LAHORE: Pakistan Medical and Dental Council (PM&DC) president Prof Dr Shabir Lehri has said the notification circulating in social media and public regarding a ban on house job and internship for foreign students is fake.
According to a press release issued on Monday, the PM&DC president in a statement clarified that the notification was fake and circulated at the media by some vested interests, and the notice had no link with PM&DC. He added foreign students and their parents are in panic due to this act.
He said this case had been sent to FIA Cybercrime Cell to investigate the matter. He emphasised PM&DC MBBS BDS (admission, house job and internship) regulations 2016, which is not implemented as yet, is under litigation in different courts.
He informed the media that the graduates, who have done their MBBS and BDS from abroad and passed PM&DC National Examination Board exam (NEB) step III, are allowed to do their house job in public or private PM&DC approved hospitals.
He said PM&DC is trying its best to convince foreign countries offering admission to Pakistani students to offer jobs and house jobs to these foreign graduates. He said parents and students could seek queries and any type of information directly from the PM&DC office or PM&DC website to prevent any miscommunication.
The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) on Wednesday announced that Amir Ahmed Sheikh has been appointed as the new director FIA Sindh Zone.
Sheikh has been transferred to this position from his former post as Deputy Inspector General of traffic in Sindh.
Following the procedure, the director general of FIA had sent a request to the Establishment Division for Sheikh’s induction.
The appointment comes in spite of a case pending in the Supreme Court regarding the objections raised against the deputation of Police Service of Pakistan (PSP) and officers of other departments to the FIA.
In July 2016, former chief justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali had instituted the suo motu proceedings on an application by FIA officer Kamran Ataullah and others of different ranks.
The application stated that the FIA was a specialised investigation agency dealing with technical/white collar crimes that required the services of experienced and trained officers to efficiently handle and deal with such crimes.
In their petition, the FIA officers had explained that the method, qualifications and other conditions for appointment to different posts in the FIA were laid down in the Jan 2, 2015 Gazette of Pakistan Extraordinary, under the Ministry of Interior in exercise of the powers conferred by Rule 3 (2) of the Civil Servants (Appointment, Promotion & Transfer) Rules, 1973.
The petitioners had also argued that the transfer and posting of PSP cadre officers to FIA amounted to denial and disobedience of the guidelines given by the Supreme Court of Pakistan in 2011 and would ultimately cause serious losses to their service career and other officers of the FIA.
They had contended that this practice went against the norms of law and the principles of natural justice, causing serious losses to the service career of the appellants.
In response to the suo motu proceedings, the federal government had cautioned that prohibiting such postings would adversely affect the performance of FIA.
A report submitted to the court by the Establishment Division had argued that transferring PSP officers against PSP cadre in the FIA neither blocks the promotion of FIA officers nor violates any judgement of the Supreme Court.
It had said the postings were only for a specific tenure borne on PSP cadre (BS-18 to 22) and hence did not amount to absorption, induction or deputation of PSP officers in FIA.





