Two, across the border, the former air chief, air chief marshal (ACM) SP Tyagi had his home raided by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), the equivalent of our own FIA, being suspected of involvement in bribery and corruption amounting to 50 million euros to do with India’s purchase of 12 Italian helicopters made by Agusta Westland, a subsidiary of the Italian giant Finmeccanica. According to reports in the press, CBI spokeswoman Dharini Mishra said, “He is one of the 13 people we have filed an FIR (First Information Report) against…the FIR filed on Wednesday represents the first stage of an official police enquiry’.
And last but not least, a hand for Shahbaz Sharif for his hard work and for proving that he was, by far, the best chief minister of any province of Pakistan during the past five years. You might disagree with him on many counts, such as I do, e.g., having the distasteful Rana Sanaullah by his side, but you cannot fault him for not trying his best to improve the lot of Punjab. In which, let us not be niggardly, he has succeeded to some good extent.
Whether it was combating dengue, or getting projects completed in record time, Sharif excelled in a milieu where mediocrity is the rule; where one or two of every 10 government servants actually do the jobs they are paid to do, in the way they should be done; where most of them are only along for the ride leaving the hard work to those of their colleagues who are honest of purpose, and who believe in pride of performance.
He provided leadership by being there himself: inspecting building sites and anti-dengue operations at all hours; visiting hospital latrines and personally cleaning clogged basins and drains to show that there is no shame in getting one’s hands dirty, thus forcing the bureaucracy to rouse itself out of its stupor.
I had occasion to work with him on the Doongi Ground fraud perpetrated on the province of Punjab and particularly on the people of Lahore in which the famous cricket ground in Gulberg II (along MM Alam Road) was converted into a future IMAX cinema and commercial building, the rent from whose shops would hopefully make up the losses sure to be run up by the cinema.
This is what I wrote in Dawn of December 30, 2008:
“SURELY everyone and Charlie’s aunt has heard about the Doongi Ground scandal? The one in which the government of Pervaiz Elahi tried…to convert (or in legal parlance, ‘change the use’ of) a park/playground to an entertainment centre containing an IMAX cinema?
“An IMAX cinema in Lahore you may well ask? In a city that cannot provide its inhabitants clean drinking water…where the poor far outnumber the rich who play on MM Alam Road…and where, in any case, the scheme of the Gulberg colony dating to the early fifties had Doongi Ground clearly marked as a green playground/park area?
“An IMAX cinema in any city of Pakistan, you would ask when there are very few films in the entire world in the IMAX format? When the ticket costs would be prohibitive for the vast majority of the citizens of the city? When there was, even when the project was (mis)conceived four years ago, not enough electricity in the country to run equipment such as that in an IMAX which needed humidity control and a temperature of 26 degrees Celsius all year round to merely stay in good repair in hot and humid Pakistan…something like Rs10m a month would be needed just to keep the damned thing running.”
My recommendation: Do not throw good money after bad; return the Doongi Ground to the children of Lahore; turn the whole matter over to a judicial tribunal which should prosecute those who played so wantonly with public funds.
The long and the short of it is that work was stopped; the Punjab Entertainment Company (wholly owned and financed by the Government of Punjab, I ask you) was disbanded and a sum of Rs500 million recovered. Note that 500 million had already been squandered on this criminal enterprise.
I found Shahbaz Sharif clear-headed and assertive, ensuring that a reluctant bureaucracy did what was right. I am sorry to report, however, that the bureaucracy has not allowed the findings of the excellent Farogh Naweed Report on this scandal to become public and/be implemented.
Now back to The Caring Store and the Indian air chief. Our CSD is now just another retail store catering to all comers: a commercial enterprise just like any other grocer, general merchant, or supplier. This is a crying shame, and only adds to charges that the army runs what are mainly money-making commercial concerns.
Hard on the heels of which comes the news that the GOP has quietly acquiesced to the army’s demands for more money, ending up slipping up to Rs687 billion into its coffers between 2009 and 2013. Well...
As to what has happened to ACM Tyagi, Ms Mishra’s counterpart in Pakistan should have been disappeared by now...the raiding sleuths of the FIA thrashed up and locked up in the nearest quarter guard and so on.
And, er, the CSD in India is still ONLY for the use of serving and retired personnel of the Armed Forces ...
P.S. Does The Caring Store pay taxes? Would ISPR care to comment?
Published in The Express Tribune, March 22nd, 2013.
COMMENTS (22)
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@mind control: "Well, if Pakistan had to do what India does, then what is the point in partition?"
Hush!DOn't give people such ideas. India is fine as it is.
@Foreign Leg: I did respond but it did not get through.........so another try. Why are the representatives of the people so pathetic ?? In my opinion its because our political systems are built on patronage and nepotism and not on merit. Both you and the author have a valid point of sorts like the local saying goes ' Amongst the blind even a one eyed man is a king '.
And, er, the CSD in India is still ONLY for the use of serving and retired personnel of the Armed Forces …
Well, if Pakistan had to do what India does, then what is the point in partition?
Sir, very well done after the last article which did not enjoy in reading about Gen Pasha as care taker prime minister. But Sir I differ on the account of CSD.It was and is a great facility for military personnel as its branches are stretched all over Pakistan where ever military is deployed. Moreover if you have CSD membership card, which only is issued to serving and retired army men, then you get concession of about 5 to 10 percent over your total purchases. Sir please stop rediculing army, as we have many other people in this country who think it is their duty to defame military in one way or the other.
@Parvez: Seeing how pathetic most representatives of people in Pakistan (and also many in India) are, don't you think it is a good thing that Shahbaz Sharif at least tried something? . The way I see the Lahore BRT, I think it will fail eventually but only because the demand far outstrips capacity. However I will still give him full marks for getting it operational.
An enjoyable article by KS. When the military's top brass is preoccupied in business ventures it would adversely affect the professionalism of the armed forces in fighting both internal and external threats to Pakistan and the same is quite evident in not so satisfactory performance of the military against TTP recently.
Can not agree with you on Shahbaz Shareef. A good manager has vision, the ability to build a team and delegate responsibility. He ensures work gets done, he does not do it himself.
I am not a fan of Sharif but I am a great fan of KS. If he praised Sharif he praised for reason. To me injustice prevails by all means in lower parts of Punjab, and sole reason is CM Punjab. Good Work nonetheless Sir! keep it comming...
@Arshad Syed Two wrongs dont make a right. All the elite is corrupt, both civilian and military, but the problem with the military is that there is no check on their power, they are an even greater parasitic entity than the civilain politicians.
@Kamran Shafi Sahib: Your statement: "And last but not least, a hand for Shahbaz Sharif for his hard work and for proving that he was, by far, the best chief minister of any province of Pakistan during the past five years." deserves the attention of our people. Politics is the art of Statecraft and Democracy is the means to achieve excellence. May the public reward Shahbaz Sharif appropriately.
After reading this article I thought Kamran Shafi is running Shahbaz Sharif 's election campaign . Kamran Shafi forgot to mention how brilliantly Shahbaz Sharif handled bakery boy case . Money & time which Shahbaz Sharif wasted on projects like metro bus , lap top , Sasti roti etc he could have used that money to generate electricity , to make health care facilities better , to implement education emergency in Punjab , to provide clean drinking water but we saw doctors on strike , fake medicines , flop Danish schools , kids studying in graveyards & lot more such things. Before asking if CSD pay taxes did Kamran Shafi ask how many politicians & parliamentarians including Shahbaz Sharif & President Zardari pay taxes & how much ?
Maj shafi's articles are humour in uniform.He provides free entertainment to his readers.well done,keep it up
Even Mr. Sharif has his blind spots. Remember the incident of his son-in-law assaulting the employees of a Lahore bakery? Amazingly enough the young man was found not guilty.
Blinded by love for PML N.
It is a shame with all these Indian Armed Forces Generals being booked for one charge or the other. This all started in the last 10-15 years. Prior to that, people had a clean record, they served with dignity and retired with dignity. Anybody remember General Vaidya?
It seems corruption keeps seeping into the Indian Armed forces. That is bad news.
One day perhaps the Army will start naming its missiles after shampoos in order to spur sales.
Love reading your articles - nice humour! As an aside, we in India need to get the politicians straightened up - especially the ones who are in politics for the money. Outright scoundrels. Just watch Lok Sabha TV and see their antics - you'll know what I mean.
Kamran Shafi is one of the few Pakistanis that knows whats going on in the world. Always fun to read him. That's the reason I visit the Tribune.
It is a delight to read Mr Shafi and once again he hits nail right on its head in this article.
Before all indians get carried away, allow me to warn that current Indian political set up is too contaminated by corruption. While ACM Tyagi is rightly arrested, not a SINGLE politician is convicted for corruption in last 20 years(A Raja and Suresh Kalmadi are under trial, not convicted). So current political lot is not worthy of imitation for Pakistan (or any reasonable country).
It is a pleasure to read your articles and do keep up your good work Sir!
.........but don't all our senior government officials shop at Harrods ?
Ah SIr, You gave an example that relates to a retired Air Chief. Let me give you an example related to the person who was a serving COAS at the time of the incidents I am about to narrate. Well this former COAS of India who got his post based on a birthday in the government record wanted to extend his tenure by a year by saying that the record was not accurate and he was a year younger than the records indicated. The government did not buy the argument since it was never brought up at the time that he accepted his promotion to the post of COAS. The COAS went to the court to get his extension and lost his case. He retired on the date he was supposed to. Another incident with the same COAS. HE asked for an appointment with PM Manmohan Singh to brief him about something. Manmohan SIngh politely directed him to update his boss the defence minister who in turn would update Man Mohan SIngh.
Great article, Shafi Kamran Sb. Thank you, but do you think the genarals will learn?