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Lady teachers keenly await presidential nod to ‘protection of family life’ bill

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Zubair Qureshi

More than 300 teachers of Islamabad working on deputation under wedlock are keenly awaiting President Dr Arif Alvi’s signature on the much-awaited legislation titled “Protection of Family Life & Wedlock Bill 2023” passed by both Houses of the Parliament, the National Assembly and the Senate.

After the President’s signature the bill is destined to become an Act of Parliament and the wedlock teachers who have been working in Islamabad’s schools for the last many years, would be settled along with their families in the federal capital on a permanent basis.

The National Assembly of Pakistan had passed the bill in the last week of May 2023 while the Senate passed it on August 7, almost ten days ago.

Recently, the president returned a number of bills raising some objections or on technical grounds but thankfully the Protection of Family Life bill was not among those 13 bills and according to a senior official of the President House, since there was no objection on the bill, the president would most probably sign it on Friday (today).

However, another official while talking to Pakistan Observer said the bill was not forwarded by the Prime Minister’s Office because the president never delays nor suspends a bill of public interest. “As soon as he receives the bill, he will sign it,” he assured.

The delay is at the end of either the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs or the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) and you need to check with them, he said.

The bills were passed as a result of years of struggle by these wedlock teachers, majority of them are lady teachers whose families are settled in Islamabad. Under wedlock policy, there was a 10pc quota for teachers working in Islamabad’s schools and under that quota they are entitled to absorption but for the last many years this was not being implemented.

A couple of years ago, the Federal Directorate of Education (FDE) meanwhile started sending repatriation orders to these teachers asking them to go back to their parent departments in Punjab, KP, Sindh, AJK and Balochistan, even GB. Having no one to come to their aid, they moved petitions in the Islamabad High Court and got temporary relief.

 

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