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3,000 Afghan Students to Get Scholarships for Higher Studies in Pakistan

Continuing its tradition of lending a helping hand to Afghan brethren, higher education authorities in Pakistan have announced the award of educational scholarships for 3,000 Afghan students. The scholarships will allow Afghan students to receive fully-funded higher education in top universities across Pakistan.

A ceremony to mark the award was held on Thursday in Lahore with Punjab Governor Muhammad Rafiq Rajwana in the chair. Higher Education Commission (HEC) of Pakistan Chairman Dr Mukhtar Ahmed and Afghan Ambassador Omer Zakhilwal were also present.

The first batch of 3,000 students enrolled under the programme have already completed their degrees and returned to Afghanistan.

The scholarship awards have been made available under Allama Muhammad Iqbal Scholarship Programme. The programme was launched in 2009 and awards the scholarship over a five-year period. The first batch of 3,000 students enrolled under the programme have already completed their degrees and returned to Afghanistan. The scholarship has now been extended to include MPhil and PhD programmes as well. The awardees will be able to pursue higher education in various fields, including medicine, engineering, agriculture, management and computer science.

Addressing the ceremony HEC Chairman Dr Mukhtar Ahnmed said the commission believed in person-to-person and institution-to-institution relations. He said it was this belief due to which HEC had invited Afghan academicians to come live and work in Pakistan. “HEC will provide support in quality assurance and human resource development of the Afghan education system.” He said it was time to channel energies on constructive things instead of wasting time on destruction

Describing the selection of candidates, Dr Mukhtar said HEC had worked diligently with Afghan Ministry of Education to conduct tests in Afghanistan. “The merit list for MPhil and PhD programmes is also being processed,” he added.

Punjab Governor Rajwana said Pakistan always took pride in hosting Afghan students. “These students will become Pakistan’s ambassadors in Afghanistan once they return to their motherland,” he added.

Afghan Ambassador Omer Zakhilwal congratulated HEC for the scholarships, saying the two countries were “celebrating an important dimension of student exchange. It is the desire and wish of our people to keep good relations with Pakistanis”.

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No Varsity Asked to Annul Admissions: Punjab Higher Education Minister

The past few days have seen a confusion building over the fate of admissions in some degree programmes offered by 18 private universities in Punjab. However, Punjab Higher Education Minister Syed Raza Ali Gillani has stepped in to put the controversy to rest.

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Punjab Higher Education Dept Likely to Withdraw Notice Barring Admissions

The department had barred 18 private universities from offering admissions in various programs, but is likely to roll back the decision

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University Olympics? The Sooner, The Better

Aitchison vs Lawrence, Cambridge vs Oxford, Harvard vs Yale; these and thousands of other pairings of names define some of the fiercest and religiously-maintained rivalries among educational institutes around the world. The annual fixtures between Aitchison and Lawrence, The Game between Harvard and Yale and The Boat Race between Oxford and Cambridge have not only produced remarkable performances by athletes over decades, but they also unearthed talent that went on to bring laurels at various national and global stages.

Interschool, inter-collegiate and inter-university events were once the highlights of annual academic activities across Pakistan too. Debates, sports fixtures, drama fests, poetry and writing competitions; academic calendars were filled with such activities. Unfortunately, events as such have become few and far between in educational institutes across Pakistan of late.

Negative influence

This has led to two major problems. Educational institutes have become far too focused on enabling children get good grades and offer no real avenue for developing other aspects of their personalities. And secondly, youth have been reduced to scanning the internet in their free time, where predators of all kinds await with traps set.

This proneness to negative influence of students has become more concerning following the recent arrest of Karachi University students on suspicion of having connections with terrorist organizations. The failed assassination attempt on a provincial parliamentarian in Karachi has acted as a wakeup call, so far.

It has drew the government’s as well as university administrations’ attention towards providing healthy avenues to students that engage them in positive activities. Interior Minister Ahsan Iqbal has been especially active since the past few days, holding meetings with university heads and vice chancellors to find ways to contain rising extremism in youth.

On Thursday, September 21, which was observed as the International Day of Peace, the Interior Ministry and Higher Education Commission (HEC) of Pakistan held an event to announce the launch of Young Peace and Development Corps (YPDC). While Iqbal highlighted how YPDC will promote peace and tolerance among students and encouraged youth to refrain from violence, a remark by HEC chairman was what intrigued academimag.com.

University Olympics

In his address, Dr Mukhtar said HEC planned to organize University Olympics to promote co-curricular and extra-curricular activities among youth. If the plans are for real, we think the event could become a defining attribute of our education system and one that will go a long way in fighting rising radicalism in educational institutes.

Apart from the prestige of participation in a national-level event as such, the planned Olympics will offer students a chance to divert their energies towards constructive matters. We think that besides sports, the Olympics should have events like game design, arts and performing arts, debates and declamations and creative writing etc. Such events not only encourage students to develop essential skills needed in the real world like competitiveness and perseverance, they also contribute to the intellectual, moral, physical and social development of the participant.

Besides the Olympics, the HEC should also consider conferences and symposiums that involve students in constructive debates about the peaceful teachings of our religion. Engagement with religious scholars and learned members of the academia and constructive discussions on the messages of Islam is the only real way we can empower young minds with the knowledge needed to fight radicals.

HEC should ensure that its claims of taking effective measures against extremism do not turn out to be hollow slogans, and the plan of university Olympics gets put into action at the earliest.

 

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Continue Please: SHC Orders Reopening of Aisha Bawany College

Putting days of unease and speculation to rest, the Sindh High Court (SHC) on Thursday directed authorities to reopen Aisha Bawany College in Karachi. The court also directed law enforcement authorities to assist officials in getting the order implemented. Following the directives, the college was unlocked on Thursday and will remain in operation until a final verdict is passed in the case.