Looming football ban
Pakistan continues to struggle to get its football house in order so much so that a FIFA ban on the game now looms large. The battle for control of Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) has been raging since 2015, with politics having a big role to play. Currently, there are two sides staking claim to the federation. One, an administrative group led by Ashfaq Shah who was elected as president in a poll held in 2018 on the orders of the Supreme Court. Two, a Normalization Committee appointed by FIFA in September 2019 with the mandate to make the federation compliant with the world body’s regulations and organise new elections. FIFA deems Ashfaq Shah’s election is in breach of its regulations for member countries.
Last week, the battle for PFF takeover turned serious when the Ashfaq Shah group forcibly took control of the PFF headquarters in Lahore. This triggered a warning by FIFA to vacate, until Wednesday (i.e. yesterday), the Football House and give its control back to the Normalization Committee headed by Haroon Malik or face suspension. FIFA has made it clear that the federation’s suspension would lead to the loss of its all membership rights with “immediate notice, including, but not limited to, the right of PFF’s national teams or any of its clubs to participate in any international competitions, as well as the right of PFF and its members to benefit from FIFA’s financial/development programmes”.
However, in a timely intervention in the matter, Federal Minister for Inter-Provincial Coordination Dr Fehmida Mirza, who is also the President of Pakistan Sports Board, has written to FIFA to send a delegation to Pakistan to settle the issues through dialogue involving all stakeholders. She has quite rightly expressed reservations over the performance of the Normalization Committee, put in place by FIFA about 18 months back, over its failure to hold elections. The government must play a serious part in the whole affair. We can’t afford a ban on football!
Customary delays
Development projects at three public universities in Sindh have been stalled for the past several years, even though the government has made much of the funds available, a report in this newspaper reveals. These institutions have completed a mere 25% of the uplift schemes. This bears testament to the neglect of the two significant sectors of health and education in the province and the country.
At the Sindh Medical University, Karachi the construction of a girls’ hostel and the expansion of an administrative block has been facing delays for the past six years. In 2015, the total cost of the scheme had been estimated at Rs791 million. This year, the government has released Rs30 million out of the Rs130 million set aside for the project but it is yet to get off the ground, showing that the authorities have failed to grasp the importance of hostel accommodation for female students. Red tape appears to be playingThis situation forces many to go to foreign countries for education at greater expense. a role here. Despite the passage of six years, the university has not even opened a separate bank account for the project. Many female students at medical colleges are in need of hostel facilities because their families live either abroad or in rural areas.
The setting up of the Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto Chair at Karachi University was announced in 2012 but the work on it stays suspended since 2017 due to want of adequate funds and bureaucratic wrangling over the appointment of a consultant for the project. Work on a planned sewerage scheme at Karachi University is going nowhere though the government has allocated Rs400 million for it. A scheme for the construction of an auditorium at Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto University and for improving other facilities has met with the same fate. The university administration has utilised only Rs50 million out of the Rs104 million released for the purpose. Official explanations for the delays are unconvincing. There are many questions, but no answer.
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