More than half of children in Pakistan tribal areas still out of school

In this undated photo, children attend a class during winter in one of the school-deprived regions of Pakistan’s tribal areas. (AN photo)
Short Url
Updated 10 January 2020
Follow

More than half of children in Pakistan tribal areas still out of school

  • Nearly 60 percent of children in tribal areas are out of school, latest data shows
  • A fifth of the region’s educational facilities are in shambles

PESHAWAR: Winter is harsh in South Waziristan, but pupils of the government school in Alam Khan Khel have no choice but to take classes under the open sky. Their school still has no building, like more than a fifth of other educational facilities in tribal areas.
“Four teachers impart education to 123 students who have to enjoy leave in times of adverse weather conditions,” district education officer Muhib Dawar told Arab News.
The difficulties confronting Alam Khan Khel children in the Khaisoor Valley are a reality for many students in the region on the Pakistan-Afghan borderlands, which for years were haunted by military operations.
According to 2017-2018 data collected by the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province’s elementary and secondary education department, tribal areas have 5,890 educational institutions – ranging from primary schools to government colleges – and 1,195 of them remain either damaged or completely destroyed.
Out of 1.78 million children aged between four and 14 years, 58 percent are out of school.
The situation is especially dire for girls.
In 2009, the Pakistan Army launched a series of operations against militants stationed in the tribal region. The operations affected the education sector, forcing thousands of students to quit studies, and plunging the literacy rate there to 10.5 percent for girls and 36.66 percent for boys.




Students sit at a makeshift school set up by the local community in Pat Took village, South Waziristan tribal district, on Aug. 19, 2019. (Photo courtesy: Mahusd Welfare Association)

While in 2017, a set of constitutional amendments led to the merger of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) with neighboring Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, Naseer Shah Afridi, All FATA Teachers Association president, told Arab News that educational institutions were still facing a shortage of teaching staff, and the government had yet to recruit 4,700 teachers.
The low rate of girls’ enrollment is attributed to the unavailability of residential facilities for female teachers, leaving them unable to stay at their duty stations, Afridi said.
“The education sector misses almost all the facilities. Imagine, the session is about to end in March and we don’t have all textbooks for our students yet,” he added.
Dr. Noor Zaman, secretary-general of Mahsud Welfare Association – an organization formed by the local community to promote education in tribal areas – told Arab News that a number of remote regions had no schools at all.
“We had to set up a makeshift school at Pat Took area in tribal areas where 200 children get an education. I have hired two teachers whom I pay Rs10,000 a month from my own pocket,” he said.
Meanwhile, KP Education Secretary Nadeem Aslam Chaudhry told Arab News that the provincial government had a multi-pronged strategy to rebuild the region’s damaged schools.
“By June this year, we will complete hiring 4,500 teaching staff, which will overcome the deficiency of teachers there,” he added.
Chaudhry said that construction works were underway and 1,000 new and closed schools in the erstwhile FATA would start functioning by April.


Pakistan says it is moving toward phased crypto regulation after Binance, HTX approvals

Updated 8 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan says it is moving toward phased crypto regulation after Binance, HTX approvals

  • The country is among the world’s largest crypto adoption markets, with nearly 40 million users
  • Bilal bin Saqib says the government is not promoting crypto but moving to regulate the sector

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s top virtual asset regulatory official said on Sunday the country was laying the foundation for a phased and tightly supervised crypto framework after granting conditional approvals to two global exchanges, signaling a shift from years of regulatory ambiguity toward formal oversight of digital assets.

The Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (PVARA) said this week it had issued no objection certificates (NOCs) to global crypto exchanges Binance and Huobi (HTX). Pakistan has also signed a memorandum of understanding with them to explore what the finance ministry described as the “tokenization” of up to $2 billion in sovereign bonds, treasury bills and commodity reserves, an initiative aimed at boosting liquidity and attracting investors.

“The no objection certificate given to Binance and Huobi is the first practical step of this new thinking,” PVARA chief Bilal bin Saqib said at a briefing. “Let me make it clear that this NOC is not a shortcut. This is not a blanket approval.”

He said the approvals marked the start of a risk-mitigated, phased and supervised entry framework, adding that platforms would be subject to strict anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing requirements, ownership transparency checks and enforcement-linked licensing timelines.

“This is not a new experiment,” he said, pointing to phased regulatory approaches adopted in financial centers such as Dubai, the United Kingdom and Singapore, where firms are first brought under supervision before being allowed to expand operations.

Pakistan is among the world’s largest crypto adoption markets, with estimates putting the number of users between 30 and 40 million, despite the absence of a comprehensive regulatory framework. Saqib said ignoring the sector was no longer viable, warning that unregulated adoption posed greater risks to the economy and consumers.

“We don’t want to promote crypto,” he said. “We want to regulate crypto. Adoption is already there.”

​He said the framework was designed to prepare Pakistan for longer-term developments in digital finance, including tokenized assets, compliance technology, blockchain analytics and digital payment infrastructure, while ensuring that local talent is channeled into regulated and productive use.

“For the international community, the message is clear,” Saqib said. “Pakistan is not running away from innovation. Pakistan is welcoming innovation. Pakistan is regulating innovation.”