Other proposals include a conflict of interest law, a long overdue reform of the police, the recruitment of 40,000 new teachers and every government-funded post that is recruited in future will be through the National Testing Service. This latter proposal may at last address the scourge of nepotism and poor quality recruitment, which has dragged virtually all public services into a swamp of mediocrity over the years. Also on the agenda is a reform of the lower judiciary and a mass transit project for Peshawar.
Given the diversity of proposals, it is clear that this is not a set of plug-and-play solutions to a complex ganglion of issues. Some are interlocked, and not all are going to be popular and may be resisted in some quarters. Implementation is going to be uneven. Even so this does genuinely appear to be a viable agenda for change in a province that has been accused of being a bastion of conservative backwards-thinking, where change at a fundamental level was not on the agenda. The lives of Everyman may be touched, affected, and improved by these proposals and we wish them well.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 27th, 2016.
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