Release Dr. Aafia Siddiqui


Military Inc

Every Country has an Army, Pakistan Army has a Country

Besides tens of thousands of Army Men working in government-owned airline and other government-owned industries here’s list of Army Officers in Civilian Institiutions. Pakistan should be called Military Inc..

  • General Pervez Musharraf (President of Pakistan)
  • Major General (Retd) Muhammad Anwar (President of Azad Kashmir);
  • Lt Gen (Retd) Khalid Maqbool (Governor Punjab);
  • Commander Khalil (Governor NWFP);
  • Lt General (Retd) Javed Ashraf Qazi (Federal Education Minister);
  • Col (Retd) S.K. Tressler (Federal Minorities & Culture Minister);
  • Lt Gen. Hamid Javed (Chief Executive’s Chief of Staff);
  • Lt General Muneer Hafeez (Chief of NAB);
  • Major General Usman Shah (Deputy Chief of NAB);
  • Major General Shujaat Zameer (Deputy Chief of NAB);
  • Major General Abdul Jabbar Bhatti (Chief, Regional Accountability Bureau, RAB, Punjab);
  • Air Vice Marshal Zakaullah (Chief of RAB NWFP);
  • Major General Tariq Bashir (Chief of RAB Sindh);
  • Major General Owais Mushtaq (Chief of RAB Balochistan) ;
  • Lt General (Retd) Hamid Nawaz (Secretary Defence);
  • Air Marshal (Retd) Zahid Anees (Secretary Defence Production);
  • Lt General (Retd) Saeedul Zafar (Secretary Railways);
  • Major General (Retd) Fazal Ghafoor (Ambassador to North Korea);
  • Brigadier (Retd) Abdul Majeed Khan (Ambassador to Tajikistan);
  • Major General (Retd) Salimullah (Ambassador to UAE);
  • Major General (Retd) Muhammad Hassan Aqeel (Ambassador to Thailand);
  • Lt General (Retd) Asad Durrani (Ambassador to Saudi Arabia);
  • Vice Admiral (Retd) Shamoon Aslam Khan (Ambassador to Ukraine);
  • Air Marshal (Retd) Najeeb Akhtar (Ambassador to Brazil);
  • Major General Syed Mustafa Anwar Hussain (Ambassador to Indonesia);
  • Lt General (Retd) Muhammad Shafeeq (Ambassador to Bahrain);
  • Major General (Retd) Agha Masood Hassan (DG of Postal Services);
  • Major General Farrukh Javed (Chairman National Highway Authority);
  • Rear Admiral Ahmad Hayat (Chairman Karachi Port Trust);
  • Rear Admiral Sikandar Viqar Naqvi (Chairman Port Qasim Authority);
  • Vice Admiral Tauqir Hussain Naqvi (Chairman National Shipping Corporation) ;
  • Major General (Retd) Muhammad Hassan (Chief of National Fertilizer Corporation) ;
  • Lt Colonel (Retd) Akbar Hussain (Export Processing Zone Authority);
  • Major General Shehzad Alam Malik (Chairman Pakistan Telecommunications Authority);
  • Air Vice Marshal Azhar Masood (Chairman National Telecommunications Authority);
  • Brigadier (Retd) Muhammad Saleem (Chairman NADRA);
  • Brigadier Mirza Babar Aziz (DG NADRA);
  • Brigadier (Retd) Muhammad Anwar Khan (DG NADRA NWFP);
  • Major General Raza Hussain (Chairman SUPARCO);
  • Major General Sabihuddin Bokhari (Surveyor General of Pakistan);
  • Brigadier Javed Iqbal Cheema (DG National Crisis Management Cell);
  • Air Marshal (Retd) Shafeeq Haider (Chairman Federal Public Service Commission);
  • Lt General Arshad Hussain (Member Federal Public Service Commission);
  • Lt General (Retd) Jehangir Nasrullah (Chairman Punjab Public Service Commission);
  • Major General (Retd) Arshad Chaudhry (Member Punjab Public Service Commission);
  • Major General (Retd) Arshadullah Tarar (Member Punjab Public Service Commission);
  • Air Vice Marshal (Retd) Aliuddin (DG Civil Aviation Authority);
  • Air Vice Marshal (Retd) Arshad Saleem (Deputy DG Civil Aviation Authority);
  • Major General Zafar Abbas (DG Anti-Narcotics Force);
  • Major General Syed Haider Javed (DG National Logistics Cell);
  • Major General (Retd) Inayatullah Khan Niazi (DG Auqaf, the Deptt. of Historical Relics);
  • Major General Pervez Akmal (MD OGDC);
  • Brigadier (Retd) Rizvan Ashraf (General Manager OGDC);
  • Brigadier (Retd) Ishtiaq Ali Khan (MD Pakistan Mineral Development Authority);
  • Major General (Retd) Hamid Hassan Butt (Chairman Pakistan Railways);
  • Lt General (Retd) Syed Shujaat Ali Khan (Rector Engineering University Lahore);
  • Lt General (Retd) Arshad Mehmood (Vice Chancellor Punjab University);
  • Air Vice Marshal (Retd) Sardar Khan (Vice Chancellor Engineering University Peshawar);
  • Captain (Retd) U.A.G. Isani (Vice Chancellor Islamabad University);
  • Lt General (Retd) Sardar Ali (DG National Institute of Public Administration) ;
  • Brigadier (Retd) Maqsoodul Hassan (DG Directorate of Education);
  • Brigadier Muhammad Ejaz (Home Secretary Punjab);
  • Brigadier Abdur Rehman (Director Health NWFP);
  • Brigadier Shadab (Secretary C&W Punjab)
  • Brigadier Anees (Chairman Punjab Privatisation Commission);
  • Colonel (Retd) Shahid Qureshi (DIG Sindh Telecommunications) ;
  • Colonel (Retd) Ghulam Hussain (Secretary S&GAD NWFP);
  • Brigadier Mukhtar (Home Secretary, Sindh);
  • Brigadier Zaheer Qadri (DG, KDA, Sindh and not Secretary C&W NWFP);
  • Brigadier (Retd) Akhtar (Secretary to Governor Sindh);
  • Major General (Retd) Imtiaz (Chairman Pakistan Athletics Federation);
  • Brigadier Saulat Abbas (DG Pakistan Sports Board).
  • Brig. Khalid Javed, DG Projects Directorate, NADRA, Islamabad
  • Col Talmeez Abbas, DG Dataware Housing, NADRA, Islamabad
  • Maj Tahir M. Alvi DDG, Project Directorate, NADRA, Islambad
  • Brig Safdar Husain Awan is the Secy (C&W) NWFP Brig Qadri is DG KDA;
  • Brig Mohtarim is Home Secretary Sindh
  • Major General (Retd) Hashmi, Registrar, Pakistan Engineering Council;
  • Major General (Retd) Anis Bajwa, Chairman PTDC;
  • Major Genera (Retd) Asif Riaz Bokhari, NRB;
  • Brig Muhammad Toseef Uz Zaman Khan, Civil Aviation Authority;
  • Brig Saeed Ahmed Malik, WAPDA Head Qtrs Lahore;
  • Brig Muhammad Iqbal, WAPDA HQ Lahore;
  • Brig Mushtaq Ahmed, WAPDA HQ, Lahore;
  • Brig Khalid Sohail Cheema, DG Pak PWD;
  • Brig Shamshad Khan, GM NWFP NHA;
  • Brig (Retd) Zareen Khan, Project Incharge Ghazi Brotha Dam WAPDA;
  • Brig (Retd) Mukhtar Ahmed Tariq, GM Admin OGDC;
  • Brig (Retd) Muhammad Hamayoun Khan, GM Procurement OGDC;
  • Brig (Retd) Sardar Javed Ashraf, MD KW&SB;
  • Brig (Retd) Nisar, IG Prisons (Sindh);
  • Brig (Retd) Zafar Ahmed Malik, Karachi Building & Control Authority;
  • Brig (Retd) Aftab Ahmed, DG PHA;
  • Brig (Retd) Dilbar Husain Naqvi, MD National Construction Company;
  • Colonel Rauf, IG Prisons, NWFP;
  • Colonel Asif Jamal, MD, Multan Development Authority;
  • Colonel (Retd) Najam ul Hasan Malik, TMO Rawalpindi;
  • Colonel (Retd) Hafiz Abdur Rehman Malik, MD WASA, Rawalpindi;
  • Colonel (Retd) Kanwar Muhammad Sherbaz Khan, GM CS&E OGDC;
  • Lt Col Muhammad Azim, GM NHA;
  • LT Col Naqeeb Amjad Malik, Manager CS&E OGDC;
  • Lt Col (Retd) Aziz ul Haque Mirza, Member (Operations) NHA;
  • Lt Col (Retd) Hafeezullah Awan, MD WASA Quetta.
  • Major General (Retd) Shujaat Ali Khan, Ambassador to Morocco;
  • Major General (Retd) Badruddin, Ambassador to Brunei;
  • Vice Admiral(Retd) Khalid Mir, Ambassador to Lebanon;
  • Brig (Retd) Muhammad Nisar, Ambassador to Argentina;
  • Brig. Sikandar Ali, Director, Anti Narctics Force;
  • Brig (R) Saeed Ahmad Rafi, Director General, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (He was inducted by Gen Musharraf into Foreign Service as incharge of overseas polling for Presidential Referendum in April);
  • Brig (R) Mian Khalid Habib, Chief of Protocol, M/o foreign Affirs;
  • Brig Tipu Sultan, Director General, Ministry of Foreign Affairs;
  • Group Capt (R) Khalid Aziz Babar, Director General, Ministry of Foreign Affairs;
  • Naval Lt (R) Ghalib Iqbal, Consul General, Toronto (son-in-law of former Air Chief Anwar Shamim) {Anwer Shamim is a Quadiyani and had served General Zia, Anwer Shamim has huge ranches in California, USA, which he and his brother in Law Khursheed Anwer Mirza made through trafficking Narcotics during so-called Afghan Jihad [the Time Weekly that carried this news was banned in Pakistan in 80s]}.
  • Naval Lt (R) Qasim Raza Mutaqqi, Counsellor, Rome;
  • Col (R) Salik Nawaz, Deputy Chief of Protocol, M/o Foreign Affairs;
  • Capt (R) Masood Akhtar, Deputy Chief of Protocol, M/o Foreign Affairs;
  • Capt (R) Shaukat Muqaddam, Counsellor, Dublin;
  • Capt (R) Zaighamuddin Azam Khan, Counsellor, Berlin;
  • Capt (R) Sohail Ittehad Hussain, Director General,M/o Foreign Affairs;
  • Capt (R) Khalid Durrani, Director, M/o Foreign Affairs.
  • General (R) Jahangeer Karamat, Ambassador of Pakistan in USA.
  • Brigadier (R) Ejas Shah, Director General Intelligence Bureau.

The above list was of 2002. In 2003, as many as 104 serving and retired Lieutenant Generals, Major Generals or equivalent ranks from other services are among the 1,027 military officers inducted on civilian posts in different ministries, divisions and Pakistani missions abroad after Oct 12, 1999 military takeover. The number of army Brigadiers or their equivalent ranks from the Navy and Air Force is even higher at 160, according to an annexure placed before the Senate library.

There have been 14 ambassadors and a high commissioner from the military ranks during this period.

Of these 1,027 military officers inducted on civilian posts, 27 military officers have been given the prized grade of 22 while 62 officers have been adjusted in grade 21. A whopping figure of 150 officers occupy civilian positions in Grade 20. There are 276 officers between grade 20 and 22 alone. The nature of their jobs varies from deputation, secondment, re-employment to contract basis. These military officers occupy civilian posts in a situation where, according to Incharge Cabinet Division Raza Hiraj, there are 700 ‘unabsorbed’ surplus civilian employees. There are 33 officers on special duty (OSD) just in grades between 19 and 21.

The range of fields where military officers are working on civilian posts encompasses every sector of human endeavour including communications, education, diplomacy, water and electricity management, information, post office, jails, local bodies, think tanks, industrial production, shipping, minority affairs, population welfare, health, agriculture, railways, highways, housing, labour and manpower, social and women development, law and justice and sub-sectors of sports from cricket to hockey.

A close look at the figures shows that these military personnel occupy 13 posts in the cabinet division, 5 posts in the commerce ministry, 98 in communications ministry, 113 in the defence division, 52 in the defence production division, 9 in the education ministry, 16 in the establishment division, 24 in the ministry of foreign affairs, 6 in the ministry of food, agriculture and livestock. There are 88 military officers working in the ministry of interior, 2 in the health ministry, 6 in the housing and works ministry, 29 in the industries and production ministry, 3 in the information and broadcasting ministry, 58 in the ministry of Information Technology, 25 in the Kashmir affairs and northern affairs ministry, five in the labour and manpower division, 17 in the ministry of minorities affairs, 39 in the ministry of petroleum and natural resources, just one each in the ministry of population welfare, the planning and development division and the ministry of religious affairs. There are two military officials working in the revenue division (CBR), 21 in the ministry of science and technology, 72 in the ministry of railways/railway board, 37 in the ministry of water and power, 5 in the ministry of women development, 6 in the Wafaqi Mohtasib (Federal Ombudsmen). There are another 37 officers who have been inducted under the military’s 10 per cent quota in civilian posts over and above these appointments.

In the Foreign Affairs 13 Lieutenants and Major Generals were appointed as ambassadors in different countries, while one Brigadier and a Major also got ambassadorial positions.

  • Lt-Gen (retd) Asad Durrani was appointed as ambassador in Riyadh (contract expired on October 2002).
  • Vice-Admiral (retd) Shamoon Alam Khan was appointed as ambassador in Kyiv (up to August 28, 2003),
  • Vice-Admiral (retd) Khalid M Mir was appointed ambassador in Beirut (up to July 2003),
  • Lt-Gen (retd) Nasim Rana as ambassador in Kuala Lumpur (up to July 2003),
  • Air Marshal (retd) Muhammad Farooq Qari as ambassador in Tripoli,
  • Lt-Gen (retd) Agha Jehangir Ali Khan as ambassador in Mexico,
  • Maj-Gen (retd) Shujaat Ali Khan as ambassador in Rabat (up to September 2003),
  • Maj-Gen (retd) Fazal Ghafoor as ambassador in Tashkent (contract expired on April 2002),
  • Maj-Gen (retd) Salim Ullah as ambassador in Abu Dhabi (up to June 2003),
  • Lt-Gen (retd) Mohammad Shafique as ambassador in Bahrain (contract expired on October 2002),
  • Maj-Gen (retd) Muhammad Hassan Aqeel as ambassador in Thailand (up to June 2003),
  • Maj Gen (retd) Syed Mustafa Anwar Hussain as ambassador in Indonesia (up to August 2003)
  • Maj-Gen (retd) Sultan Habib as ambassador in DPR Korea (up to October 2003).
  • Brigadier Abdul Majid Khan was appointed as ambassador in Dushambe (contract expired on June 2002)
  • Major Badruddin was posted as high commissioner to Bender Seri Begawen.
  • Maj-Gen Khalid Bashir was appointed as Member (Tech) Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) (up to November 2001),
  • Maj-Gen Raza Hussain as chairman SUPARCO
  • Maj-Gen Shahzada Alam Malik as Chairman PTA.

  • Maj-Gen Tariq Javed was inducted as National Highway Authority chairman on November 11, 2000 but was later repatriated. In his place Maj Gen Furrakh Javed was appointed as NHA chief on November 5, 2001 on a secondment basis. He already had served as deputy director general (Dev) in the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA).

  • Maj-Gen (retd) Agha Masood Hasan appointed as Director General Pakistan Post Office on a contract basis,
  • Vice-Admiral Taj Muhammad Khattak was appointed as Chairman Port Qasim Authority (PQA) on secondment,
  • Rear Admiral Muhammad Asad Qureshi was appointed as Director General PQA,
  • Vice Admiral (retd) S Tauquir H Naqvi as Chairman Pakistan National Shipping Corporation (PNSC) on contract,
  • Vice Admiral (retd) S Abaid Ullah Khan as chairman (PNSC) (contract terminated on October, 2000),
  • Rear Admiral Bakhat Ali Jumani was appointed as Executive Director (Ship Management PNSC),
  • Rear Admiral (retd) Sarfraz Khan was appointed as Chairman Gwadar Port Authority (GPA),
  • Rear Admiral Muhammad Nashat Raffi as General Manager Karachi Port Trust (KPT),
  • Vice Admiral Ahmed Hayat was appointed on a contract basis as Chairman Karachi Port Trust (KPT), but prior to him Vice Admiral (retd) Khalid Mohammad Mir was serving as chairman.
  • Maj Gen (retd) Mohsin Ahmed Vahidy was appointed as Executive Directive PNSC Karachi on a contract basis but he is not serving now,
  • Rear Admiral Sikandar Viqar Naqvi was appointed chairman PQA (not serving).

  • Lt-Gen (retd) Hamid Nawaz Khan was re-employed on a contract basis as secretary ministry of defence but earlier Lt-Gen (retd) Nasim Rana was serving in this capacity whose contract was terminated on July 8, 2001.

  • Rear Admiral Irfan Ahmad was appointed as Additional Secretary (contract terminated), then Maj-Gen Muhammad Ashraf Chaudhry was made Additional Secretary, defence ministry, on secondment basis.
  • Maj-Gen Javed Iqbal was appointed as Director General Military Land and Cantonments (ML&C) on secondment but he was later retired. Later, Maj Gen Muhammad Jawed was appointed as DG ML&C on secondment.
  • Maj-Gen Mahboobul Muzaffar and Maj-Gen Sabihuddin Bokhari were appointed as Surveyor General of Pakistan. After their retirement, Maj-Gen Tariq Javed was appointed in their place on secondment basis.
  • Rear Admiral Arshad Munir Ahmed was appointed Ex-Managing Director Karachi Shipyard (contract expired),
  • Air Vice Marshal S Javed Raza as Director Pre Engineering PIA,
  • AVM (retd) Niaz Hussain Director (Engineering) PIA
  • AVM Arshad Rashid Sethi as Deputy Director General, CAA (not working).

  • Air Marshal (retd) Zahid Anis was appointed as secretary D P Division. Earlier Lt-Gen (retd) Lehrasab was working in his place.

  • Maj-Gen Ali Baz was appointed as Additional Secretary D P Division. Earlier, Maj-Gen Rehmat Khan was serving as Additional Secretary D P Division.
  • Maj-Gen M Salimuddin was re-employed after his retirement from the army as Chief Scientists and Scientific Adviser DESTO in place of Maj-Gen Akbar Saeed Awan,
  • Maj-Gen Syed Ali Hamid was appointed as Director General DEPO on secondment basis
  • AVM Aurangzeb Khan was appointed Chairman Pakistan Aeronautical Complex board, Kamra.

  • Maj-Gen (retd) Rahmatullah was appointed as Managing Director Federal Employees Benevolent Fund and Group Insurance. Earlier, Maj-Gen (retd) Inayatullah Khan Niazi was working in his place.

  • Air Marshal (retd) Shafique Haider was appointed as Chairman Federal Public Service Commission (FPSC)
  • Lt-Gen (retd) Arshad Hussain was appointed Member, FPSC.
  • Maj-Gen (retd) Sikander Shami was appointed as Director General of Head of Institute of NIPA, Lahore,
  • Lt-Gen (retd) Sardar Ali as Director NIPA, Lahore
  • Maj-Gen Muhammad Iqbal Khan was appointed as Managing Director PASSCO on contract in the ministry of food, agriculture and livestock,
  • Maj-Gen Ahsan Ahmad as Director General health on secondment but was replaced by Maj-Gen (retd) Muhammad Aslam also on secondment/contract in the health ministry.

  • Maj-Gen (retd) Zahid Ehsan was appointed as Chairman Nadra (posted out)

  • Maj-Gen (retd) M Mohsin was appointed as chairman NFC (national finance commission) on contract.
  • AVM Azhar Maud was appointed National Telecommunication Corporation (NTC) chairman.
  • Maj-Gen (retd) Jamshed Ayaz Khan was appointed as president Institute of Regional Studies, Islamabad, on contract.
  • Maj-Gen (retd) Inayat Ullah Khan Niazi was appointed Chairman ETPB (contract expired)
  • Maj-Gen Anis Ahmad Bajwa was appointed as Managing Director PTDC Islamabad on contract.
  • Lt-Gen Hamid Javed was appointed as Chief of Staff to the President in the president’s secretariat.
  • Lt-Gen Ghulam Ahmad was appointed as chief of staff to Chief Executive in place of Lt-Gen Hamid Javed.
  • Maj-Gen Abdul Jabbar Bhatti, Maj-Gen Shafaatullah Shah and Maj-Gen Muhammad Yousaf were also appointed as deputy chief of staff to chief executive.
  • Maj-Gen Haroon Sikandar Pasha was appointed as Director Chief Executive’s secretariat.
  • Maj-Gen Nadeem Taj had also served as Military Secretary (MS) to Chief Executive (posted as MS to the president from January 2002).
  • Lt-Gen Khalid Maqbool (now Governor Punjab) and Lt-Gen Syed Muhammad Amjad were appointed as Chairm an National Accountability Bureau (NAB), while Maj-Gen Abdul Jabbar Bhatti, Maj-Gen Ijaz Ahmed Bakhshi, Maj-Gen Ovais Mushtaq Qureshi, AVM (retd) M Saleemud Din, Maj-Gen Muhammad Sabir, Maj-Gen Nazakat Ali Khan, Maj-Gen Shujaat Zamir Dar, Maj-Gen Syed Usman Shah, Maj-Gen Tariq Bashir, Rear Admiral Ihsanul Haq, Real Admiral Ubaid Sadiq, VM Masood Akhtar, VM Zakaullah Khan and AVM (retd) Khuda Dad were subsequently appointed as Director General, NAB
  • Maj-Gen (retd) Syed Asif Riaz Bokhari was appointed as Member, NRB on a contract basis.
  • Maj-Gen Parvez Akmal was appointed as Managing Director Oil and Gas Development Company (OGDC) (not working)
  • Maj-Gen (retd) Syed Usman Shah was appointed as Director General Intelligence and Investigation.
  • Lt-Gen (retd) Javaid Ashraf Qazi was appointed as secretary/chairman Pakistan Railways. After his contract was terminated Lt-Gen (retd) Saeeduz Zafar replaced him.
  • On termination of his contract, Maj-Gen (retd) Hamid Hassan Butt was appointed as General Manager M & SPR but his contract too was terminated.
  • Lt-Gen (retd) Zulfiqar Ali Khan was appointed as WAPDA Chairman on secondment/contract
  • Maj-Gen (retd) M Aslam Zuberi was appointed Adviser in the Wafaqi Mohtasib secretariat (contract expired).

Those who were appointed in the attached departments include Air Marshal (retd) Sharbat A Changazi who was appointed as Director State Life Insurance Corporation of Pakistan and Rear Admiral (retd) Ejaz Husain appointed as General Manager Special Project, Pakistan State Oil Company Ltd.

Disclaimer: This post has nothing to do with the book of same name.

Other posts by Kashif Aziz


Thank you for reading this post. You can now Read Comments (5) or Leave A Trackback.

Post Info

This entry was posted on Thursday, July 5th, 2007 and is filed under Current Affairs .

Tagged with: , ,

You can follow any responses to this entry through the Comments Feed . You can Leave A Comment, or A Trackback.



Previous Post: Aunty Culture »
Next Post: Scourge of Society »

Read More

Related Reading:

5 Responses to “Military Inc

  • 1
    d0ct0r
    July 5th, 2007 22:34 GMT

    our budget’s major chunk goes to debt servicing and defense budget while i think only mere 20% is spent on Pakistan and its public.. shameful!

  • 2
    nota
    July 6th, 2007 19:00 GMT

    From CSMonitor: Pakistan military’s profits draw ire quoting Dawn:
    “According to a 2003 study published in Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper, retired and current Pakistani military personnel occupy, among others:

    •98 posts in the Ministry of Communications
    •113 in the Ministry of Defence,
    •52 in the Ministry of Defence Production
    •24 in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
    •88 military posts in the Ministry of Interior
    •29 in the Ministry of Industries, Production, and Special Initiatives
    •58 in the Ministry of Information Technology
    •39 in the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Resources
    •72 in the Ministry of Railways
    •37 in the Ministry of Water and Power”

    Two other interesting articles:
    WP: Musharraf’s Military Reaches Deep Into Pakistani Society

    “DAULAT NAGAR, Pakistan — Nusrat Riaz, a doctor for 17 years, has spent the past three directing a clinic that provides care to thousands of poor patients in this remote, wheat-farming village on the plains of Punjab.

    So Riaz was surprised this spring when he learned the government had appointed a monitor to look over his shoulder as he worked. He was even more surprised when he learned the man had no medical background, had no experience supervising doctors and was functionally illiterate.

    But when Riaz learned the monitor was a retired Pakistani army officer, it all made sense. “This is part of the militarization of the entire country,” said Riaz, 46. “It is very insulting, and it is happening because of the man sitting at the top.”

    AND

    OpenDemocracy’s Pakistan: the army as the state

    “There are several scenes from Ziauddin Sardar’s forthcoming film in the Dispatches series on Channel 4 television that I won’t forget in a hurry. In one, Sardar has the pleasure of accompanying the Karachi police on a night-time anti-terror raid and is later brought face-to-face with a would-be suicide-terrorist.

    In another, he walks out of a supermarket and proceeds to empty his shopping bag: out pops a box of cornflakes, followed by some washing powder, and more. Each item, he tells the camera, has been manufactured by a military-run conglomerate. As he leaves, the camera focuses on the building next to where he is standing: it is a branch of the Askari bank, a nationwide network owned by the Army Welfare Trust.”

  • 3
    ice awan
    July 28th, 2007 17:31 GMT

    WOW thats a lot of retired army personnel. Retired hmmm ….
    well… retired means out of that particular service….
    what this entire study fails to tell is in what periods,i meant how many were in what and whose govt. that would have made things even more interesting. Anyways …. i think we are getting over critical over the subject. I am definitely not trying to defend this total. it would be stupid not to heed to the call of this atrocious figure. but still, a country like USA has a majority of senators who have served in their armd forces for a long long duration and later have been involved in politics. Retired gens from US armd forces have been on some of the highest posts. Retired, i think should have no problem. Yes the problem is with the Deputation, that is serving in civil org while still working in the army. that is a total waste. Further to that, if at all deputation has to be served, then it should only be for law enforcement agencies, where the experience of mil service can come in handy. Still, you have to understand, that army, airforce and navy is not all about gun yielding, trigger happy soldiers. there are a lot of technical fields involved, such as Elec and Mech Engr, MBBS Docs(which btw are rendering a great svc to all sectors of society, far more than the doctors out there in the civil). As far as govt docs are concerned, please i dont even care to comment on it. I personally know a govt doc, who kept on receiving his pay check for three months even after he had stopped going to clinic in Sawaan village near jhelum. And i also know a doc, personally, who never has visits the clinic again near pindi in a village only 2-3 times a week and spends the rest in his hometown, working in a private clinic. but still he receives his pay for the entire month. Have you ever considered that the monitor could have tried to bring the doctor back in line and the comments what so ever were given in retaliation. I personally don;t think that HR or adm job requires any sort of medical experience. There are always two sides to every story. Never formulate an opinion w/o hearing out both.
    Askari bank. WOW … have you considered that it has grown to be the largest bank of pakistan. I dont remember any army person comming to my house with a gun and asking me to open my account in that bank. And i am quite sure that it is the same for everyone who has an account there. I had my account in Muslim Commercial bank for a long time, but then they made my life so miserable that finally i had to change the bank. and ever since i am very conveniently happy and satisfied.
    If it is a cement factory, well it is a business. I dont see what is wrong with that.
    Plus being in intricate knowledge of the subj. the govt just spends 17% of the budget on def. DEFENCE.. not army, that is pretty low as far as mil quantum is concerned.

    I dont understand, why do we take away the good things when we come to criticizing a subj.
    Still i maintain, employment of army pers, IN SERVICE to any other department than the army is something amazingly strange , a practice that should be made constitutionally illegal. After retirement, hmm i think there is no harm. army businesses, well they are being run by civil/retired army officers so there is no harm in that too. We have a very large army, and definitely they also need to run the administrative affairs. The airforce also runs fizaia and the navy behria. that is their requirement. the fact is that the business is being run with internally generated money, that is from the DSOP fund of the entire army, the benevolent funds and many other sources. I srsly see no harm in the armd forces having welfare org. After all the US army also runs a pvt business of US War Veteren Foundation.

  • 4
    Kashif Aziz
    July 28th, 2007 22:07 GMT

    but still, a country like USA has a majority of senators who have served in their armd forces for a long long duration and later have been involved in politics. Retired gens from US armd forces have been on some of the highest posts.

    How about discussing the issue in Pakistani scenario? cause I don’t think Army in US take over civilian governments and I don’t think Army in US bomb and burn alive it’s own people in US.

    If you check the post again, it clearly mentions how many from the armed forces were inducted in place of civilian positions when large number civilians were available in the pool (most of them made OSD to accommodate army guys)

    Now an ordinary citizen of Pakistan has to compete with another entity on the quota, the Army.

    As far as govt docs are concerned, please i dont even care to comment on it. I personally know a govt doc, who kept on receiving his pay check for three months even after he had stopped going to clinic in Sawaan village near jhelum. And i also know a doc, personally, who never has visits the clinic again near pindi in a village only 2-3 times a week and spends the rest in his hometown, working in a private clinic. but still he receives his pay for the entire month. Have you ever considered that the monitor could have tried to bring the doctor back in line and the comments what so ever were given in retaliation. I personally don;t think that HR or adm job requires any sort of medical experience. There are always two sides to every story. Never formulate an opinion w/o hearing out both.

    I am sorry to hear your bad experiences with civilian doctors. But these 2 are out of how many? and does this justifies hiring people from the armed forces? If armed forces think civilians are corrupt or useless then why don’t they close down the civil services academy?

    We have all seen the role of civil society after 2005 earthquake, worst catastrophe happened in the history of Pakistan. Civil Society was far more active and vigilant than the Army and what happened when Army took over the rescue operations, we all know. I have ground facts about relief operations so I am in better position to comment on this

    I am sure you are not representing the Army here :)

  • 5
    ice awan
    July 29th, 2007 21:59 GMT

    not at all .i was just stating facts that …. it is not that bad for a mil man to koin other professions after he retires from svc ….but yes .. there is no excuse for anyone in service to take hold of a civil institution. I am not representing anyone hrtr … i am just trying to bring out things w/o a bias …. after all there are two sides to every story ..but i do believe that there are some things for which one can offer no justification. to my mind …. the only point of contention here should be the appt of serving army personnel on civil posts. that as i said earlier should be made constitutionally illegal in any form of government.. baaki after retirement, and and army running foundations and trusts … to me are not something really to be so uptight over


Subscribe without commenting


Leave a Reply

Note: Any comments are permitted only because the site owner is letting you post, and any comments could be removed for any reason at the absolute discretion of the site owner.




Say No to Electricity Bills

About Chowrangi

Chowrangi is a crossroad of lifestyles. Chowrangi cover topics related to business, entertainment, current affairs, religion, sports, technology and other aspects of our daily lives.
If you are interested in writing on Chowrangi.com, drop us a line at info@chowrangi.com


What if America attacks Pakistan?