Pakistan refuses to register medical graduates who studied at 'fake' colleges abroad

Psychology students study outside the Competence and Trauma Centre for Journalists inside a university's psychology department in Peshawar on Nov. 24, 2014. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 08 January 2021
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Pakistan refuses to register medical graduates who studied at 'fake' colleges abroad

  • Foreign qualified medical graduates can only begin their house jobs and professional careers after securing licenses from local regulator
  • The Pakistan Medical Commission says it will be an injustice to grant licenses to students who went to dubious international medical institutions

ISLAMABAD: The government has refused to locally register thousands of medical graduates who completed their degrees from international institutions that are included in the “grey and black lists” of Pakistan Medical Commission. 

A recently constituted regulatory authority, the commission maintains the official register of medical practitioners in the country and has sorted international medical colleges in its green, grey and black lists. All recognized foreign medical colleges are part of the green list while the unrecognized institutions are added to its grey and black lists. 

The government has informed thousands of students, who have either graduated from colleges in the grey and black lists or enrolled in them, that their degrees would not be recognized. This has led the students to protest against the commission as many of them call the decision “arbitrary and illegal.” 

“We worked hard to become doctors by staying away from our homes,” Mian Abid, a recent medical graduate from Kyrgyzstan, told Arab News on Thursday. “Our efforts have been wasted by this official decision.” 

“The commission framed its rules for medical graduates from foreign universities only a few weeks ago,” he continued. “It should not apply them retrospectively.”

A large number of Pakistani students who fail to secure admissions in public medical colleges due to cutthroat competition get themselves enrolled in Russia, Central Asian states and other countries where medical education is cheaper and it is relatively easy to get admission.

Kyrgyzstan is among the most popular destinations with these students where they can graduate as doctors by spending half the amount as compared to their home country. 

All the foreign qualified graduates are required to take an exam upon their return to Pakistan to get certification from the medical regulator before they can begin house job or launch professional career in the country. 

The government passed the Pakistan Medical Commission Act, 2020, in September last year in a bid to regulate and improve the standard of medical and dental education in the country and assess the quality of foreign institutions where Pakistani students were getting enrolled to become doctors. 

“All foreign medical colleges from where Pakistanis have graduated are registered with their respective health ministries and regulators,” Sheikh Ayaz, a recent medicine graduate from Kyrgyzstan who is struggling to get his degree verified, told Arab News. 

He said the whole world was accepting medical graduates from colleges in Kyrgyzstan and other countries, though they were now blacklisted in Pakistan. “Thousands of Pakistanis students move to Kyrgyzstan, China, Russia and other countries where they can afford medical education since it is not affordable in local private colleges,” he said. 

The government has put at least 21 medical colleges of Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan on its black list for not meeting the required criteria, while 294 institutions from 48 other countries, including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Turkey, Iran and Egypt, are added to the grey list for being under assessment. 

Mohammad Ali Raza, vice president of the Pakistan Medical Commission, said the regulator would not compromise on the standard of medical and dental education, adding it would only grant licenses to those students who fulfilled its required criteria. 

“It would be an injustice to 220 million Pakistanis if we grant licenses to these graduates who have studied in fake medical colleges,” Raza told the media on Thursday. 


Four militants, three paramilitary personnel killed in Pakistan's restive northwest

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Four militants, three paramilitary personnel killed in Pakistan's restive northwest

  • The troops were killed when militants targeted an ambulance transporting them after a quadcopter attack on a paramilitary camp in Karak
  • Pakistan is witnessing a surge in militancy in its western regions, which last week prompted Islamabad to conduct airstrikes in Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: Four militants and three paramilitary personnel were killed in separate incidents in Pakistan's northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, authorities said on Monday, amid a surge in militancy in the region bordering Afghanistan.

Security forces conducted an intelligence-based operation in KP's Dera Ismail Khan district on reports about militant presence, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military's media wing.

An intense exchange of fire followed between the two sides and four Pakistani Taliban militants were killed during the operation.

“Weapons and ammunition were also recovered from Indian sponsored killed Khwarij (Pakistani Taliban militants), who remained actively involved in numerous terrorist activities in the area,” the ISPR said.

“Sanitization operation is being conducted to eliminate any other Indian-sponsored kharji found in the area.”

New Delhi did not immediately respond to the Pakistani military's statement.

In the second incident, militants gunned down three personnel of the Federal Constabulary (FC) paramilitary force after a quadcopter attack on an FC camp in KP's Karak district, a police official said on Monday.

The explosive-laden quadcopter struck the FC camp in the Bahadur Khel area early Monday morning and injured seven FC troops, according to Karak police spokesperson Shaukat Khan.

Three FC personnel were killed when militants attacked a Rescue 1122 ambulance which was transporting the injured troops to a hospital following the attack.

“With this incident, the total number of FC personnel martyred has risen to three, while five others, including a member of the rescue team, were injured,” Khan told Arab News.

“A search operation is currently underway to trace those responsible.”

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, but Pakistani officials have said in the past that armed groups, particularly the Pakistani Taliban, have been increasingly using commercial drones modified to drop explosives, alongside other weapons they say were acquired after the US military withdrawal from neighboring Afghanistan.

Pakistan is witnessing a surge in militancy in its northwestern KP and southwestern Balochistan provinces that border Afghanistan. Islamabad accuses Afghanistan of allowing the use of its soil and India of backing militant groups for cross-border attacks against Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi deny this.

On Sunday, Pakistani security forces killed five militants, including a suicide bomber, during an intelligence-based operation in the country’s southwestern Balochistan province, the military’s media wing said. The operation took place in Balochistan’s Pishin district after security forces received reports about the presence of Pakistani Taliban militants.

The Pakistani Taliban, or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), have carried out some of the deadliest attacks against civilians and law enforcement agencies in Pakistan since 2007 in their bid to impose their own brand of Islamic law in the country.

Pakistan also carried out intelligence-based strikes on alleged militant camps and hideouts in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar, Paktika and Khost provinces on Saturday, a security official said. The official said more than 80 militants were killed in the attacks, a claim denied by the Afghan Taliban who said Islamabad killed and wounded dozens of civilians in the strikes.

The strikes have increased tensions between the neighbors, with Afghanistan warning it will retaliate at a “suitable time.”