President promises to personally look into the matter, VCs of more than 30 universities form action committee.    
ISLAMABAD:  
President Asif Ali Zardari promised to personally look into the issue of the devolution of the Higher Education Commission (HEC)  even as the vice chancellors of 133 universities backed the HEC’s  demand to be spared from being devolved from the federal level to the  provincial level of government.The president made the commitment to Sindh Governor Ishratul Ibad  Khan after the governor called to tell the president of the fierce  opposition to the move from public universities in Sindh, the  president’s home province.
The federal government had announced late last month that the HEC  would cease to be a federal institution and would be devolved to the  provincial level as part of the implementation process of the 18th  amendment to the constitution, which greatly enhanced the powers of the  provincial governments while reducing those of the federal government.
Meanwhile, at a marathon meeting held at HEC headquarters in  Islamabad, the vice chancellors of more than 30 public universities  formed an action committee, headed by Imtiaz Gilani of the University of  Engineering and Technology (UET) Peshawar, to keep the HEC a federal  institution.
“We are the key stakeholders of the HEC and we should have been  consulted before taking any decision in this regard,” said Gilani,  flanked by more than 30 heads of public universities at a press  conference held after the formation of the action committee.
The HEC was created in 2002 and is widely recognised as a highly  successful institution that has been able to revitalise higher education  in Pakistan through its regulation of standards at public and private  universities as well as securing additional funding for universities as  well as scholarships for students, both to local and foreign  universities. Nearly 5,000 Pakistani students are currently studying  abroad on HEC or HEC-affiliated scholarships. In addition, the HEC  finances research and has ensured that academics in Pakistan are  well-paid.
Students and educators are fearful that devolving the institution to  the provincial level would split resources and reduce funding for both  universities as well as scholarships.
A resolution, passed by the heads of 133 universities, acknowledged  the HEC’s role: “Our universities are the premier research institutions  in Pakistan, and with the support of the HEC through various programs  such as the research grant program, conference support, digital library  program, indigenous PhD scholarships, travel grants etc., have been able  to place Pakistan firmly on the research and innovation map of the  world.”
The HEC has actively worked to support the growth of universities in  the underserved areas of Pakistan such as Uthal, Malakand, Gilgit, Dera  Ghazi Khan and Sukkur. Connected via a state-of-the-art high-speed  computer network with video-conferencing systems, every university is  now connected to each other and the world.
In addition, students are given scholarships to get PhDs at foreign  universities and return to join the faculty at public universities  throughout the country.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 8th,  2011.



 



 
 
 
 






 
 
 
