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Tuesday December 24, 2024

Govt under obligation to support sincere charity organisations: Ghani

By Our Correspondent
December 24, 2024
Sindh Local Government Minister Saeed Ghani addressing a meeting of the PPP workers on December 14, 2024.— Facebook@SaeedGhaniPPP
Sindh Local Government Minister Saeed Ghani addressing a meeting of the PPP workers on December 14, 2024.— Facebook@SaeedGhaniPPP

Sindh Local Government Minister Saeed Ghani has said the government and affluent people are under a solemn obligation to fully back the sincere charities striving hard to spread education in Pakistan.

He stated this while speaking as the chief guest at an event organised by the non-profit Green Crescent Trust (GCT) at a holiday resort on Sunday to entertain over 1,200 orphaned children enrolled in its charitable schools in Karachi and its suburbs.

The GCT’s donors and philanthropists, eminent businessmen, and industrialists attended the ceremony. Ghani told the audience that Pakistan could progress at an accelerated pace only after eradicating the issue of illiteracy in the country in the shortest possible time. He said that Pakistan’s development and advancement would remain an unfulfilled dream without enrolling out-of-school children in the country.

He said that imparting quality education to all the children in the country was the solemn duty of the government, but the latter failed to fulfil this constitutional obligation. The local government minister opined that bona fide charities like the GCT, which embarked upon the mission of providing quality schooling to children from underprivileged communities, had been shouldering an important responsibility of the government.

The government and concerned philanthropists should extend the fullest support to such non-profits in the education sector to jointly wage the struggle against illiteracy in the country, he added.

He appreciated the fact that the GCT had so far established 170 schools in remote and less-privileged areas of Sindh, with an enrolment of over 32,800 students from deprived families. Ghani urged donors to keep supporting the GCT’s drive to enrol out-of-school children in Sindh.

He told the audience that his grandparents had very limited economic resources at their disposal, but even then, they ensured that his father received a proper education, who in turn also did not make any compromise on educating his children.

He stated that his ancestors' financial hardships were overcome solely due to a generational shift, as his elders prioritised education. The local government minister encouraged the orphaned students present at the event to pursue their education wholeheartedly to secure their families' economic prosperity, as he did.

After witnessing impressive speeches and other presentations by the students at the event, he said the children passing out from the GCT schools could become future leaders of Pakistan as qualified scientists, economists, technologists, educationists and civil servants.

In his welcome speech, GCT Chief Executive Officer Zahid Saeed said the authentic UNO figures showed that over 26.2 million children aged between four and 16 were out of school in Pakistan. He said enrolling these out-of-school children was a massive challenge that required constant support from philanthropists and donors.

He said China had overcome its backwardness and poverty in just 20 years by fully focusing on its people's education. He said that ensuring quality schooling for every child in the country without any discrimination could ensure that Pakistan was counted among the most advanced nations in the shortest possible time.

Saeed expressed the firm belief that the GCT would continue to get philanthropic support from concerned donors to expand its educational network in Sindh for children from deprived families.

GCT school network alumna Nazish Jameel, now serving as a town officer in the local government department, told the audience how the GCT transformed her life from an orphan student of an underprivileged family to a government officer who passed the provincial civil service examination.

Abdul Jabbar Rathod, former president of Memon Professional Forum, and Abdul Ghaffar Umar, GCT founding secretary-general, also spoke and highlighted the cause of spreading education to overcome poverty and backwardness in Pakistan.