Monday, September 29, 2008

Eid Greetings

The Blog Team would like to extend heart-felt felicitations to IIUI Blog visitors on the occasion of Eid-ul-Fitr. We hope that you will keep visiting the blog in future as well and would wish some of you could give us some feed-back about the blog (For feed-back, please send your e-mails to iiuiblog@gmail.com).

We request all of you to pray for the departed soul of Professor Mirza Muhammad Arshad, one of the colleagues who passed away on September 29, 2008. May his soul rest in peace! Amen.

Professor Arshad Mirza Passed Away!

Dr. Rahmat Illahi has shared the following sad news:

"Asalam-o-Alaikum

I regret to inform you that Prof. M. Arshad Mirza has died today morning. Inalilahe Waina alaihe rajehoon. May his soul peace in rest.

I really appreciate your efforts and cooperation in this regard.
with highest regards

Rahmt Ellahi"

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Appeal for Professor. Arshad Mirza

We have received following message from one reader:

"Professor Arshad Mirza of the Economics Department is suffering from lungs disease and is in deteriorating conditions in Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS), Islamabad. To save his life, he must undergo lungs transplantation. This facility is not available in Pakistan and for travelling abroad and have treatment, he needs to have Pak Rupees 50,0000 which are beyond his capacity. Funds are being raised to help Prof. Mirza. Amounts can be deposited directly to his account no. 184400601571101 in the Habib bank, International Islamic University. You can also contact Dr. Rahmat Ilahi chairman, Dept. of mathematics and statistics at phone no. 0519258037 or 0519019510.

Jazakumullah"
1 comments:
Adnan said...
Please note below the corrections in blog details: Estimated amount required: Rs 5 million (50,00000) Account Name: Muhammad Arshad Mirza Account Number: 18440060157101
Bank: Habib Bank Limited, International Islamic University, Islamabad
Please note that the above estimate is for a possible lungs transplant in India (least of the preferred places for the transplant). Investigations are being made in UK at the moment to compare the costs and treatment levels. We will appreciate if someone could pass on his/her contact details for us to share the medical reports of Professor Mirza to make similar inquiries in the USA.
September 23, 2008 12:41 PM

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Jack Straw on Pakistan and the UK: A Living Bridge

From: http://www.justice.gov.uk/news/sp160908a.htm
16 September 2008

International Islamic University, Islamabad, Pakistan

Jack Straw has given a speech on relations between Pakistan and the UK at the International Islamic University in Islamabad during his official visit to Pakistan.
[Check against delivery: this is the prepared text of the speech, and may differ from the delivered version.]

The Right Honourable Jack Straw MP, Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice:


Introduction

Good afternoon.

I am honoured to be here at the International Islamic University as a long standing friend of Pakistan. I bring with me the greetings and good wishes of Prime Minister Gordon Brown, and Foreign Secretary David Miliband.

And Ramadan Kareem to you all. I know the importance of the Holy Month of Ramadan, a time of prayer, of reflection, of empathy - for Muslims from around the world whether in Lahore or Liverpool. Islam, after Christianity, is the second largest, and the fastest growing faith community in the United Kingdom. And I am looking forward greatly to celebrating Iftaar with you here this evening, as I will with friends in Blackburn on Friday, as I did in Delhi on Sunday.

Just less than forty years ago, in the heady days of the late 1960s, I was President of the National Union of Students in the United Kingdom.

I remember the indomitable sense of possibility and of passion felt by students then.

I remember the excitement of having our lives ahead of us, and the future in our hands.

I can only hope that those of you here this afternoon feel something similar. For you are Pakistan's future, you are the leaders of tomorrow, and you are at a hugely significant point in your nation's history.

What I would like to discuss today is the opportunity that now presents itself to your generation, and how democracy and the rule of law can help lay the foundations for a peaceful and prosperous Pakistan as they have for nations around the globe. The Iqbal Institute, which has so graciously hosted this event, was founded to foster dialogue and further understanding between different nations and cultures. And it is in this spirit that I share some of the United Kingdom's experiences, not to hector but to highlight some of the lessons - sometimes painful lessons - from our own past.

My first visit to Pakistan was back in 1992. That included a memorable trip to Muzaffarabad, more recently the scene of such tragic devastation in the 2005 earthquake.

Since then I have visited your country on many occasions, and did so frequently during my five years as British Foreign Secretary.

In any event, Pakistan is seldom out of my thoughts, and never out of my heart. It cannot be, not when I represent 16,000 British Pakistanis in my own constituency in Blackburn, with roots which run deeply throughout this country, but especially in the Mirpur area and the Pakistani Punjab.

When I was last here the region was wracked with tensions which threatened to overspill into something with far more alarming consequences.

And it was just 10 months ago that Pakistan was under emergency rule, elections had been postponed, the rule of law had been supplanted by emergency law.


Benazir Bhutto

And on December 27th came the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, a tragedy as deeply shocking to me as it was to so many millions here in Pakistan and around the world.

I had the honour of knowing Benazir, and of considering her a friend. I last saw her in mid-October last year - shortly before her return to this country. She was a very brave and courageous woman.

In spite of the upheaval and trauma of the past few months and the current difficulties, I can sense - even from my short time here - a real appetite and desire for change. I hear about it often at home, but I can almost touch it here.

Do not lose sight of that, nor allow such optimism to slip into cynicism.

It is because these latest green shoots of democracy which sprouted on Election Day, 18th February 2008 represent the triumph of unity over division that there are those who seek to undermine it.

So I say to you, let the elections which followed the murder of Benazir Bhutto stand as a symbol of hope.

Benazir did not just leave behind her a grieving nation. She left behind a legacy, and the dream of a peaceful and democratic Pakistan. In the words of the poet Ahmed Faraz, who himself passed away here in Islamabad just a fortnight ago:

'Dreams do not die.

Dreams are light, life, wind,

Which can not be stopped by mountains black,

Which do not burn in the hells of cruelty,

Like light and life and wind, they

Do not bow down even in graveyards.'

Remember the determination of the Pakistani people: that terrorism will not succeed; that the dream of democracy will not be bowed, but made real.


Transition to democracy

For the story is the same around the world: whilst the concept of 'democracy' is ancient, the experience of it is young.

This is not just true for the new nations which emerged from the aftermath of World War II or the end of the Cold War, but for much of 'historic' Europe.

Even in the lifetime of my parents, the UK is the only country in Western Europe not to have experienced occupation, dictatorship, or the moral hazard of neutrality in the face of a great evil.

More than that, three now well-functioning democracies in Western Europe - Spain, Portugal and Greece - were ruled by right wing dictators until the Seventies, and nations in Eastern Europe did not even begin to establish democracies until the 1990s.

Some may call it a paradox, others an inevitable feature of imperialism, but either way, the United Kingdom preached the values of democracy at home but for two centuries was less inclined to see it practised abroad. Like any empire, many parts of the British Empire ultimately were enforced by compulsion, subjugation and down the barrel of a gun, not through the will of the people.

I use the example of my country's history to put Pakistan's own transition to democracy into perspective. It is, therefore, with humility that I make my remarks today. It took us a very long time indeed before we practised as well as preached.


Democracy and rule of law

Sometimes democracy and the rule of law may be seen by impatient leaders as an optional extra.
It is not.

The truth is that among those nations which enjoy the greatest stability and long term prosperity, there is one common feature: regardless of race, religion, colour or creed, natural resources or geographical location, it is strong and effective democratic institutions underpinned by the rule of law which enhance the material and social well-being of a country and its people.

This is because true democracy is more than just a people's right to choose its leaders at the ballot box; it is a continuing experience. It gives people security by giving them control over their own lives. It is an end and the means.

To quote Prime Minister Gilani during yesterday's International Democracy Day, 'I have a strong belief that democracy is the best system that has so far been evolved in human history as it not only addresses people's concerns but also gives the opportunity to the people to freely express their will and determine their own political, economic, social and cultural systems and their full participation in all aspects of life'.

The expression of the will of the people through open and fair elections and is essential to a democracy, but so to is effective government, at all levels.

It is through effective democratic government, supported by effective public institutions, that Pakistan can meet the challenges of fighting terrorism, and further marginalising extremism in all its forms; how it can best strengthen the economy; how it can improve the health and education of its citizens.

According to the United Nations Human Development report, 'all but two of the world's richest countries [those with per capita incomes above $20,000] have the world's most democratic regimes'. It goes on to highlight that even among different countries with similar incomes, it is those which are democracies where people live longer and fewer children die. As the economist Amartya Sen has famously argued, 'No famine has ever taken place in the history of the world in a functioning democracy.'

Stability is sustained in a democracy because a free media, an active citizenry, and effective political processes do not allow governments to sit idly by in the face of injustices and popular pressure. Societies with a sovereign parliament, an independent judiciary and a people free to speak out in legitimate opposition are strengthened by such accountability, not threatened by it.

In the UK we have recently worked more thoroughly to separate the judiciary from the executive and the legislature so there can be no hint that political pressure has been brought to bear on the decisions made by the judges or in their selection. Such separation of powers brings with it the openness that a modern democracy requires if it is to operate effectively and in the confidence of the public.

My own office of Lord Chancellor has been traced back to the seventh century. It is among the most ancient roles in the United Kingdom. But it was as recently as 2005 that the Lord Chancellor combined his post as a member of the Cabinet with that of the head of the Judiciary, and the Speaker of the House of Lords, the second chamber of our Parliament. The uproar would have been extraordinary if such a constitutional anomaly had been created in 2005 rather than substantially reformed.


Now it is the Lord Chief Justice who is head of the judiciary, with an independent appointments commission responsible for the selection of judges, whilst the House of Lords elect their own Speaker. This recent reform to an ancient office goes to show that even the most established democracies must renew their constitutional arrangements so that they continue to meet the demands and expectations of the public.


Security

Democratic institutions inevitably come under the greatest strain when the pressures on those institutions are the greatest. No greater strain arises than from the murderous, random violence which is the consequence of all terrorism. The threats from terrorism are here, there, and everywhere; and terrorist outrages are no respecter of belief or faiths, indeed are an insult to those faiths.

We each choose our own language. I prefer the word 'struggle' to 'war' to describe the response to terrorism in which all of us have to engage, for that is what it is - a struggle. And it is the people of Pakistan who are at the very the forefront of this struggle.

The United Kingdom has lost many souls at home and abroad to Al Qaeda inspired terrorism and to the Taliban; but the people of Pakistan have lost many more. In the last year alone more than a thousand people, military and civilian, have been killed, and many more injured. Pakistan bears a heavy burden and wears the scars of this struggle against terrorism.

In the United Kingdom Al-Qaeda inspired terrorism is not our first experience of this scourge. Hundreds paid with their lives in the 30 year struggle against Irish republican terrorism.

But what this recent experience tells us is that in the face of such security threats, we must stay true to our democratic principles. I recognise that this is not easy, but it is a fallacy that security derives from acting outwith the law. We all would do well to heed the philosopher John Locke: 'where the law ends, tyranny begins'.

In 1942, the darkest year of World War II, and not long after we had weathered 'The Blitz', when Great Britain still faced an existential threat from Nazi Germany - the Law Lord, Lord Atkin [in his dissenting opinion in Liversidge v Anderson], put it this way;

'Amidst the clash of arms the laws are not silent. They may be changed, but they speak the same language in war as in peace.'

What Lord Atkin attested was that that the law should be and ought to remain the framework of any response, especially at times of crisis.

This way a nation's values are put at the forefront of a response and not compromised in chasing the myth that democratic principles are a hindrance to a nation's security.
What we have also learnt is that an effective response necessarily involves more than just the military and law enforcement.

Today 'The Troubles' in Northern Ireland are happily behind us, and the people of Northern Ireland are able to look forward to peaceful and prosperous future. That was achieved by a combination of a firm military and security response, and an increasingly effective political process. British Prime Ministers - John Major and Tony Blair in particular - dealt with men who had blood on their hands. But they were right to do so. The means were justified by the achievement of peace.

Whilst all terrorism is the same in its direct effect - the random killing and maiming of innocent civilians, and the terrorisation of whole communities, there (I accept), the similarities end. For example, the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) had clearly defined political ends, and a leadership and an associated, lawful, political party to articulate those ends.

In contrast, Al-Qaeda has no coherent or attainable political ends. The only thing they articulate is violence, the only thing they are reconciled to is division. I know of no conceivable basis on which any kind of 'negotiation' with the leadership of Al Qaeda would normally be justified.

When David Miliband was here in April he talked about the importance of reconciliation with those who are willing to be reconciled. Reconciliation does not mean creating a haven for terrorists - quite the reverse. It means establishing a dialogue with those who are prepared to renounce violence and participate in due democratic processes. That has been the lesson of Northern Ireland, and that was the lesson of the 18th February. If you give people voice through democracy, those who oppose it can be marginalised.

This can help challenge the conditions of social acceptance, even tolerance, which allow Al-Qaeda and the Taliban operate in some areas of the North-West Frontier Province, the Tribal Areas of Pakistan, and the bordering eastern parts of Afghanistan.

In these areas, and alongside a firm security response, I believe politics - which after all is about the resolution of grievances and injustices in a way which avoids violence - has a crucial role to play in helping to improve the conditions of the people(s), and thereby helping to make the terrorists' environment much less benign. More to the point, I know that your new President Zardari, and the government of Pakistan hold this belief too.

There is now a growing understanding between ourselves and the Pakistani authorities that in the long term security does not derive from the actions of the military, the law enforcement agencies and the courts alone. This applies to Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq as it did to Northern Ireland.

A key, and growing part of any successful counter-terrorism strategy must be to prevent individuals from being drawn to violent extremism in the first instance. To do so is not to mobilise tanks, aircraft, troops - but instead to give voice to that great majority of the people who renounce terror.

I was struck, a week ago today, by the symbolism of President Karzai joining your newly sworn-in President at his first press conference: the leaders of two nations among those which have lost the most in the struggle against terrorism, and have the most to gain in working together with common purpose to end it.

I also applaud President Zardari for his promise of continuing to strengthen relations with India and his recognition of the need further to build up trust and create new ties between the two countries. The lesson from recent European history can apply every bit as much in South Asia. Genuine peace is far more than the cessation of hostilities, but the forging of constructive and mutually beneficial relationships between a country and its neighbours.

We wholeheartedly support Pakistan's developing 'multi-pronged approach', encompassing diplomatic, economic, political and security responses.

So it heartens me that cooperation between our countries is improving in respect of all these areas. And I am sure that Prime Minister Gilani's government is as committed as Gordon Brown's to doing still more.

In July this year, our Government announced that it was doubling to £480 million support for fighting poverty over the next three years, making Pakistan the UK's second largest aid programme recipient.

This help will be targeted, in cooperation with the Pakistani authorities, where it is needed most, particularly in the border areas - helping more children get an education, improving health, tackling preventable diseases like TB and polio - to help Pakistan to achieve its goals.

I am here to play my part as Justice Secretary, and it is why my colleagues from across Her Majesty's Government - the Foreign Secretary, the Defence Secretary, the International Development Secretary, the Home Secretary, the Communities Secretary all have visited in recent months.

We must recognise our responsibility to you, and yours to us - for we face many of the same threats.

For Pakistan's security is Britain's security; as Britain's is Pakistan's.


Living bridge

This increasing sense of partnership is critical to all our interests because there is a living bridge between our two countries, in the shape of the 1 million British citizens and their families of Pakistani descent.

Such strong family and cultural ties between our two countries - rooted as they are in a long, shared history - enrich us both. In politics, education, medicine, sport, the arts people of Pakistani origin are an important and established part of British life.

From Amir Khan in boxing to James Caan in business, from Owais Shar in the England cricket team, to Sarfraz Manzoor in journalism British Pakistanis are hugely successful. We are enormously admiring of such achievement, and of Britons who are comfortable with and proud of their Pakistani heritage.

In the realm of British politics, the four Members of Parliament of Pakistani heritage [Shahid Malik (Dewsbury), Sadiq Khan (Tooting), Mohammad Sarwar (Glasgow, Central) and Khalid Mahmood (Birmingham, Petty Barr)] - two of whom are ministers - bear testimony to the influence of the Pakistani community on our country. But the strength of this living bridge is such that I hear Pakistani politics debated every bit as much as British politics on the streets of Blackburn.

Not surprising given the 1.4 million journeys made between Pakistan and the UK each year for tourism, to visit families, for business - helping people to stay in touch with their kith and kin, their culture and their heritage.

Pakistan-UK trade ties are strong and growing. £1.9 billion worth of trade flowed between the two countries in 2006, whilst the UK is Pakistan's third largest trading partner. Around 80 UK companies are currently doing business in Pakistan, evidence of their confidence in Pakistan's economic potential. Large British banks are increasingly looking to success in Pakistan: Barclays Bank opened its first three branches in the country - one here in Islamabad - just last month.

Pakistani people have made and continue to make an enormous and invaluable contribution to all walks of life in the UK.

British Pakistanis are where Britain and Pakistan intersect. Their success shows that these two identities can and do thrive in the same place and in the same person.


Conclusion

I do not for one moment underestimate the challenges Pakistan faces, in its transition to democracy, in the face of terrorism, in strengthening the economy and its international ties.

And I hope that the Pakistani people continue to find the strength to keep moving forward, even when you have already come so far. I can offer you the hand of support and friendship of the United Kingdom to help you on your way. But ultimately how far you progress it is not in anyone's gift but yours.

As with so many things, I think it is William Shakespeare - perhaps the most cherished poet and playwright in the English language - who has put it most elegantly:
'Our remedies oft in ourselves do lieWhich we ascribe to heaven.' (All's Well That Ends Well)

As all of you know better than me, the remedy lies with the Pakistani people - your future is yours to determine. Progress, stability, security can only be achieved through the expression of your will and resolve.

Let this year which began in mourning, end in celebration.

Let the decade which began with much hope, end with a lasting transition to democracy.

Thank you and Ramadan Mubarak.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Our Escalating Boycott Rate!

The doors are locked and entry is not allowed…even if you are a faculty member, you cannot get in for your classes and teaching assignments as it is second day of students’ protest in the Women Campus of International Islamic University, Islamabad. This recent protest is widely reported in national dailies and news channels. We can even see what students are really up to and think about soaring strike culture at IIUI. Is it unusual that students went on strike in an educational institution in Pakistan? Of course, not! We have a plethora of evidence that every now and then students stage such demonstration somewhere in Pakistan and at times they are bloody cool! However what is unusual in case of IIUI is its punching strike rate which we have observed over the last couple of years. If you don’t recall, we can give you some flashback in the form of pictures, videos and news coverage. Enjoy, if you are not among the big bosses!

What makes our students to go on strike is a million dollar question for IIUI administration. What else we can do for you chaps, they monger every time whenever a news item pops up. To them, IIUI is a complete institution by all means: competent faculty staff, visionary leadership, shining students, superb infrastructure, efficient management and on the top of every thing, moderate and always on cutting edge! So what goes wrong every now and then that some trouble makers start marching around, shouting meaningless and shameful slogans such as “water in hostels”, “books in libraries”, “good teachers in classes”, “over stuffed hostels”, “increased fee” etc. etc.

We’ll ask them to remain cool and comfortable. Students are notoriously immature and they never comprehend how prideful our President is when it comes to his achievements within very short span of time. If you really want to feel that sense of pride then go through the recent interview of our President on Dawn’s educational pages. It is indeed a much revealing piece. In addition to expose the decaying quality of Dawn’s journalism, this interview clearly tells us that our president could be proud for 4 times just in one session of interview. Not only this, he could take pride at least for 2 times in the same interview and this obviously for what he has done for IIUI! He is perhaps in run for this year’s Presidential Pride of Performance Award! All the best Dr. sahib!

Unfortunately students and the most of the faculty do not share this sense of pride and they are highly critical of what is happening on campus. Isn’t it a matter of subjective interpretation? One thing is for sure that Dr. Siddiqi’s tenure as president witnessed unprecedented strikes and agitations on Campus. By the way the interview reveals that the “visionary president” lacks some vision when he narrates the history of IIUI (He says: “We started with the faculty of Islamic Studies with the strength of just 40 students,” whereas we all know that faculty of Islamic studies (was there ever a faculty with this name?) was not the pioneering faculty of IIUI; Dr. Siddiqui was then “proud of the Department of Social Science which has been established under his enterprising aegis”. Yet another sheer misrepresentation of facts! He does not even know about certain basic statistics of IIUI and says “We are lucky to have four PhDs teaching in the faculty of Engineering”. In fact IIUI hosts seven (7) PhDs in the Faculty of Engineering & Technology: http://my.iiu.edu.pk/Faculties/EngineeringTechnology/FacultyStaff/tabid/79/Default.aspx )

If you really want to know that why it is all happening then there are simple answers. Answers that do not need Socratic wisdom but of course, call for invoking your ordinary prudence! Our problem is maladministration and mismanagement. Despite all rhetoric about power decentralization, we are an extremely enclosed body-corporate where decision making is centralized and irrational. Whatever notional powers are devolved, they are among the few handpicked and largely incompetent people who ultimately create these situations for the President. Let’s take the example of this strike. Who decided about the increase of hostel fee and how that decision was reached? Like all other cases and after students’ agitation and strike, the decision was withdrawn in the name of clarification and misconception. Our familiar buzz words at IIUI! Every time after facing music, our President delicately shifts the whole blame to his subordinate authority and ironically that authority cannot even utter a word: Et tu, Brute?

We sincerely believe that strike culture is merely a tip of an iceberg of maladministration. It is high time for IIUI administration to come out of its boastful pride and think about the ground realities. Such matters cannot be resolved with poorly drafted counter press releases.

Friday, September 12, 2008

"The URL you requested has been blocked"

We are informing you that our IIUI readers are currently experiencing some problem in accessing this blog site from International Islamic University Islamabad. Whenever the blog’s URL is launched in web browser from IIUI, a message pops up: The URL you requested has been blocked. URL = iiuiblog.blogspot.com. Apparently it looks that I I U I Blog has been blocked at IIUI’s internal network. We have been trying to understand this situation realising the fact that there might be some technical bottlenecks behind this restraint but now it looks that this blog site is deliberately blocked. We have contacted IIUI web & IT team and asked them about this matter but so far we could not get any response from them.

Since the day we started this blog, we have struggled to keep it as diverse in opinion as possible but alas!! The narrow-mindedness of a few people has apparently prevailed and the authorities at IIUI have resorted to censorship and blockade of blog which is condemnable and lamentable in today’s free, democratic Pakistan. It also reflects their sheer bad taste as such technological measures can be easily circumvented these days

There is no doubt that a few posts were critical of the policies of IIUI administration but we don’t think that the step taken by the authorities is in any way justifiable. Our purpose has always been to generate a healthy and candid debate within IIUI and we are of the view that dissent is necessary for the intellectual life of an institution.

We’ll request Dr Manzoor Ahmad ("learned Islamic scholar " and “the greatest living philosopher of today’s Pakistan”) and Dr Anwar H Siddiqui (“the visionary president of IIUI”) to please look into the matter and see who are those that are responsible for strangling our voice at IIUI campus and let them share some wisdom and vision that God has bestowed to you both.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Vision, passion and purpose

From: Dawn, Karachi, http://www.dawn.com/weekly/education/education1.htm
By Kaleem Ahsan

A dynamic educationist with a passion for revolutionising the International Islamic University (IIU), Islamabad, of which he has been the president for over a year-and-a-half now, Dr Anwar H. Siddiqui, is no stranger to this high seat of learning, having also served as its vice president from 1986 to 1997. He has an illustrious career in the prestigious and sanctimonious field of education, having previously held such distinguished positions as Vice Chancellor, Allama Iqbal Open University (Islamabad); DG, Federal Judicial Academy; Director, National Institute of Public Administration (Karachi); Director, Research & Studies, Pakistan Administrative Staff College (Lahore); Professor and Chief Consultant, Ahmed Bello University, Zaria, Nigeria.

As one of the founding members of the IIU, Dr Anwar has a special attachment to the institute and is thereby fervently committed to the task of taking it forward academically with the introduction of new disciplines and faculties. He fondly recalls the humble beginnings of the university in 1980: “We started with the faculty of Islamic Studies with the strength of just 40 students,” he says while showing extreme pride in the giant strides that the university has made over the years.

Today, the university boasts of nine faculties and five autonomous academies, institutes and centres that are offering some 58 academic programmes to no less than 14,000 students of which 5,500 are female students.

“We have the highest number of female students among all the Pakistani universities. We are very proud of our female campus for which we have separate female teachers — parents are very confident and comfortable sending their daughters to our university. If we continue with our present pace, it can be safely predicated that in the next 10 years, we would have 10,000 female students,” he rhapsodises.

Talking about some of the unique programmes that IIU offers in Sharia & Law; Islamic Studies (Usuluddin); and Islmaic Banking & Finance, he asserts, “Our Arabic-based programmes are the best in Pakistan. We put a strong emphasis on Arabic in the teaching of Islamic subjects. We offer specialised education in the field — BA in Sharia & Law, in which we offer all courses as per requirement of the Bar Council as well as harmonising the course with the injunctions of Islamic Sharia. Our students are serving as judges, session judges, additional session judges. In the discipline of Islamic Economics, we impart knowledge on modern economics and attune this with the tenets of Islamic economic system — Islamic Banking. As you know, Islamic Banking is now gaining popularity and spreading in the world — we are a pioneering institute in the subject of Islamic Banking & Finance, integrating modern economics and finance with the Islamic economic and banking system.”

With science and technology being the buzzword in the field of education, the International Islamic University has also expanded to bring this all-important subject within its fold.

“We now have a major thrust towards Science & Technology, Economics, Management Science, Computer Science, Engineering, Basic & Applied Sciences,” Dr Siddiqui proudly points out, adding, “Our engineering degree is now recognised by the Pakistan Engineering Council. We are lucky to have four PhDs teaching in the faculty of Engineering. In Basic & Applied Science we are offering new fields like Mathematics, Bio Informatics, Environmental Science, Software Engineering.”

Of the contribution he’s made in the growth of the university, Dr Sahib is particularly proud of the Department of Social Science which has been established under his enterprising aegis.

With media having acquired such importance in the society today and with its role also having undergone such tremendous change, he states that the Centre for Media & Communication Studies (CMCS) has been setup in the light of these new changes. “The print media will never lose its importance and relevance,” he rightly observes. “But with the exponential growth that has taken place in the country in the field of electronic media, the overall role of media has changed — in print as well as electronic media.” Taking all of this into account, the CMCS has been established and the university has strived to enlist the services of qualified and experienced professionals for its faculty. “It is a modest start but in due time we plan to have our own pilot studio for training in television. So until we manage to acquire this facility, we have arranged for our students to get the necessary training at the PTV studios. We already have our own FM radio station. We are also planning to have a complete media centre for which we are making efforts to seek Japanese cooperation. Our aim is produce trained personnel for the various media-related fields — so that those who graduate from our institute would be absorbed by the market.”

In other fields of social sciences, the IIU is offering Political Science & International Relations, Psychology, History, and Sociology.“

We also have a very good, separate Education department,” he enthuses.

Alumni of the prestigious Institute of Business Administration, University of Karachi (1961), after which he acquired his PhD from the University of Southern California (1966), it is only understandable that Dr Sahib has a special interest in the fields of economy and business. There is great pride in his voice when he talks about the status and standing of IIU in the arena of business education. “IBA in Karachi is acknowledged as No 1 in this field after which LUMS is accorded the second position. Our university is considered to be third,” he discloses proudly. “And we are trying to further improve our standard and standing,” he adds. “We have 50 faculty members of which 50 per cent are employed on a full time basis. We have quite a few PhDs among them — it is hard to find PhDs in Business Administration. Overall we have 60 PhDs in our faculty. We have sent 30 PhDs abroad for further studies.”

It is said that a good teacher is a happy teacher — a teacher content with his/her remuneration.

Cognizant of this dictum, Dr Anwar points out that the salary structure of the teachers has been revived and made more flexible. “Our professor gets Grade 21 and Lecturer Grade 18. For our various faculties, especially for Law, Engineering, Computer Science, we try to get fresh PhDs … and they want to be paid well, as per their qualification so we are paying 1.25 lac to a PHD. We have a very dynamic international faculty and a strong presence of overseas students hailing from some 46 countries. Most of our foreign students are from China.“

We are the trustees of Faisal Mosque. Our Islamic Research Institute is the biggest in the country. Our library is also one of the biggest in Pakistan. Our Sharia Academy is very well-reputed and recently the Iqbal Institute of Research & Dialogue has shifted to our Academy from Lahore.”

With everything having the prefix ‘Islam’ looked down upon or quite suspiciously these days, especially in the West, Dr Anwar strongly rejects the notion in some circles that IIU is some kind of a glorified madressah. “We are an international standard university offering courses in various fields — especially Islamic Sharia & Law, and Islamic Finance and Banking. There is no element of religious extremism anywhere in any of our disciplines. Many dignitaries visit our university when they come to Pakistan.”

Broaching the subject of the IIU’s admission policy, he stresses, “The admission is given on merit and we also offer financial assistance to deserving students. If a student is very good in studies, we do not let him or her leave due to financial constraints. Students apply to us for financial assistance and after assessing their case, we allow them fee concession. We have a number of funds for providing financial help to the students under different headings.

With the university’s name being what it is, one would have expected that it is being funded by the leading, if not most, Islamic countries. However, it was a surprise to learn that this is not the case.

“We have no funding from the Islamic world. Our university was established through a resolution of the OIC but we don’t get any funding from any of the OIC states. Twenty per cent of our expenses are covered by the budget that the government provides us and the remaining 80 per cent we generate from the fee. We have sister universities in Malaysia, Uganda, Niger, etc. The Saudi Arabian government helps by providing us Arabic teachers. So you can say that the international help that we receive is only limited to coin and kind.”

But despite the limited financial resources that the IIU has at its disposal, Dr Anwar H. Siddiqui, within the short period of time that he has been at the helm of affairs, has managed to take the university forward through his visionary approach, turning it into a dynamic seat of learning attuned to the present day needs and requirements.

Sunday, September 7, 2008

The Dark Side of the Enlightenment Project

Author: Dr. Asad Zaman, Professor, International Institute of Islamic Economics-IIUI, Email: asadzaman@alum.mit.edu

The article below has appeared in Turkish Daily News (https://turkishdailynews.com.tr/article.php?enewsid=89584), and also in The News, Pakistan.

An extremely important element in the current thinking and psychology of Europeans is the "Enlightenment Project" undertaken by large numbers of European intellectuals. Achievements of Newton, Galileo,and many other prominent scientists created a dramatic impact on the mindset of Europe. A few simple laws could lay bare the secrets of the movements of the stars, and a few observations could upset centuries of belief in the central place of man (and his planet) in universe.Imagine what progress would be possible if these principles of utilizing observations and fact, and building upon them in the light of reason, were applied on a much larger scale. Enlightenment thinkers were inspired by fantastic achievements of science, and technology.They thought that application of the scientific method in all areas of human thought would lead to a radical improvement in the human condition. All social problems such was wars, famines, disease, misery were due to traditions and superstition (that is, Christianity).Opposing tradition, establishment, encouraging fresh and innovative ways of thinking, and subjecting all ideas to the iron test of reason would lead to the improvement of the human race, and to 'moral progress'.

The first and second world wars came as a shock to believers in the Enlightenment project. The scale of violence, barbarism, and cruelty of Europeans to others was easily equal to the worst happenings in the 'dark' and unenlightened times before the triumph of reason. Centuries of diligent study and application of scientific methods to shape minds and construct societies did not appear to have improved human beings judged as humans. Blind faith in progress through application of science was tempered by a dark dose of reality. Warnings that the Enlightenment project might not turn out so well on the human front had been present all along, but the few naysayers had been ignored by the enthusiastic mainstream. Hume had clearly stated that moral values could not be discovered or established by the scientific method.Everyone saw that morals, integrity and honesty were necessary for civilization. Religion, custom and tradition form the basis formality. Enlightenment thinkers felt confident that they could find alternative bases for a superior morality on the solid foundations off acts and reason. The far-sighted Nietzsche saw much more clearly than his contemporaries the implications of the rejection of religion as superstition, and the magnitude of the task facing the Europeans in constructing an alternative basis for morality, and human behavior.He described this in the parable of the madman who claimed that "We have killed God" – meaning that we Europeans have lost faith in God.He goes on to say the this tremendous news has not yet reached the ears of men, even though they did the deed themselves. That is, the full implications of loss of faith have not been absorbed by European intellectuals, who continue to believe that rational foundations for morality can be found. The implications of living without any basis for morality have not been absorbed.

The twentieth century can be viewed as a report card for the Enlightenment project. As recorded by philosopher and ethicist Jonathan Glover in his Humanity: A Moral History of the Twentieth Century, the report is not good. Violence, murders, atrocities,destruction of entire cities, and large masses of innocent people using deliberately cruel methods, has been done on a scale never before seen in the annals of history. Glover writes that the challenge of Nietzsche, to find an alternative basis for morality, has not been met, although he continues to be optimistic that a solution may be found. Many authors have written books and articles on the decline of morals in the West, which has been extremely rapid in the last fifty years. As a small but significant illustrative example, consider the affair of Clinton and Monica Lewinsky. Only twenty years prior to this event, similar scandals could and did bring down governments and terminate political careers. However, with the erosion of moral values, this affair was dismissed as a personal quirk which was so widespread in the society that it would be hypocritical to chastise the leader too severely for it. According to contemporary conceptions of morality, this is a trivial personal matter, and to take it seriously is the sign of a narrow minded prude. Clinton's affair is the butt of many jokes and limericks it would be improper to cite herein a public forum. Nonetheless, there is a very serious dimension to this affair. If the wives of leaders of the Western world cannot trust them to keep their promises, and to not deceive them, then who can trust them? Surely it is not the case that a person is compartmentalized so as to behave with integrity in public affairs,and not in his personal affairs.

For us living in the Muslim world, there are some very important lessons to be learned from this history of the Enlightenment project.Those of us who have absorbed the lessons of the West have learned to consider tradition and religion as inferior to reason and observation– this lesson permeates all Western thinking, literature, and other media. The fact is that the science and religion occupy different spheres, and experience shows that science offers no guidance on moral affairs. Physics can lead to Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and also provide atomic power. Biology is capable of genetic manipulation of crops to enrich multinationals at the expense of the masses, and equally capable of providing substantial increases in production to feed the starving. We are living in a world which has lost its moral bearings,at least partly as an outcome of commitment to Enlightenment principles. The law of the jungle prevails in the international arena.Any country with sufficient power can invade, capture, occupy, and kill innocents and large numbers without even the pretext of a moral justification. Our Islamic tradition offers strong moral guidance,which is becoming more and more a desperate need of the times.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Islamic Economics: An Alternative Perspective

The debate of Islamic economics, banking and finance has come a long way since last 20 years and the theory is now somehow put into practice. The International Institute of Islamic Economics-IIUI was among the pioneering attempts to teach and disseminate the cause of Islamic economics in an academic setting. However, things have substantially changed over the last several years and we can see many "Islamic" banks operating all over the world with Shariah compliant products under the supervision of a whole bunch of Shariah Advisers. A Karachi based "family of scholars" have really made their fortune out of this boom and they are now "green" cardholders when it comes to Islamic Banking. Quite understandably there is a dissent too and we are sharing here a critical voice of a young scholar who is raising some very crucial concerns about what is happening in the name of Islamic economics. The reason why we are sharing it here is pretty straightforward: the nexus between IIUI-IIIE and contemporary Islamic banking & finance.

This is a series of articles which Muhammad Zahid Siddique Mughal (National University-FAST, Karachi) is currently writing in monthly Al-Shariah. Because of space constraints, we are only giving links to both parts of the article:



Part 2: http://www.alsharia.org/articles/monthly_alsharia/2008/Sep08/islamiMuashiat_zahidSiddique.html

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

After Musharraf

Editorial

From Nature 454, 1030 (28 August 2008) doi:10.1038/4541030a; Published online 27 August 2008,
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v454/n7208/full/4541030a.html

Pakistan's elected governments should break the habit of a lifetime and give due priority to science.

Military strongmen have ruled Pakistan for longer than elected politicians — and, paradoxically, have treated that nation's scientists far better than the much less stable civilian administrations.
General Pervez Musharraf, whose nine-year rule ended with his resignation on 18 August, was a prime example: his regime greatly strengthened the foundations for a Pakistani knowledge economy, instituting reforms that included bigger research budgets, an ambitious university-building programme, a nationwide digital library, a scheme to attract international faculty, and performance-related pay for professors. Many of the changes have been praised in external evaluations within the past year, including those of the World Bank, the US Agency for International Development and the British Council.

But a week after Musharraf was forced to go, the governing coalition of political parties that replaced him has collapsed. Worryingly, Pakistan's governance of its science seems all set to revert to the situation that prevailed under previous elected governments, when the science and education ministries were often afterthoughts — and, in the case of science, with laughable budgets, no ministers and no leadership.

Is history repeating itself? Pakistan has lacked both a science and an education minister for several months, important projects are on hold and budgets have been cut. Only one out of nine planned new universities with international partners is to go ahead on schedule and, in spite of earlier promises to the contrary, the higher-education budget for the fiscal year 2007–08 has been cut from US$438 million to US$364 million. Vice-chancellors at 12 universities have had to take out bank loans to pay salaries.

The future of Atta-ur-Rahman, the former president's long-serving science adviser, is also uncertain. Atta-ur-Rahman, a professor of natural product chemistry at the University of Karachi, was the chief architect of reforms under Musharraf, who once boasted that he had so much confidence in his adviser that Atta-ur-Rahman's ideas would be funded "without reservation".

But amid the turmoil, there are reasons for optimism. Nina Fedoroff, science adviser to US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, was in Islamabad earlier this week for talks on ramping up US assistance to Pakistan's science programmes. The United States and Pakistan together contribute $150 million to what is the world's largest Fulbright programme of fellowships, enabling Pakistani students to go to the United States for postgraduate study and research. In addition, Pakistan is slated to receive a further $7.5 billion in US aid over the next five years and Pakistani officials would like 20% of this earmarked for science and innovation.

Another reason to be optimistic is that this round of non-military government could be stabler and stronger than previous ones. The incoming government will be dominated by the Pakistan Peoples Party, led by Asif Ali Zardari, the widower of the murdered ex-Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. Should Zardari become the new president, this will bring a measure of stability and an opportunity for real change. Previous elected governments dropped the ball on science and education because they were weak and spent a lot of effort — unsuccessfully — keeping the generals at bay. Zardari's party has a majority in parliament and Pakistan's military is so far showing little interest in returning to politics.

But the Peoples Party has some learning to do. Its previous record on science is among the most misguided of all Pakistan's elected governments, and Zardari himself has served time in prison on corruption charges — which he denies. In the late 1970s, the party's founder Zulfikar Ali Bhutto diverted scarce resources and personnel into building the nuclear bomb. His daughter Benazir's contribution during the 1980s and 1990s was a science ministry without a dedicated minister.

A return to the pre-Musharraf era would send Pakistan back to the scientific stone age. The new government needs to recognize that regardless of how much it disliked him, the general bequeathed it a foundation in science and technology on which it can build.