. This raises questions about the efficacy of the polio vaccine; perhaps there are issues with the way it is being stored and handled. Reports that the virus has been detec-ted in Multan, Lahore and Rawalpindi are also cause for concern.
The state`s health authorities as well as international experts need to investigate why there have been cases of infection despite the vaccine being administered multiple times. If the vaccine`s efficacy has been compromised, the problem must be rectified immediately. The state also needs to monitor migrant and mobile populations who play a major role in transmitting the virus from high-risk to hitherto `clean` zones. For example, the highest number of polio cases was reported from Balochistan`s Qilla Abdullah district which borders Afghanistan. Pakistan and Afghanistan — both endemic countries — re-infect each other due to the regular movement of people between them. The World Health Organisation has recommended that mobile and migrant populations be mapped in order to keep track of polio`s spread. The state needs to implement this recommendation to the fullest and plug the loopholes. Failure to do so will have consequences apart from the health risk: the World Bank has warned that a $40m grant will be converted into a loan due to Pakistan`s poor response to the fight against polio.

Power politics Irfan Husain


YOU may not win an election by providing regular electricity, but you can easily lose one by failing to.
At the last general elections in 2008, the ruling PML-Q got hammered because of its failure to add to the national grid despite rising demand. The resulting loadshedding was a principal cause of its rout.
I recall all too well the claim of the ex (and forgotten) prime minister, Shaukat Aziz, that he would export surplus electricity to India. Luckily, negotiations broke down over the price, otherwise we would no doubt have been sued for breach of contract.A friend in England recently asked me about the riots in Punjab over the extended power cuts that were running to 20 hours in some areas. When I got to the notion of ‘circular debt’ in my explanation, I could see his eyes glazing over. He just could not cope with the concept of the government not paying its electricity bills.
And this, of course, lies at the heart of the present crisis. If public and private power-generating companies aren’t paid in time, they can’t pay their bills for the oil and gas they need. And when suppliers aren’t paid, they are forced to cut deliveries. This reduces power availability, and the lights go out across the country. Simple cause and effect.
In a recent article in these pages (‘Is circular debt the real issue?’ By Salman Khalid and Kamal Munir), the authors have argued that the real problem goes back to 1994 when the traditional 70:30 hydro-thermal ratio was changed, and a very generous tariff policy for independent power producers (IPPs) announced. Khalid and Munir argue that we need to increase hydro-electrical capacity, and use indigenous coal to generate power.
There is considerable merit in this argument. However, these are long-term solutions: people sweltering in the dark are
unwilling to wait for a dysfunctional government to do what several of its predecessors have been unable to for decades.
Building dams takes a lot of time and money, neither of which we have. And coal from Thar is reportedly of poor quality with a low calorific content. In any case, it will be several years before it can actually be used for power generation.
Even though Khalid and Munir term circular debt a ‘red herring’, it is nevertheless devastating the economy and has serious social and political implications. In a recent article on Pakistan’s energy crisis, the Economist came up with a figure of $6bn as the amount outstanding in the shape of circular debt. It also cites an estimated loss of three to four per cent of GDP as the cost of the power shortages.
The bankruptcy of the government’s energy policy was laid bare when the finance minister recently announced the federal cabinet’s plan to tackle the crisis. This included the decision to shut down offices for two days a week, and to close markets at sunset. Neither step has been greeted with rapturous applause by either the provincial governments of Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa or the business community.
One little-reported aspect of the whole mess was highlighted in a series of cables sent by the previous US ambassador to Pakistan, Anne Patterson. Revealed by WikiLeaks in this newspaper, they focus pitilessly on the cumbersome bureaucracy that is choking off any possibility of improvement. Patterson wrote in April 2008:
“The unbundling of the power sector has resulted in the formation of 14 corporate entities; three power-generation companies, one national transmission and power despatch company (NTDC) and nine distribution companies. These companies are each working under independent boards of directors. Yet, Wapda still controls the finances of all these companies and in turn must get permission from the Ministry of Water and Power to make payments to each entity.
“…While many proposals exist for creating new power generation, turf wars for operational control among the ministries and agencies have seriously slowed or completely halted the approval processes. …Timely decisions were not taken to utilise all available resources and no agency or ministry has the lead in implementing the National Energy Strategy.”
The cables paint a dark but accurate picture of the fallout of this confusion and neglect:
“With massive blackouts affecting every region and every demographic, energy policy and shortages are daily front-page news. Not a single megawatt of electricity has been added to Pakistan’s national grid since 2000 despite record-breaking economic growth and population expansion. With economic and manufacturing capacity slumping due to power outages, unemployment is increasing while tempers and temperatures are rising.”
I know we hate hearing the truth, especially from the Americans, but I would urge readers to go through the WikiLeaks cables that can be accessed on this newspaper’s website.
The Economist has also commented on the confusion and corruption surrounding the energy shortfall: “…the government of Asif Zardari has done little as the energy crisis has grown, dithering over its strategy even as it cooks up new schemes for new power plants to enrich its cronies. In the process, the government has squandered billions of dollars.” Had a few of these billions been directed towards clearing the circular debt, people in Lahore and elsewhere would not have taken to the streets.
Apart from the issue of unpaid bills, the problem of electricity theft and transmission losses of an estimated 30 per cent of generated power has not yet been tackled seriously.
In a land blessed with fast-flowing rivers, there is no reason for us not to increase our hydel capacity to lower electricity cost.
But as we saw during the Kalabagh dam controversy, people are very sensitive about the location of water storage lakes:
nobody wants their backyards inundated. But more importantly, those downriver don’t want to see their share of scarce water
further reduced.
Thus, Sindh has good reason to fear a further depletion of the life-giving Indus if more dams are built upstream. Farmers have seen canals irrigating their fields dwindle over the years. There is a serious inter-provincial trust deficit that will have to be addressed.
Above all, we need clarity of purpose if we are to solve this perpetual problem. What we don’t need is bureaucratic confusion and foot-dragging. Even more importantly, we need fewer snouts in the public exchequer trough.

The making of the modern maulvi By Ajmal Kamal Tribune Opinion & Analysis


Maulana Ashraf Ali Thanvi opposed the Khilafat movement so fiercely that he was willing to sacrifice his life for the cause of opposing it. His Malfoozat have the following entry concerning the events. “During the peak days of the Tehreek-e-Khilafat, fiery people were in a state of great rage. There was fire all around. Matters came to such a pass that in addition to abuses, condemnations and sundry allegations, I began receiving letters containing death threats in case I did not join it. Hazrat Maulana Khalil Ahmad Sahib (RA), out of his extreme fondness for me, sent a special envoy to me with his advice that I should consider the dangerous times and if I decided to participate just a little bit only formally, there was room [in the religious sense]. I sent my reply that what he said certainly showed his affection, but the biggest threat was that of losing one’s life, for which I was prepared. However, I was neither willing to participate without being convinced [of the movement being correct] nor could I participate outwardly and remain aloof from the inside, as I considered it hypocrisy. So, behamdillah, I am alive and well before you today. These people have made it like a game for little girls: Either do as we do, or else get killed. During those days I went to the jungle as was my morning routine. On my way I met a Hindu Rajput old man, also from Thana Bhavan. The old-fashioned and elderly Hindus too have affection for me. He said, Maulvi-ji, do you have any idea what kind of things are being proposed for you? You should not come to the jungle alone like this. I said, Chaudhry, I know that, and I also know something that you do not know. He asked me what that was. I said, Without His order nobody can do anything. Despite being Hindu, he was so impressed by it that he exclaimed, Maulvi-ji, you may go wherever you feel like without any jokham (danger). For a man like you, jungle and mountains are no different from home.”
The leaders of the Khilafat movement, apart from collecting donations for the aid of the Ottoman Turks (which, according to reports, never made it to them), asked the Indian Muslims to quit their military or civilian jobs with the British colonial government because it was involved in a world war in which the Ottoman Khalifa had chosen to be in the opposite camp. Apart from producing a lot of sound and fury, such appeals remained largely ineffective, and the process of socio-economic change, initiated as a result of the policies of the colonial government continued. Thanvi, obviously, was opposed to any such adventure. Not only was his brother a district-level employee of the government, a large number of his mureeds and even khulifas, including his official biographer, were in the service of the government.
An offshoot of the same Khilafat movement was what is calledTehreek-e-Hijrat. Although Thanvi chooses to blame the Congress for it, fact is that it was the Deobandi maulvis belonging to Jamiat-ul Ulema-e-Hind (JUH) who, in their infinite wisdom, declared the subcontinent unfit for Muslims to live. They issued a religious fatwafor the shurafa Muslims, who could not undertake jihad against the British government for obvious reasons, to migrate to Afghanistan. The fatwa was obviously not directed at the vast majority of South Asian Muslims who were converts from lower castes and had no reason to feel any historical, ancestral or strategic affiliation with Afghanistan. Perhaps we could discern in this fantastic fatwa of the modern followers of Shah Waliullah an early version of what we today know as ‘strategic depth’, according to which it is presumed that the poor Afghans have a duty to let their land be used to enable ‘us’ to realise our regional, international, Pan-Islamic or whatever dream. Thousands upon thousands of starry-eyed Muslims sold their property and crossed the northwestern border into Afghanistan. The Afghans and their King Amanullah Khan, who could have no truck with the peculiar worldview of the Indian maulvis, felt that their country was unable to host so many uninvited guests, and so the borders were sealed to stop further migration. Those who had already landed there met a tragic fate, many of them even losing their lives.
When commenting on the ideas of Hijrat and quitting government jobs in his Malfoozat, Thanvis does not challenge the religious interpretation which provided the basis of the JUH fatwa. Curiously enough, he avoids even mentioning it. Instead he blames some ‘resolution’ (probably a Congress resolution) for it. He writes: “In the times of the Khilafat movement, a resolution was passed for Hijrat. Muslims stood up saying labbaik to it. Thousands of Muslims were made homeless as a result. Everyone knows its effect on the community (zaat) of Muslims. Then it was advised that they should quit government jobs. Those who had lost their minds (‘jin ki matain mari gayi theen’) left their jobs. The vacancies created by Muslims leaving their jobs were filled by Hindus. Many of them have still not found employment (‘ab tak jootian chatkhate phirte hain’). I receive letters in which people write that they had taken that stupid step then, and till now they are jobless and worried.”
Another tragic incident that took place as a result of Khilafat movement, which has been all but forgotten by our North-centric historians, was the armed rebellion of the Moplah Muslims in the southern region of Malabar in which around 10,000 people (including about 2,500 rebels) were killed, many more injured, and 20,000 deported to Kala Pani or the Andaman Islands. Thanvi comments on these events: “The nation (qaum) of Moplahs was destroyed by these leaders and the maulvis following them who lectured and flared them up. Their passions were aroused as they were of Arab descent. And then everyone knows what happened to them.”
Published in The Express Tribune, October 15th, 2011.

Friday, 14 October 2011

PAKISTAN: Children in 2005 quake zone still lack schools

PESHAWAR, 11 October 2011 (IRIN) - Zawar Khan, 13, can only recall a little of what he had been learning at school till six years ago.

“I still remember my numbers, how to write my name and a few other basic words, but not much else,” Zawar, now a waiter at a tea stall in Peshawar, capital of the Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa Province (KP), told IRIN.

Zawar’s life was altered forever by the 8 October 2005 quake which killed 73,000 people in Pakistan-administered Kashmir and KP. His family moved to Peshawar four years later in 2009, mainly because his school in KP’s Shangla District, one of the regions worst hit by the quake, had not been rebuilt.

“My family wanted me to study, but since there was no longer a school for me to attend, we decided to move so I could find work. We need the income as my father injured his leg in the quake and can now only do limited labour,” Zawar said. 

According to figures from the Earthquake Relief and Rehabilitation Authority (ERRA) set up in the aftermath of the quake, 204 schools were destroyed in Shangla and another 319 damaged by the disaster. Around 13,000 pupils in the district were affected.Speaking to IRIN from Shangla, Latifur Rehaman, an official in the District Reconstruction Unit, said “60 schools have already been reconstructed” and that these were now operating “normally”. He said funding constraints had delayed the construction of the remaining schools, but hoped they would be completed within two years.According to ERRA, across the earthquake zone, of the 5,751 educational institutions requiring reconstruction, 73 percent had been completed by the start of September 2011. This has, however, meant that many children have not been able to go to school for a long time.Some teachers in Shangla are struggling to cope in wretched conditions. “I teach the village children the best I can - in the broken down verandah of the school that once stood here, but it is not easy and many children have dropped out,” Sirajuddin Muhammad, 50, said from a village near the town of Besham in Shangla District. He said the state of the building meant “freezing conditions through the winter when many children stay away”.
''I teach the village children the best I can - in the broken down verandah of the school that once stood here''
Shattered dreamsWhile the failure to rebuild schools has been a key reason for the disruption of education in Shangla District and other quake-hit areas, other factors, too, have affected people’s education.“My mother died in the quake. As the eldest daughter in the family, I took over the household chores and the care of my three younger siblings,” said Azra Bibi, now 16. “I had once hoped to be a doctor. That dream has gone, but I do make sure my sisters pay attention to their studies at the new school constructed here.”Many parents worry. “I have educated my three children at home for four years. But I am not well read, I worry about their future and hope the school being built here will start functioning soon,” said Rehmat Ali, 35, from his village in Shangla.International agencies such as Oxfam have also expressed concern over the failure to keep promises made in 2005, immediately after the quake. Oxfam believes better disaster-prepardness is also essential to mitigate future disasters. “Everyone is aware of how disasters have taken their toll in Pakistan and how they are continuing to put people at the brink of desperation. Until we start preparing for these events and having systems in place to cope in an effective and properly invested way, the vicious circle of suffering will continue to affect millions," said Neva Khan, country director of Oxfam in Pakistan, in a press release.“So many children in Shangla and other areas died under the debris of poorly built schools. We hope the authorities have taken measures to ensure this never happens again,” said Rehmat Ali. According to UNICEF, some 17,000 schoolchildren were killed in the 2005 quake. Many of those who survived still face an uncertain future.


Pakistan Affairs 2008- CSS Past Paper


FEDERAL PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION
COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION FOR RECRUITMENT TO POST
IN BPS-17 UNDER THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT,
Year: 2008
GENERAL KNOWLEDGE, PAPER-I
PAKISTAN AFFAIRS
TIME ALLOWED: 3 HOURS…………………..Maximum Marks: 100
PART-I MCQS

Q.1 Select the best option/answer and fill in the appropriate box on the answer sheet.
i. Mahmud of Ghazni waged war against rebellious India in the year of:

a. 900
b. 1000
c. 1100
d. None of these

ii. Shahab-ud-Din Muhammad Ghuri defeated Pirthviraj in the year 1192 in the field of:

a. Panipat
b. Nagpur
c. Tarori
d. None of these

iii. Qutb-ud-Din Aibak was succeeded on Delhi throne by:

a. Aram Shah
b. Iltumish
c. Razia Sultana
d. None of these

iv. The downfall of Muslim rule in India started with the demise of:

a. Akbar
b. Aurangzeb
c. Bahadur Shah Zafar
d. None of these

v. The Holy Quran was first translated into Persian by:

a. Shah Ismail Shaheed
b. Shaikh Ahmad Sirhindi
c. Shah Waliullah
d. None of these

vi. Anjuman-e-Islamia Punjab was founded for the renaissance of Islam in the year:

a. 1849
b. 1859
c. 1869
d. None of these

vii. “Pakistan’s Constitution should incorporate the essential principles of Islam, which are as good and relevant in our day, as were 1300 years ago. But Pakistan should not be a theocratic state ruled by priests.” This statement was given by:

a. Sir Syed Ahmad Khan
b. Allama Iqbal
c. Quaid-e-Azam
d. None of these

viii. Who was appointed first President of Muslim league?

a. Nawab Mohsin-ul-Mulk
b. Nawab Viqar-ul-Mulk
c. Nawab Saleem Ullah
d. None of these

ix. Who divided Bengal into East and West Bengal in July 1905?

a. Lord Curzon
b. Lord Minto
c. Lord Morely
d. None of these

x. Dyarchy was first introduced in the Act of:

a. 1909
b. 1919
c. 1935
d. None of these.

xi. The resolution of non-cooperation with British Government was passed in the meeting of All India National Congress in 1920, which was held at:

a. Madras
b. Bomby
c. Nagpur
d. None of these

xii. The Simon Commission arrived in India on:

a. 3rd February, 1927
b. 3rd February, 1928
c. 3rd February, 1929
d. None of these

xiii. The British Prime Minister Ramsay Macdonald announced the Communal Award in 1932 at the end of:

a. First Round Table Conference
b. Second Round Table Conference
c. Third Round Table Conference
d. None of these

xiv. All India Muslim League observed the “Direct Action Day” on:

a. August 6, 1944
b. August 6, 1945
c. August 6, 1946
d. None of these.

xv. Objective Resolution was passed by the Constituent Assembly of Pakistan on:

a. March 12, 1947
b. March 12, 1948
c. March 12, 1949
d. None of these

xvi. With regard the division of power between Federation and Provinces the Constitution of Pakistan (1962) was provided with:

a. Single list of subjects
b. Two lists of subjects
c. Three lists of subjects
d. None of these

xvii. The height of Pakistan’s highest mountain Pak-Godwin Austin is as high as:

a. 26, 250 ft
b. 27, 250 ft
c. 28, 250 ft
d. None of these

xviii. The Government of Pakistan established the Indus River System Authority in the year:

a. 1960
b. 1970
c. 1980
d. None of these

xix. Under the Indus Water Treaty of 1960 Pakistan has the right to use exclusively the water of:

a. Ravi, Sutleg and Chenab
b. Sutleg, Chenab and Jhelum
c. Chenab, Jhelum and Indus
d. None of these

xx. At present Pakistan has vast natural resources and items of mineral as many as:

a. 14 items
b. 15 items
c. 16 items
d. None of these.
PART-II
Q.2. What influence Shaikh Ahmad Sirhindi has left on the history of Muslims of India? Discuss critically. (20)

Q.3. Aligarh Movement injected a new life in the dead body of the Muslim nation and helped to regain its lost glory and prestige. Discuss. (20)

Q.4. Quaid-e-Azam was the ambassador of “Hindu-Muslim Unity”. Discuss it in perspective of Lukhnow Pact and what future vision depicted from the pact? (20)

Q.5. The proposals of “Cabinet Mission” (1946) could defer the establishment of Pakistan, if accepted by Muslim League. Evaluate Critically. (20)

Q.6. The Constitution of Pakistan (1973) is the “mouth piece of Islam”. Discuss. (20)

Q.7. What is “Judicial Activism”? Has it brought Pak-Judiciary in the state of morality in the recent past? Give suggestion for the independence of Judiciary. (20)

Q.8. What are principal industries of Pakistan and what problems Government of Pakistan is facing for its industrial development? (20)

*****************************

Pakistan Affairs 2010- CSS Past Paper


FEDERAL PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION
COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION FOR RECRUITMENT TO POST
IN BPS-17 UNDER THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT,
Year: 2010
GENERAL KNOWLEDGE, PAPER-I
PAKISTAN AFFAIRS


Part I
1.name the saint,who first came in lahore.

A.Ali Makhdum Hujwari
B.Shaikh ismail
c.data gunj baksh
d.none of these.

2.Ghiyas-ud-din balban declared himself king of delhi sultanate in the year

a.1166
b.1266
c.1366
d.none of these

3.who founded daulatabad and shifted the capital of delhi sultanate?

A.Ghiyas-ud-din Tughluq
b.muhammad tughluq
c.feroze shah tughluq
d.none of these

4.who set up the chain of justice to redress the grievances of oppressed people?

A.zaheer-ud-din babar
b.shahab-ud-din shahjahan
c.aurangzeb alimgir
d.none of these

5.who was known in history as Mujaddid Alf Thani,the reformer of second millenium?

A.shaikh ahmed sirhindi
b.shah waliullah
c.sir syed ahmed khan
d.none of these

6.who called the"spiritual guide"as shopkeepers?

A.shaikh ahmed sirhindi
b.shah waliullah
c.sir syed ahmed khan
d.none of these

7.when nadva-tul-ulema came into being?

A.1873
b.1883
c.1893
d.none of these

8.who initiated the cult of shivaji against the muslims of india?

A.bal ganga dher tilak
b.bennerji
c.pandit madan mohan
d.none of these

9.who led simla deputation in 1906?

A.sir agha khan
b.sir syed ahmed khan
c.nawab muhsin ul mulk.
d.none of these

10.when nehru committee was constituted to propose the future constitution of India?

A.feb 1927
b.feb 1928
c.feb 1929
d.none of these

11.when the congress ministries resigned from their offices?

A.nov 1927
b.feb 1928
c.feb 1929
d.none of these

12.who first thought of the possibility of a muslim republic embracing the present central asian states in north west of sub-continent?

A.abdul halim sharar
b.syed jamal ud din afghani
c.ch.rehmat ali
d.none of these

13.when simla conference was concluded with failure?

A.june14,1945
b.july14,1945
c.aug14,1945
d.none of these

14.who negotiated with cabinet mission(1946)on behalf of all india national congress?

A.ghandi
b.nehru
c.a.k.azad
d.none of these

15.when abu ala maududi was awarded death punishment by military court on"qadiani issue"?

A.march 1953
b.april 1953
c.may 1953
d.none of these

16.muhammad ali bogra,the then p.m of pak,presented his constitutional formula to the constituent assembly on

a.sep7,1953
b.oct7,1953
c.nov7,1953
d.none of these

17.when was the 17th amendment bill ratified by the president,after getting passed by both houses of majlis e shura?

A.dec29,2003
b.dec30,2003
c.dec31,2003
d.none of these

18.when was the local govt.system under the devolution of power plan,2001,inaugurated?

A.aug4,2001
b.aug14,2001
c.aug 24,2001
d.none of these

19.when was gas(natural)discovered at sui baluchistan?

A.1950
b.1952
c.1954
d.none of these

20.the suleman mountain,one of the western,is as high as

a,1100ft
b,2200ft
c,3300ft
d,none of these
Part II

Q2. Shah Waliullah realised "The renaissance of Islam and Muslim Society can not be affected until the intellectual life of the Muslims is re-oriented." Discuss Critically.

Q3. Aligarh and Deoband movements had great contrast in their views and mission and their leaders were at daggers drawn with each other. Discuss

Q4. How far is it correct to say Quaid-i-Azam consolidated the nascent state of Pakistan? Comment.

Q5. Why military of Pakistan intervened in Pakistan's politics? What is the role of the present leadership to de-politicize army? Give specific measures.

Q6. What is meant by National Reconciliation? What are it's ingredients? Can we equate National Reconciliation with National Reconciliation Ordinance?

Q7. Compare and contrast the resistance movement of East Pakistan with the present movement of Baluchistan. Suggest remedies.

Q8. Pakistan's industry is providing jobs to various categories of workers and is earning foreign exchange for the country. Comment.

Pakistan Affairs 2011- CSS Past Paper


FEDERAL PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION
COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION FOR RECRUITMENT TO POST
IN BPS-17 UNDER THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT,
Year: 2011
GENERAL KNOWLEDGE, PAPER-I
PAKISTAN AFFAIRS

PART-I
MCQ’S


Q.1 Select the best option/answer and fill in the appropriate box on the answer sheet.

(i) Who recalled Muhammad Bin Qasim from Sindh?
(a) Caliph Walid
(b) Caliph Sulaiman
(c) Caliph Abdul Aziz
(d) None of these

(ii) What was thereal name Shah Waliullah?
(a) Qutubddin Ahmed Faruqi
(b) Qutubddin Ahmed Siddiqui
(c) QUtubddin Ahmed Syed 
(d) None of these

(iii) Who was formal teacher of Syed Ahmed Barelvi?
(a) Sheikh Ahmed Sirhandi
(b) Shah Walliullah
(c) Shah Abdul Aziz
(d) None of these

(iv) Who for the first time translated the Holy QUran in Urdu language?
(a) Shah Walliullah and Shah Abdul Aziz
(b) Shah Abdul Qadir and Shah Rafiuddin
(c) Syed Ahmed Baralvi and Shah Ismail Dehlvi
(d) None of these

(v) Faraizi Movemnents was primarily a religious movemtn. What change Dudhu Mian brought in the movemtn?
(a) Transferred it into a gurreilla movement
(b) Transferred it into a political movement
(c) Transferred it into a Cultural movement
(d) None of these

(vi) Which of the following was/were the drawback(s) of the government of Indian Act 1858?
(a) Control of the Secratery of State for India and his council was bureaucratic in nature
(b) Expencese of the Secratery of State for India and his Council became a burden on Indian revenues:
(c) Both of these
(d) None of these




(vii) By how many member(s) the Executive Council of the Governor General was enlarged under the Indian Council Act of 1861 ?
(a) One member
(b) Two members
(c) Four members
(d) None of these

(viii) As per the Govermnet of Indain Act 1858, the transfer of the contaol of the Government of Indian from the East Indian Company and assumption by the Crown was to be announced by Queen’s Proclamation, which was accordinly read in a Darbar. Where was this Darbar held?
(a) Calcuta
(b) Delhi
(c) Allahabad
(d) None of these

(ix) Where, during the War of Independence, was Sir Syed Ahmed Khan woking/ posted.
(a) Delhi 
(b) Bijnaur
(c) Aligarh
(d) None of these

(x) Sir Syed Ahmed Khan established a Treanslation Society (later, renamed as ‘Scientific society’) in 1864. In which town was it founded?
(a) Bijnaur
(b) Aligarh
(c) Ghazipur
(d) None of these

(xi) In 1867, some promienent Hindus of Banares Launched a movement for the replacement of Urde written in Nasta’leeq by Hindi written in Deva Nagiri script as the Court language. In which province(s) was this movement started?
(a) Bengal Province
(b) Central Provinces
(c) North-western Provinces
(d) None of these

(xii) What was the designation of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan in M.A.O school at Aligarh?
(a) Secretary, Managing Committee
(b) President, Managing Committee
(c) Parton, Managing Committee
(d) None of these


(xiii) Which organization is considered the first Muslim political body contitured to represt the Muslims of the subcontinewnt as a whole? 
(a) Anjuman-e-Mussalmanan-e-Hind
(b) Central National Mohammadan Association
(c) Urdu Defence Association 
(d) None of these

(xiv) Mention the importance annoucments(s) that was/were made by the Governor General Lord Hardinge in thie Darbar at Delhi in 1911?
(a) Annulment of the partition of Bengal
(b) Transfer of Capital from Calcutta to Delhi
(c) Both of these
(d) None of these

(xv) Which Muslim leader left the politics after the cancellation of the partition of Bengal?
(a) Nawab Salimullah Khan
(b) Nawab Waqar-ul-Mulk
(c) Nawab Hamidullah Khan
(d) None of these

(xvi) First sesstion of All-indian Muslim League was helo on 29-30 December 19074. where was it held?
(a) Lahore
(b) Aligarh
(c) Karachi
(d) None of these

(xvii) “Few individuals significantly alter the source of history. Fewer still modify the map of the world. Hardly anuone can be created with creating a nation-state. Mohammad Ali Jinnah did all three”. Who made these remarks about Quaid-e-Azam?
(a) Stanley Wolpert
(b) Ian Stephens
(c) Lawrence Ziring 
(d) None of these

(xviii) The All-indian Muslim League observed ‘Day of Delivernce’ after the resignation of the All-India Congress minstereis. On what date was it observed?
(a) 22 octuber 1938
(b) 22 December 1938
(c) 22 October 1939
(d) None of these

(xix) Who was the first leader of opposition in the first National Assembly constituted under the 1962 contitution of Pakistan?
(a) Sardar Bahadur Khan
(b) Khan. A sabur
(c) Mumtaz Daultana
(d) None of these

(xx) In which year Pakistan become ‘Republic’?
(a) 1947
(b) 1956
(c) 1962
(d) None of these


PART-II

Q.2 Briefly analyze and discuss the contribution of the religious reforms – Shaik Ahmed Sirhandi, Shah Walliullah, Syed Ahmed Barelvi and the like – in the growth of Muslim consciousness in the South-Asian subcontinent.

Q.3 John Plamentaz defines ‘Nationalism’ as “the desire to preserve or enhance peoples national or cultural identity, when that identity is threatened or the desire to transform or even create it when it is felt to be inadequate or lacking.”
In the light of above definition, briefly but comprehensively discuss the respective role played by Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, Allama Iqbal and the Quaid-e-Azam in strengthening the Muslim nationalism in India.

Q.4 Describe the main content and relative importance of the Lucknow Pact and Delhi Muslim Proposals and their respective impact on the subsequent political development in India.

Q.5 Can the Lahore Resolution be termed as the ‘Magna Carta’ of Pakistan? Take a position and support your argument by historical facts, if any.

Q.6 Give a critical appraisal of the constitutional crises/crises initiated by the controversial actions taken by Governor General Ghulam Muhammad and endorsed by the superior Court of Pakistan. Discuss and analyze its effects on the subsequent history of Pakistan.

Q.7 Federalism has been a continuing cause of political tension in our country. Will the 18th amendment made in the constitution by the present Government solve this issue for all? Take a position and support with your argument.

Q.8 Given the problems that Pakistan is facing today, what is your vision of Pakistan in the year 2011? How, in your opinion, can be its internal and external problems solved?