Top StoriesAviation ministry merged with defence

Aviation ministry merged with defence

-

- Advertisment -spot_img




A general view of Islamabad International Airport building. — Reuters/File

ISLAMABAD: The federal government has merged the Ministry of Aviation with the Ministry of Defence, abolishing the status of one more ministry under its rightsizing plan to reduce state expenditures.

The defence ministry has issued a letter regarding the merger to notify the development to all ministries and divisions after completing the implementation of statutory regulatory orders (SROs) given by the Cabinet Division on February 4.

The letter, sent to all provincial chief secretaries including top officials of the Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) and Gilgit-Baltistan (GB), stated that the defence ministry should be approached for all aviation matters in future.

Through this merger, the incumbent government was eyeing saving Rs145 million annually.

The decision was taken last month after the federal government turned down a proposal to create a separate transport division by merging aviation, railways and communication divisions.

The PM Shehbaz-led administration received a new recommendation on January 10 for merging the aviation ministry with the defence ministry, which was previously managing aviation matters until 2013, more aligned with the strategic goals as part of the rightsizing programme.

The federal government has formulated a rightsizing programme by abolishing various ministries and their attached departments to reduce expenditures and improve the efficiency of the government.

In January, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb vowed to rightsize 42 ministries and their 400 attached departments by June 30 of the current fiscal year, adding that the rightsizing committee will reduce 80 institutions to half.

Sharing the six-month performance of the high-powered Cabinet Committee on Rightsizing, Aurangzeb said that the government decided to bring five or six departments under rightsizing in each phase.

“60% vacant regular posts — that have not come in payroll — which stood at 150,000 have been abolished or declared as dying posts, creating a real financial impact,” he said.

The minister recalled that efforts had been made previously to reduce the size of the federal government, adding that they are trying to reduce the federal government’s expenditure of Rs900 billion.

He said, under Wave-1, six ministries including Kashmir Affair and Gilgit Baltistan, SAFRON; Information Technology and Telecom; Industries and Production; National Health Services Regulations and Coordination; Capital Development Authority (CAD) were processed.

Subsequently, the government also started examining five more institutions — Ministry of Communications, Ministry of Railways, Ministry of Poverty Alleviation and Social Safety, Revenue Division and Petroleum Division and their attached departments — for the rightsizing.



Source link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest news

US tariff threat looms over India’s baby garment exports

India’s apparel exports to the US may face setbacks due to a proposed reciprocal tariff regime from April....

Tech stocks tumble over US spends uncertainty – The Times of India

BENGALURU: US President Donald Trump's tariff announcement sent tech stocks into a frenzy on Thursday. Stocks...

Tornadoes and violent winds cause deadly damage in South and Midwest

Tornadoes and violent winds flattened homes and ripped apart buildings from Oklahoma to Indiana...
- Advertisement -spot_imgspot_img

Workers at Wilson Center Put on Leave as Trump Seeks Shutdown

Almost all the employees of the Wilson Center, a prominent nonpartisan foreign policy think tank in Washington, were...

Must read

New country album pays homage to Tom Petty

New country album pays homage to Tom Petty...

At least 10 shot dead as section of Kenyan parliament set on fire

At least ten people were shot dead in...
- Advertisement -spot_imgspot_img

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you