January 8: PILDAT has launched the first-ever Citizens'
Report on the Performance of the
Pakistan Institute for Parliamentary Services - PIPS
by recommending a need for the PIPS to work harder towards
achieving its goals and objectives, greater transparency for
its activities and a standard procedure for recruitment at
the PIPS by the FPSC, among others.
The Performance
Assessment launch was presided over by Syed Naveed
Qamar, MNA and Member Board of PIPS, while Rana
Muhammad Afzal Khan, MNA, PML-N, Mr. Ali
Muhammad Khan, MNA, PTI, Mr. Iftikhar Ullah
Babar, Former Secretary Senate, and Mr. Ahmed
Bilal Mehboob, President PILDAT, shared their views,
alongside a large number of Parliamentarians.
The Performance
Assessment Report commissioned by PILDAT was mainly authored
by Mr. Iftikhar Ullah Babar, Former Secretary Senate. A paper
examining the role of a similar institute in India - the Bureau
of Parliamentary Studies and Training (BPST) was also commissioned
by PILDAT and was written by Mr. Ratan Lal Shali, former Director
of the BPST. The Citizens' Report on
the Performance of the Pakistan Institute for
Parliamentary Services - PIPS and Challenges
and Future Vision before Parliamentary Study Centres and Institutes
can be accessed online at the PILDAT website.
Syed
Naveed Qamar, MNA believed that the PIPS should take
an initiative to create awareness and demand by reaching out
to Parliamentarians and making it more accessible within the
Parliament buildings. He highlighted that all the training
courses have to be conducted in continuous cycles, which will
help in creating demand from both Parliamentarians and the
PIPS in research as well as trainings.
Rana
Muhammad Afzal Khan, MNA, appreciated PILDAT's initiative
on Citizens' Periodic Reports on the Performance of State
Institutions and highlighted the need for legislators to develop
a comprehensive understanding of Parliamentary traditions,
rules, Parliamentary practices, law and policy drafting mechanism.
He also stated that the PIPS must keep up with the dynamics
of an evolving polity and address legislators’ needs
more proactively and effectively.
Mr.
Ali Muhammad Khan, MNA, said that the PIPS has not
provided sustained capacity building and research support,
especially to the first time Parliamentarians. The Institute
has to work with Parliament, Provincial Government and Local
Government tiers as well.
Earlier, giving
an overview of the report, Mr. Iftikhar Ullah Babar,
Former Secretary Senate, and the author of the report, said
the idea of the PIPS was given in the Speakers' Conference
of 2004, and officially started operating in 2006. It is a
much-needed institute, particularly for a nascent democracy
such as Pakistan. During the initial period of 3 years, the
PIPS performed well, whereas in the years 2012-13 it was not
much active as the Parliament was not in office. According
to his assessment the large number of functions has diluted
its strength. As it is, the PIPS has only focused on only
4 functions out of 12. Very significantly, it is supposed
to bridge the gap between citizens and Parliamentarians, this
duty however not yet been carried out.
In his welcome
address Mr. Ahmed Bilal Mehboob,
President-PILDAT, emphasized that the creation of
the PIPS is a visionary and progressive initiative taken by
the Parliamentarians and all those who were involved in the
setting it up. He further explained that the PIPS was established
through an Act of Parliament back in 2008 to promote research,
provide training and to provide facility of information to
the Parliamentarians in the performance of their duties. A
state of the art facility was purpose-built in Islamabad for
PIPS by USAID at a cost of over Rs. 1 billion. A 22-member
Board of Governors headed by Chairman Senate or Speaker National
Assembly by rotation runs the affairs of the PIPS. Pakistan
is one of the few countries of the developing world, which
can boast the existence of such a dedicated facility for supporting
Parliamentarians, Provincial Legislators, and Parliamentary
staff. Its funding has been secured through the Act which
is provided by the National Assembly, Senate and all the Provincial
Assemblies. He underscored the significant of this Institute
and for it to perform even better; it is imperative that citizens
also take ownership.
Mr. Mehboob
said that in addition to the in-depth analysis of Mr. Babar,
we at PILDAT feel that the following points will also be useful
for enhancing the performance, prestige and credibility of
the PIPS.
The PIPS should
strive for greater transparency of its operations by placing
all its Annual Reports submitted to the Parliament on its
website. Preparation and submission of the Annual Report is
a statutory requirement as per the PIPS Act, 2008. (Ref. Section
17 of the Act)
Recruitment
of the PIPS staff should be undertaken through the Federal
Public Service Commission (FPSC) and their promotion should
follow the pattern of the Central Superior Services of Pakistan
where successful completion of courses at the National School
of Public Policy is considered a pre-requisite for promotion
at each stage. The Honourable incumbent Speaker of the National
Assembly of Pakistan has set a noble precedent by ordering
all senior inductions to the National Assembly Secretariat
through the FPSC. The quality of human resource, with some
noble exceptions, at the secretariats of the Senate, National
Assembly, Provincial Assemblies and the Election Commission
of Pakistan has suffered a great deal because of the policy
of undertaking staff recruitments at the institutional level
without involving an independent body such as the FPSC which
is created for the very purpose of inducting senior civil
servants into the service of Pakistan.
The PIPS should
develop a progressive vision for itself to not only provide
Research, Training and Information services to Pakistani Parliamentarians
and staff but to the same segments in the region and especially
focusing on the emerging democracies in the Muslim world.
The PIPS Board
should very seriously take stock of the performance of the
PIPS during the past six years and see how this promising
institution can do full justice to its charter. A facility
so rich in funds and physical infrastructure in the form of
a state-of-the-art building should have performed better than
is portrayed in the assessment report. For example, during
the past four years (2010-2011 to 2013-2014), total budget
of the PIPS was Rs. 453.126 Million of which it could manage
to spend only Rs. 126.007 Million or only 28 % of the budget.
(Ref. Table 2 of the report). The PIPS returned (surrendered)
Rs. 320.186 Million back to its funders (Senate and National
Assembly) during the past four years because the budgeted
amount could not be utilized. (Ref. Table 3 of the Report).
The PIPS should
urgently and seriously think through its mission especially
in the realm of research and see how can it avoid duplication
in the presence of Research Branches in each of the National
and Provincial Legislatures.
In view of
the dearth of timely availability of independent and objective
analysis of the annual budgets both at the Federal and Provincial
levels, the PIPS should seriously consider establishing a
Parliamentary Budget Office for
the purpose. Many countries in the world now have the parliamentary
budget offices. The Canadian Parliament has an established
parliamentary budget office for the past many years. The next-door
Afghanistan Parliament also has its own budget office.
There has been
some gap in provision of the PIPS services to the Provincial
legislators. The PIPS should seriously consider how to bridge
this gap especially after the 18th amendment when Provincial
Assemblies have much greater responsibilities but weak capacity.
The PIPS, instead
of focusing on recruiting full time senior sectoral experts,
should consider establishing linkages with universities and
independent think tanks to reinforce its research capability.
Establishing
a modern digital cum traditional library at the PIPS is justified
but having two almost similar libraries in the Senate and
National Assembly should be discontinued and only one library
should suffice within the parliament building.
Mr.
Muhammad Rashid Mafzool Zaka, Director, Research
and IT at the PIPS, while speaking at the forum, said that
considering the PIPS is a new initiative and only in its formative
stage; it is making its mark and emerging as an Institute
that can be depended for providing value added capacity development
programmes and research outputs.
Participating
MPs at the Launch included Dr. Ramesh Kumar Vankwani,
(MNA PML-N), Senator Saeeda Iqbal (PPPP),
and member Board of the PIPS, Ms. Nafeesa Khattak
(MNA, PTI), Dr. Fouzia Hameed, (MNA, MQM),
Ms. Surriya Jatoi (MNA, PPPP) Mr.
Khalil George (MNA, PML-N), Ms. Ayesha Syed
(MNA, JI) Ms. Shahjehan Mangrio
(MNA, NPP), Dr. Shahida Rehmani (MNA, PPPP),
Ms. Kiran Haider (MNA, PML-N), Ms.
Aasiya Naz Tanoli (MNA, PML-N), Ms. Shams-un-Nissa
(MNA, PPPP) Ms. Amra Khan (MNA PML-N) Makhdoom
Khusro Bakhtyar (MNA, PML-N), Mr. Sanjay
Perwani (MNA MQM), Mr. Salman Khan Baloch
(MNA, MQM) Senator Suruiya Amiruddin
(PPP), Senator Osman Saifullah Khan (PPP),
Ms. Saman Jafri (MNA MQM), and Dr.
Nikhat Shakeel (MNA MQM). 3 representatives from
the PIPS also joined the launch including representatives
from civil society organisations and the news media.
The Citizens
Report by PILDAT is part of a series of similar reports which
PILDAT plans to release about the performance of various State
institutions run by tax payers' money. These reports are a
part of the Democracy and Governance project of PILDAT funded
by DANIDA - the Danish Government through the Danish Embassy
in Islamabad. |