Lyari’s children miss out on education as community struggles

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Students at Mazharul Uloom government girls’ school in Lyari. (AN Photo)
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Students at Mazharul Uloom government girls’ school in Lyari are taught about different colors. (AN Photo)
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Razia, a grade one student, is telling her classmate about the colors. (AN Photo)
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Miss Shaista teaches first-grade students about different colors. (AN Photo)
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Azra Aqeel, a tenth grader at Mazharul Uloom Government girls’ school, Khadda Market, says the best facilities and modern teaching methods make learning enjoyable for students and help decrease the dropout ratio. (AN Photo)
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Lack of basic facilities for his daughter persuaded local elder Abdul Latif Dosai to motivate community leaders to uplift the girls’ school in Lyari. (AN Photo)
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The communities are making classrooms more attractive for the children. (AN Photo)
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Aziz-ur-Rahman, a teacher associated with DCTO Government School for the past 34 years, says the school’s quality is much-improved since it was taken over by private donors. (AN Photo)
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DCTO Government School, one of the oldest schools from pre-partition Sindh and originally established in the 1930s by Deepchand T. Ojha, now has a modern look after it was taken over by Kiran Foundation in 2014. The school has nearly 600 students, teacher Aziz-ur-Rahman told Arab News. (AN Photo)
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Shahryar is a dropout child who works at an electrical shop at Khadda Market, Lyari. (AN Photo)
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Muhammad Yasir (R) says he is ready to rejoin school if someone takes responsibility of feeding his family. (AN Photo)
Updated 18 November 2018
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Lyari’s children miss out on education as community struggles

  • Locals say school dropout rate is much higher among boys in Lyari than girls
  • Poverty is the main reason why children do not go to school

KARACHI: “B-L-U-E is blue.” Razia, a first-grade student at Mazharul Uloom Government Girls School, spells out the word as her teacher, Shaista, shows the class a blue pencil.

Mazharul Uloom is something of an exception among Pakistan’s government schools, which often suffer from a lack of space and facilities. Karachi-based researcher Khizar Qazi tells Arab News that, according to an education department report from 2015-2016, around 248 primary schools in the megacity operate from a single room. 

“More than 50 percent of schools have no drinking water,” Qazi says. “And more than 80 percent either have no washrooms, or — if they do — there is no water available in them.” 

He adds that many schools do not have the requisite number of English or science teachers. 

It’s understandable, then, that Razia’s school, which — despite being in the low-income town of Lyari — has many of the facilities other schools lack, has seen a marked increase in students over the past 16 years, from 200 in 2002 to 1,300 in 2018.

Not far from the school, 13-year-old Muhammad Yasin is fixing a wheel at a motorcycle repair shop. “My father lost his job and we had nothing to eat. So I left the school in grade four to earn a livelihood for my family,” he tells Arab News. Yasin earns Rs. 400 — less than $3 — a day. That makes it possible for his family of seven to have two meals every day.

“Not all of the estimated 80 percent dropouts are lucky enough to (find a job). Some suffer a great deal more,” Aziz-ur-Rahman, a teacher at DCTO School, tells Arab News, adding that the number of street children in Lyari has grown considerably over the last several years.

Abdul Latif Dosai, a local elder and member of Mazharul Uloom’s managing committee, recalls how shocked he was when his daughter enrolled at the school five years ago: “There were teachers here, but there were no facilities: No washrooms, no furniture... the classrooms had broken ceilings.”

Dosai approached influential people from different communities in the neighborhood to raise funds for basic facilities in the school. “When we got some infrastructure, we launched a door-to-door campaign to persuade parents, mostly from the fishing community, to send their girls to school,” he says.

The school is gradually gaining popularity. “The (student) numbers are increasing. We use modern teaching methods, making it possible for the girls to take more interest in their academic activities,” Shaista tells Arab News. “We also have evening classes for English language, computer literacy and art.”

“I enjoy studying here,” Azra Aqil, a student in grade 10 whose favorite subject is English, says. “In the evening, I teach at a tuition academy where students from other government schools also come. There is major difference.”

“There are over 300 government schools managed by city, provincial and federal governments, but very few of them impart quality education,” Rahman, who has been teaching for the last 36 years in Lyari town, notes.

In its recent report, “Shall I Feed My Daughter or Educate Her? Barriers to Girls’ Education in Pakistan,” Human Rights Watch (HRW) wrote: “Pakistan was described as among the world’s worst performing countries in education at the 2015 Oslo Summit on Education and Development. The new government, elected in July 2018, stated in its manifesto that nearly 22.5 million children were out of school. Girls are particularly affected. Thirty-two percent of primary school age girls are out of school in Pakistan, compared to 21 percent of boys.”

According to the report, 59 percent of girls are out of school by grade six compared to 49 percent of boys. Only 13 percent of girls manage to reach the ninth grade in school. Both boys and girls are missing out on education in unacceptable numbers, but girls suffer more. Fifty percent of women attend schools in Sindh, compared to 71 percent of men. However, both Dosai and Rahman say that the dropout percentage in Lyari is higher among boys than girls.

“Although there are still a huge number of girls out of school — and that is a major source of concern — there are more out-of-school boys here, since most (of them) are forced to work in this poor town,” Dosai says. 

“Political instability, disproportionate influence on governance by security forces, repression of civil society and the media, violent insurgency, and escalating ethnic and religious tensions all poison Pakistan’s current social landscape. These forces distract from the government’s obligation to deliver essential services like education— and girls lose out the most,” the HRW report continued.

Although education has never been a priority for government, locals say that poverty and gang wars in Lyari have further compounded the problem, even though the town was once a hub of educational, literary and cultural activities.

Rahman recalls: “During the last census, I visited different parts of the neighborhood and found many widows. Their children were mostly out of school.” Lyari’s notorious gang war, he claims, had had a major impact on the state of education in the town.

“You may find many children out on the streets. They are annoyed with us, their parents and themselves. If we remain unsuccessful in bringing them to school, there are higher chances that they may spoil the good work of Rangers and police who fought hard to restore peace in Lyari,” Dosai says.

Meanwhile, 13-year-old Yasin tells Arab News: “If someone gives me the amount I am earning here for my family, I will quit my job and attend school.”


After primary schools, Pakistan’s Punjab closes high schools as smog crisis deepens

Updated 12 November 2024
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After primary schools, Pakistan’s Punjab closes high schools as smog crisis deepens

  • Record air pollution has triggered hundreds of hospitalizations, school closures, lockdowns in Punjab this month 
  • On Tuesday, provincial capital Lahore, home to 13 million people, had worst air quality globally, according to IQAir

ISLAMABAD: The government of Punjab has closed all educational institutions in the province up to the higher secondary level from tomorrow, Wednesday, until the end of the week because of record-breaking smog that has already prompted the closure of primary schools and government offices and has sickened tens of thousands of people.

Record-high air pollution levels have triggered hundreds of hospitalizations, junior school closures and stay-at-home orders in several districts of Punjab, including the provincial capital of Lahore, which has been enveloped in a thick, toxic smog since last month.

On Tuesday, Lahore, home to 13 million people, had the worst air quality of any city in the world, according to live readings by IQAir, a Swiss air quality monitoring company.

“All the educational institutions […] up to higher secondary level shall remain closed and will shift to online mode with effect from Nov 13 within […] DG Khan, Bahawalpur, Sahiwal, Sargodha and Rawalpindi divisions […] till Nov 17,” the province’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said in a notification issued on Tuesday, ordering schools to shift to “online mode.” 

In Pakistan, the higher secondary level refers to upper secondary education, which includes grades 11 and 12. It is also known as intermediate education.

Speaking to reporters, Punjab Education Minister Rana Sikandar Hayat said the decision to close higher secondary institutes was taken “in light of the complaints received from the district.”

“This drastic decision had to be taken to protect children from the deadly effects,” he said. “There is a sense of educational loss, but the decision to close educational institutions is being taken out of compulsion.

Primary schools and government offices had already been closed until Nov. 17 in many districts of Punjab earlier this month, with school closures likely to affect the education of more than 20 million students, according to associations representing private and government schools.

Authorities in 18 districts of Punjab also closed all public parks, zoos and museums, historical places, and playgrounds for ten days last week. 

On Friday, a court in Lahore ordered the government to shut all markets after 8pm. Authorities have already banned barbecuing food without filters and ordered wedding halls to close by 10pm.

On Monday, the UN children’s agency said the health of 11 million children in Punjab province was in danger because of air pollution

“Prior to these record-breaking levels of air pollution, about 12 percent of deaths in children under 5 in Pakistan were due to air pollution,” UNICEF’s representative in Pakistan, Abdullah Fadil, said. 

“The impact of this year’s extraordinary smog will take time to assess, but we know that doubling and tripling the amount of pollution in the air will have devastating effects, particularly on children and pregnant women.”


Bus carrying wedding guests falls into river in northern Pakistan, killing 18

Updated 12 November 2024
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Bus carrying wedding guests falls into river in northern Pakistan, killing 18

  • Accident took place on Gilgit Baltistan region as bus was heading to Chakwal in Punjab 
  • So far only one woman had been found alive and was being treated at hospital, officials say 

MANSEHRA, Pakistan: A bus carrying about two dozen wedding guests fell into the Indus River in northern Pakistan on Tuesday, killing at least 18 people, officials said.
It happened in the Gilgit Baltistan region as the bus was heading to Chakwal, a city in Punjab province, government spokesman Faizullah Farqan said.
He said a search for bodies continued, and so far only one woman had been found alive and was being treated at a hospital.
Police said it was unclear what caused the crash, and officers were yet to record the lone survivor’s statement.
Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari offered condolences and asked rescuers to expedite efforts to find missing passengers.
Road accidents are common in Pakistan due to poor infrastructure and disregard for traffic laws and safety standards. In August, 36 people were killed and dozens of others were injured in two separate bus crashes.


Pakistan says developing nations need $6.8 trillion by 2030 to meet climate pledges

Updated 12 November 2024
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Pakistan says developing nations need $6.8 trillion by 2030 to meet climate pledges

  • PM Sharif calls on donor countries to give 0.7 percent of gross national income as development assistance, use existing climate funds
  • Premier says debt cannot become “acceptable new normal” in climate financing, calls for focus on non-debt financing solutions

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Tuesday developing countries would need an estimated $6.8 trillion by 2030 to implement less than half of their current nationally determined contributions (NDCs), or national action plans for reducing emissions and adapting to climate impacts defined by the Paris Agreement.

Nearly 200 nations have gathered in Baku, Azerbaijan, for COP29 climate talks this week to thrash out the details of a deal known as the New Collective Quantified Goal, designed to deliver billions of dollars of climate finance to the regions that need it the most. But the United States, Europe and others say they will only commit to the fund if the list of countries contributing to it is widened to include the likes of China, South Korea and Singapore, and the resulting deadlock could block progress during the talks.

Meanwhile, COP29 follows a year of weather disasters that have emboldened developing countries in their demands for climate cash. 

Pakistan is ranked the 5th most vulnerable country to climate change, according to the Global Climate Risk Index. In 2022, devastating floods killed over 1,700 people and affected over 33 million, with economic losses exceeding $30 billion. International donors pledged over $9 billion last January to aid Pakistan’s flood recovery but officials say little of the promised funds have been received so far.

“Developing countries will need an estimated $6.8 trillion by 2030 to implement less than half their current NDCs,” Sharif said in an address on the sidelines of the World Leaders’ Climate Action Summit.

“Donor countries should fulfill their commitment to provide 0.7 percent of their gross national income [as development assistance] and capitalize existing climate funds.”

One such commitment, the $100 billion Annual Climate Finance pledge established over a decade ago at COP15, is now reported by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development to have reached only $160 billion, Sharif said. 

“Despite this number remaining a tiny proportion of the defined need, a significant part of this financing is dispersed in the form of loans, further enhancing the debt burden on developing nations and potentially pushing them toward mounting debt traps, I call them death traps,” Sharif added.

“Pakistan alongside many other developing countries calls for stronger, more equitable climate finance mechanisms. Debt cannot become the acceptable new normal in climate financing which is why we must resume focus on non-debt financing solutions, enabling countries to fund climate initiatives.”

Sharif also called on the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change to set up a committee to review NDCs “periodically.”

“We need to double adaptation financing from present level and loss and damage funds must be enhanced and directed toward resilient infrastructure and other pressing needs,” Sharif added.

Governments last year pledged $800 million toward a new ‘loss and damage’ fund to help poorer nations being hit by climate-fueled disasters. The fund, which has a director and a host nation, will now be deciding how the funds should be dispersed and calling for more contributions at COP29.

On Tuesday, the world’s top multilateral banks, including the World Bank, European Investment Bank and Asian Development Bank, pledged to ramp up climate finance to low and middle income countries to $120 billion a year by 2030 as part of efforts at COP29 to agree to an ambitious annual target.

Reaffirming a goal of capping global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius above the pre-industrial average by 2050, the new figure is a more than 60 percent increase on what the group of 10 multilateral development banks (MDBs) had funneled to poorer nations last year, according to a statement released during the UN climate summit.

The new figure includes $42 billion to help adapt to the impacts of extreme weather, a 70 percent increase over the 2023 number.


Emerging fintech operator in Middle East, Pakistan to acquire FINCA Microfinance Bank

Updated 12 November 2024
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Emerging fintech operator in Middle East, Pakistan to acquire FINCA Microfinance Bank

  • FINCA operates in 108 cities in Pakistan, providing state-of-the-art deposit and payment solutions 
  • ABHI established global headquarters in Abu Dhabi in Jan. 2024, has expended to Dubai and Saudi Arabia 

KARACHI: Abhi Private Limited, an emerging fintech operator in the Middle East and Pakistan, and leading tech conglomerate TPL Corp. Limited, are all set to jointly acquire FINCA Microfinance Bank Limited, a statement from Abhi said on Tuesday. 

FINCA Pakistan, part of a global FINCA network, operates in 108 cities across Pakistan, providing state-of-the-art deposit and payment solutions, including micro-credit facilities aimed at improving livelihoods. 

ABHI established its global headquarters in Abu Dhabi in January 2024 and has also expanded its business through partnerships in Dubai and Saudi Arabia.

“The strategic alliance between Abhi and TPL Corp. aims to reshape financial inclusion efforts across Pakistan by combining FINCA’s extensive microfinance network and expertise with Abhi’s innovative digital solutions and TPL Corp’s presence in retail, insurance and technology sectors,” Abhi said in a statement. 

“By bringing together these complementary strengths, the partnership is set to diversify and expand access to financial products and services that cater to underserved communities, including rural populations, small businesses, and lower-income individuals.”

The acquisition will combine TPL’s diverse business portfolio and FINCA Pakistan’s established presence and deep knowledge of the market, with the combined entity being “well-positioned to introduce customer-focused solutions that can make a tangible difference in underserved regions.”

“At Abhi, we’ve always believed in creating accessible financial solutions for everyone,” said Omair Ansari, CEO & Co-founder of Abhi. 

“By joining forces with TPL, we’re making a stride toward expanding our reach and delivering impactful financial products to millions of Pakistanis who have previously lacked access to essential services.”

Looking ahead, Abhi, TPL and FINCA plan to focus on delivering a new range of financial products “tailored to underserved communities, driving financial inclusion and contributing to the nation’s economic growth.”

“FINCA Pakistan delivered on its promise to develop a nationwide microfinance network that is creating economic opportunity throughout Pakistan, especially for women,” said Jeff Smith, chair of the FINCA Pakistan Board of Directors. 

“Abhi and TPL share FINCA’s commitment to expanding access to financial services for small entrepreneurs. The infusion of new capital and more comprehensive digital services have the potential to significantly accelerate financial inclusion in Pakistan.”
 


Top leaders of Imran Khan’s party briefly arrested, released in Pakistan’s Rawalpindi

Updated 12 November 2024
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Top leaders of Imran Khan’s party briefly arrested, released in Pakistan’s Rawalpindi

  • Leader of the opposition in the national assembly and other PTI leaders had arrived at Adiala jail to meet Khan
  • Ex-PM has been in jail since August last year and faces a slew of legal challenges he says are politically motivated 

ISLAMABAD: Top aides of jailed former Prime Minister Imran Khan were briefly detained before being released in the Pakistani city of Rawalpindi as they arrived to meet their leader at a local prison, his party said on Tuesday, with police saying they were arrested for breaking a law against public gatherings. 

Leader of the opposition in the National Assembly, Omar Ayub Khan, and several other leaders of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), had arrived at Rawalpindi’s Adiala jail to meet Khan when they were arrested for what Punjab Police has described as violating Section 144 of the Pakistan Penal Code, a legal provision that empowers district administrations to prohibit the assembly of four or more people in an area for a limited period. 

“PTI workers were detained for violating Section 144 but were released after being issued a warning,” Punjab Police Spokesperson Sajjadul Hassan told media. 

The PTI says the leaders were detained to block them from meeting Khan who has been imprisoned since August last year and faces a slew of legal cases, from corruption to terrorism, which he says are politically motivated. 

“PTI leadership has been set free, after being kept in custody till the time for scheduled meeting with Imran Khan was over,” the party said in a text message to reporters.

In a post on X, the PTI said the arrests showed the “blatant misuse of power” of the ruling coalition led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s PML-N party, which it said was “aimed at silencing PTI leaders and anyone standing with Imran Khan.”

“This assault on political freedoms is a grave warning for all citizens. The nation must stand up for itself, get organized, and peacefully protest,” the PTI said. “This is not an issue of any one person or party; it is a matter of Pakistan’s survival and integrity.”

Since his ouster from the PM’s office in 2022 in a parliamentary no-trust vote, Khan has been embroiled in over 150 cases and has been sentenced in several, including to three years, 10 years, 14 years and seven years to be served concurrently under Pakistani law. Khan’s convictions were later overturned in appeals but he cannot be freed due to other, pending cases against him.

He has maintained his innocence and has argued that the cases are an attempt to sideline him politically by keeping him out of the public area. The government denies it is persecuting Khan or his party.