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Emboldened NED University rebuffs KBCA
KARACHI, Dec 12, 2007: The NED University, having the firm backing of its
chancellor, Sindh Governor Ishratul Ebad, for its illegal construction
activities, has started to throw its weight around and has snubbed the Karachi
Building Control Authority for trying to stop the work, It was learnt.
Sources said that, in a harshly worded letter to the KBCA, the
NED told the city's building regulatory authority that the university did not
need anyone's approval for any construction and that its (KBCA's) various
"illegal" construction notices issued to the university were being treated as
"null and void".
Sources informed that the NED was carrying out the
restoration/construction work at its city campus, which is protected under the
Sindh Cultural Heritage Protection Act. Nobody, including the owner, could carry
out any construction/restoration work in a building protected under this act,
which prescribes heavy fines and long prison terms for violators. An
NOC/permission is to be obtained from the advisory committee on cultural
heritage, which is headed by the chief secretary, before carrying out any
construction activities in a protected site.
The sources said that NED
registrar Javed Aziz Khan's letter to KBCA chief Rauf Akhtar Farooqui on the
subject "NED city campus restoration project" referred to the letter from the
Governor's House that says that the culture secretary had been directed to order
the KBCA not to interfere with the NED.
Mr Khan, in his letter to the
KBCA, further said that the "NED does not require any approval/NOC from the KBCA
for starting/carrying out restoration work at its city campus on Maulana Din
Mohammad Wafai Road near Pakistan Chowk.
"Being an autonomous body, i.e.
a public sector university, NED does not require permission from any other body,
other than its own statutory bodies for all alterations and development work
within its respective campuses.
"So, the notices issued by the KBCA
deputy controller of buildings, Saddar, are being treated as null and
void".
In the absence of the mandatory NOC, permissions and approvals,
the construction activities being carried out by the university's architecture
department chief Dr Noman Ahmad and his deputy Anila Naeem under the overall
supervision of Vice-Chancellor Abul Kalam, are illegal.
The sources said
that as the NED's Ms Naeem is associated with the Sindh culture department's
technical committee and another NED adjunct faculty member is associated with
the advisory committee, the culture department was not taking any action against
the NED for its illegal construction.
The sources said that the KBCA
officials concerned – chief controller Rauf Farooqui, controller Agha Maqsood
Abbas and deputy controller Abdul Rehman Ansari – are former students of the NED
and on their part, initially did not believe that their alma mater could be
carrying out the illegal construction. But when the picture became clear to
them, the KBCA started to take the issue seriously and sent notices, one after
the other, to the NED asking it to stop the illegal construction and present the
mandatory approvals.
We attempt to get the NED version on the issue
also could not succeed as the university officials concerned refused to give
their side of the story and said that they "Might talk to you after a couple of
months".
Going slow The sources said that though the NED
administration kept mum officially, they had been trying to manipulate the
happenings behind the scenes. A few weeks ago an NED delegation met the KBCA
officials – chief controller Rauf Farooqui and controllers Mohammad Shafique and
Atique Baig, the latter also former students of the NED – and requested them to
look the other way while they (NED) carried out the illegal construction. The
officials made it clear that since the matter was being reported in the media,
they could not ignore the issue; however, they could help their alma mater by
"going slow" – which they did.
In the meantime, the university's
vice-chancellor succeeded in getting a letter sent to the chief secretary
directing him to order his subordinates – the KBCA etc – not to interfere in the
NED issue.
The sources said that now, with the letter from the Governor's
House in their pockets, the NED administration had been emboldened and had
written the strongly-worded letter – which looks unusual keeping in mind that it
is coming from a house of higher learning – to the KBCA on the issue.
The
sources said that just by reading the letter, one can see what the educational
institution, which claims to be a premier and prestigious one, is probably
teaching its students (engineers, architects, etc).
"It is teaching them
that if you are influential or have the backing of influential people, you can
violate any law of the land. It is no wonder that more and more buildings, which
are constructed in violation of relevant laws, are coming up in the city", said
an observer.
Governor's House Meanwhile, a spokesman for
the Sindh Governor's House, responding to the NED University's city campus
restoration work issue on Tuesday, said that "Work is being done by one of the
premier institutes of engineering education in Pakistan, in accordance with
heritage regulations. The university has also acquired the necessary NOC from
the department concerned", the spokesman added.
This is interesting as
the university's registrar in his letter to the KBCA has stressed that the
university does not require permission from any other body, other than its own
statutory bodies, to carry out work on its campuses.
The contradiction
between the statement issued from the Governor's House and the NED registrar's
claim is quite obvious. Dawn
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