Thursday, October 05, 2017

CPEC and Pakistan’s digital future

DAWN’s exclusive story titled ‘CPEC plan for Pakistan’s digital future’ is intriguing and promising, simultaneously. There is no denying the fact that the future is digital. Increasing access to digital content through the internet is, thus, vital for the development and sustainability of any country. Pakistan, by joining hands with China to build the digital future, has taken a giant leap forward.
However, the question who will or will not benefit from the project is important. The general perception in Gilgit-Baltistan is that this particular fibre optic network will not benefit the region. This perception is fuelled by the fact that information related to the project has largely been kept secret.
The report talks about a four-phase strategy which prioritises urban areas, starting with Islamabad, before venturing to rural peripheries. This strategy is tricky. The Gilgit-Baltistan region, through which the cable is being laid primarily, cannot wait till 2030. The federal government needs to ensure that the people of this region are not deprived of this facility, as this will be a repeat of their Sui gas dilemma.
This project must be linked with the Knowledge Corridor plan. All government and private schools in GB and other parts of the country should be given free or subsidised access to the internet to improve the quality of teaching and learning. The establishment of a tax-free Silicon Valley in Giglit-Baltistan can also help transform the economy in a short period.
Noor Pamiri
Islamabad
Published in Dawn, October 4th, 2017

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Sunday, October 01, 2017

سکرین کے پیچھے

آج الحان نے تقریباً رُلا دیا۔


کمپیوٹر کے ذریعے ڈیڑھ سالہ الحان سے گفتگو کی کوشش کر رہا تھا۔ گفتگو بچوں کے لئے مخصوص نظموں کے ذریعے ہورہی تھی۔ میں نظمیں پڑھ رہا تھا، اور وہ جھوم کر، سر ہلا کر، میرا ساتھ دے رہا تھا۔

میں نے کہا، الحان، پاپا کو کِس کرو۔


الحان نے لیپ ٹاپ سکرین کو اپنے ننھے بازووں میں بھر لیا، اور سکرین کے قریب ہوگیا۔

سکرین پر بوسہ دیا۔

ٹھنڈی سکرین پر بوسہ دینے سے گفتگو میں اس کی دلچسپی کم ہوگئی۔۔۔۔ لیکن شائد تجسس بڑھ گیا۔

اس نے سکرین کو نیچے جھکایا۔

میں سمجھا سکرین بند کر رہا ہے۔

امینہ، میری شریکِ حیات ساتھ ہی بیٹھی تھی۔
میں نے کہا، "یار یہ سکرین بند کر رہا ہے۔"

امینہ نے کہا، "نہیں، سکرین کے پیچھے آپ کو ڈھونڈ رہا ہے۔"
میرا کلیجہ کٹ کر رہ گیا۔
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Monday, September 25, 2017

کیا کرتے

میں خود ہی مرا تھا ساون پہ، موسم کے اشارے کیا کرتے 
موجوں سے محبت مجھ کو تھی، بے جان کنارے کیا کرتے
دل ہار گیا تھا اُس پر میں، اُسے میں نے ہی اپنایا تھا 
تقدیر بگاڑی تھی خود ہی، معصوم ستارے کیا کرتے

لوٹا تو کسی نے نہ دیکھا، پوچھا تو سبھی خاموش رہے 
میں چھوڑ گیا تھا گھر اپنا، بے رنگ چوبارے کیا کرتے

طوفان کی شدت اتنی تھی، آتش کا اثر برباد ہوا 
گھر ڈوب گیا تھا اشکوں میں، بدمست شرارے کیا کرتے

رنگوں سے مزین دل میرا برباد ہوا تھا لمحوں میں 
آنکھوں میں اندھیرا چھایا تھا، پُرکیف نظارے کیا کرتے

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Sunday, September 24, 2017

Here’s why PTCL is Pakistan’s worst internet service provider

PTCL, which has been rechristened as “Perennially Tortured Consumers’ League”, for reasons explained later, makes sure that its customers get the worst services.
My bad luck started five years ago, when I obtained a telephone number (051-28***24) from PTCL, on my younger brother’s name.
The services were almost always poor, with frequent disconnections, low browsing speed and crushingly low download speed. I hope and wish they maintain a log of the complaints received for each number. If such a log exists, it shall speak for itself.
Not until three months back, after several complaints, was I told that my connection was compatible with the optic-fibre option, which I had opted for, and that I had never received the 4MB internet that I was being charged for. I have on average paid 24-2600 rupees to PTCL, chiefly for internet services, because the phone is hardly used once or twice in a month for local calls.
Which means I was being charged for a service that was not being offered to me. Is not that tantamount to fraud, and a breach of trust?
I must take legal counsel on that.
After knowing that my landline had not been compatible, I asked for assistance in resolving the issue, because internet is very important for the work I do. I was asked to visit the PTCL Customers Care Centre in Islamabad.
On the instruction/advice of the PTCL employee, my telephone number was ‘made compatible’ with Optic Fibre service, or so I was told. My number was changed to 051-23***40, and I was promised robust, uninterrupted, services.
Almost three months have passed since then, and there has not been a week when I have needed internet and not complained to PTCL, requesting them to resolve the frequent disconnection issues that I have been facing. In fact, the number of frequent disconnections has increased considerably since then.
The response to my complaints have been false assurances, gimmickry of words, lip-service, half-efforts, or, outright silence. After almost every complaint made through 1218, I also sent messages to PTCL through its Facebook page, and Twitter handle (screenshots of which are readily available). So pathetic is the PTCL’s customer service that one of my complaints was responded to after 5 days (120 hours), after several reminders and ‘hyper’, frantic, calls. This is despite of the fact that every time I was promised a ‘quick resolution’ within 48 hours.
Also surprising is the fact that despite of no efforts being made, or despite of the service not improving, I continue receiving automated calls telling me PTCL’s records showed that my issue is resolved. Are the employees fooling their higher ups? Or are the higher ups lax, inefficient, feeding off the tax-payers’ hard earned money?
Today is the Sixth (6th) day of my latest complaint (#54). My internet gets disconnected after every few minutes. Adding insult to the injury, the ugly website of PTCL, offering ‘packages’, pops up, whenever the connectivity returns, replacing my open windows. The PTCL website forcibly open for three to four times every time, after the connection restores. This constant popping up of the PTCL website has made me hate the brand, as if the services were not pathetic enough already.
Now, having lost all hope, and in a sheer act of frustration and a sense of being let down, despite of me paying all my bills on time, I plan soon to burn in front of the national press club all the bills that I have paid, their telephone set, their modem, and an effigy of the PTCL chairman, which would symbolize the entire inept, dumb, useless, parasitic, leech-like, management and foot workers, who are sucking the life out of the nation’s prime telecommunication organization. I hope to gather other affectees of PTCL’s criminal inefficiency, and after the protest demonstration, which will have wide coverage – we will ensure that it does – we will think how to legally pursue this case further.

Enough is enough.
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