Picture of the Day: Who is Rewarding Whom?

Posted on December 6, 2006
Filed Under >Zamanov, People, Photo of the Day, Politics, Sports
30 Comments
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Guest Post by Zamanov

This picture, proudly displayed on the PCB webpage and in many Pakistani newspapers, is from the President of Pakistan’s reception for the cricket team shows Mr President handing a check of Rs 5 million (50 lakhs) to Mohammad Yousuf, the stylish batsman who recently broke the world record for runs and centuries scored in a year.

While every Pakistani is proud of Yousuf’s achievements and his incredible form over the past year, does it behoove the President of the Republic to award him with a substantial amount of money from public funds when the PCB has already announced an award of Rs 1 million through their official sponsor?

This award is over and above the Rs 1 million that the Prime Minister awarded, and another benovolent Governor of Sindh awarding him Rs 0.5 million. Hence, by the last count, Mohammad Yousuf has been awarded Rs 6.5 million from public funds and Rs 1 million from the PCB (another public institution).

While no one should begrudge what Mr Yousuf receives from private parties for his magnificent achievements, is it the official business of governmental figures to reward cricketers or any other sportsperson with such substantial funds from the public exchequer? Is this some kind of auction or race to achieve superiority over who gives more for this cause? First it was the PCB, then the Governor of Sindh, then the Prime Minister, and now the President. The irony is that Musharraf, in full military attire, is awarding a cricketer the equivalent of 120 years of the average annual income in Pakistan!

Wouldn’t an offical civilian award or the Pride of Performance along with a token monetary award been more appropriate?

This may be in line with the ill-advised image-building program of both the Prime Minister and the President or it may have something to do with Yousuf’s recent conversion, but to me it is akin to some gross colonial practice of rewarding the locals who help the master’s image rather than using their official power and office to help the desperately poor and the ones in dire need. Such practice has been a favorite of our rulers; including, for example, the money that poured to Javed Miandad after his famous ‘Sharjah sixer.’

Is it just me or does no one else see the inappropriateness of the President’s actions?

30 responses to “Picture of the Day: Who is Rewarding Whom?”

  1. Moeen Bhatti says:

    “Badshah Salamat” can do anything. How can you question him??

  2. Pakpics says:

    Mohammed Yousuf really deserves this prize & i wish him best of luck for his career & another thing that he is going to saudia for offering Hajj so this way he will be blessed from ALLAH too. Lage raho Yousuf Bhai

  3. drpak says:

    I agree with Turab. We seem to be very critical of everything. If Muhammad Yousuf had not recieved any rewards from the government and other bodies, someone here would have come out with a hot and long winded post about how the goverment does not support its national heros. It doesn’t matter what the government does, there will always be some angle from which to be critical.

    Also, this money was not snatched from the mouths of hungry orphans. The PCB makes millions of dollars from the team from advertising revenue. It’s not, as you repeatedly call it, “public funds”.

  4. Shah says:

    Well, money from governmental funds is another matter, but I do not think that this suits the image of the “President and the Prime-Minister of an Islamic Republic” (well, atleast a formal if not a practical title!)
    People MUST seperate a mere game from important national matters!!

  5. TURAB says:

    ^^ I hope that website is supposed to non serious as it wrongly reports that yousuf has been dropped from the team for ODI…..

    http://www.boriat.com/story.php?src=./sections/new s/20061204-01.xml

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