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Pakistan

PSM's privatisation at advanced stage, SC told

  • The court ordered the ministers for planning and privatisation to appear before it on February 9 and adjourned the case.
Published February 4, 2021

ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court (SC) on Thursday was informed that the privatization of Pakistan Steel Mills (PSM) had entered the advanced stage.

The process of PSM's privatisation would be completed by September, the Secretary Industries and Production Ministry told the two-member bench of Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Gulzar Ahmed and Justice Ijaz Ul Ahsan hearing the case of PSM employees seeking promotions.

During the course of proceedings, the CJP observed that the PSM administration was responsible for the mill's closure of mill. No such entity could be ruined without the collusion of its officials. The officers should be sacked first before the workforce was forced to resign.

He asked whether the government had initiated action against the PSM administration. Both the administration and the officers were a burden on the national exchequer.

He questioned as to why the PSM's management staff continued to hold their posts. A closed mills did not need a managing director or chief executive, he added.

PSM's counsel Shahid Bajwa said the PSM's entire administration had been replaced.

The chief justice asked whether the mill would be functional with the change of administration. What 439 officers were doing when the PSM was closed.

Except Pakistan, steel mills all over the world were running in profit, he remarked.

Still the number of PSM staff, including those working at its hospital and schools, was more than its requirement, he added.

The counsel said only 439 out of 1,800 employees were working in the PSM. The mills' daily expenditure had also been reduced from Rs 20 million to Rs10 million.

The administration had so far sacked 49 per cent of the workforce, and required the labour court's permission to remove the rest, he added.

The chief justice said the apex court would gave the direct permission for the purpose, but first the officers should be removed.

He observed that every institution of the country was functioning in similar conditions. Every official was concerned about their own interests and not about the country.

The counsel for PSM employees union said the employees were ready to work.

The chief justice remarked that some PSM employees had not worked for a single day since recruitment to retirement.

He asked as to who would repay the mill's debt of Rs 212 billion.

Justice Ijaz said the mill, which was once the backbone of country's economy, was closed but the employees were demanding promotions.

The PSM counsel said the employees had staged a sit-in out side the residence of the chief executive officer (CEO). They had also dug his grave outside his home.

The additional attorney general informed the court that ministers for ministers for planning and privatisation could not attend the proceedings as they were out of the city while the minister for industries and production was in self-isolation due to COVID-19.

The chief justice said the court would decide the case after hearing the federal ministers.

The court ordered the ministers for planning and privatisation to appear before it on February 9 and adjourned the case.

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