Strike at textile college over high fees
THE National College of Textile Engineering (NCTE), which has produced a nucleus of bright engineers in the textile sector, is beset by a strike for the last 40 days. Students also boycotted the annual examinations, but government functionaries or members of the All-Pakistan Textile Mills Association, which grabbed the control of the college, are silent spectators.
The college’s merit was at the top throughout Pakistan during the academic year of 1993. The merit limit for admission was 907 marks in FSc. But now it is touching the lowest level for the current academic year. The merit has come down to 660 marks, and only 211 students have applied for admission for the academic year 2002-2003 against 150 seats.
In order to place the college on a sound financial footing, the government enacted the NCTE Cess Act for collection of tax from textile industry at the rate of Re1 per spindle for spinning industries and Rs20 per powerloom for the weaving industries.
However, a visit to the NCTE revealed a sorry state of affairs from every angle. It appears that the institution lacks teachers with leadership qualities, properly equipped laboratories and conviction required for imparting education.
The students are being supplied substandard food in the hostel. The lawns adjacent to the hostel are in a shambles, while the decades-old trees have been uprooted. There are no buses, canteens and amusement facilities for the students. There is also no hall for holding workshops, seminars, competitions and literary contests in the college.
Perhaps, it was one of the few institutions of the country which hosted students from all the provinces, the northern areas and Kashmir. These students brought about an unbelievable revolution in the textile sector and were instrumental in modernizing the spinning, weaving, hosiery, processing and printing sectors, earning handsome foreign exchange.
A painful aspect of the situation is that the enhancement in fees is going on unchecked in the NCTE, while in major departments like spinning, weaving, processing and garments, there is no Ph.D teacher. Majority of the members of the faculties belongs to those fields which are not relevant to the education imparted in this institution. The library has 11,835 books, 90 per cent of which are obsolete. Similarly, laboratory equipment is outdated.
Over 75 per cent students of this college travelled up to 30 kilometres in the city to generate funds for paying their fees. A number of students are reportedly working in powerlooms and other textile units and restaurants at night for generating funds.
A number of students said their parents had sold their assets to pay their fees and other charges. But the continued increase in the fees seemed to have shattered the dreams of their families. Their sisters waiting for marriage were in a shock. Three students said their sisters had committed suicide owing to financial stress.
Majority of the students lack freshness on their faces, their eyes and cheeks giving a look of misery and penury. They are even not able to reply to simple questions with confidence, showing the pressure they are under.
The aberrant increase in the tuition fee and other charges can be judged from the following chart:
A trust deed (dated Dec 25, 1954, article III), which is an agreement of the Board of Trustees who had originally established this college, envisages Award prize, give rewards, stipends and scholarships to the student trainees and research workers in textile technology for work in Pakistan and abroad. According to this rule and statement of the Board of Trustees, tuition fee will not be charged from the students.
The Students Action Committee, which represents the protesting students, claimed that their strike was not comparable to the strike of other institutions because they did not accept the government decision of the appointment of the board of governors. NCTE had already been run by the BoG since 1983, and the students were not against it. The students strike was against the unaffordable college dues which were at present Rs79,220 per annum. The second point of protest was that the college management could not be privatized according to the presidential order which was also correlated with the first point because when the college would become a private university, the management would further increase the fees. The basic protest of students was against the private university status for the college, action committee leaders said.
“The college management started a new department, Garment Manufacturing Technology, in 2000, but it even failed to arrange classrooms and teachers for this purpose. The management had reported to the federal government that four more PhD scholars had joined the college, but the ground reality was otherwise as no new PhD faculty member had joined the college,” they claimed.
The students urged President Pervez Musharraf to send a team for investigation of incidents of violence and negative steps taken by the college administration before making any decision about the status of NCTE. The government should also direct the board of governors to call a meeting of college committee for the revision of the fees schedule up to affordable limits (below Rs20,000) so that the students could end their strike.
As regards the solution to budget problem of the college, the students have suggested that 15 per cent seats be allocated to self-financing like other institutions so that bright students belonging to the middle or poor classes may get textile education.
On the other hand, the NCTE principal claimed that the Aptma management took a number of measures, including hiring of qualified and experienced faculty teachers at a salary package comparable to industry norms, renovation of classrooms, hostels, library, establishment of a computer centre and face-lifting of the institution. The BoGs caused a gradual increase in college dues and simultaneously introduced a scheme of Qarz-i-Hasna for the needy students. A sum of Rs4.9 million had been distributed among the needy students during the last four years. “The students who have passed out and are working in the industry, are not paying back as agreed the loan received out of a sum of Rs4.9 million paid to the needy students. The amount of recovery is about Rs69,000,” he said.
Talking about the current situation, he said the crisis in the college sparked off over a minor issue of sessional marks notified by the University of Engineering and Technology, Lahore, resulting in boycott of examinations by the second-year class despite our assurances that the papers would be marked in accordance with the university policies. Second-year boycott was followed by the third-year students and the simple matter of sessional marks was changed into a demand for a government university and reduction of fees without formally presenting these demands to college teachers or to the Aptma management. The matter of upgradation of the college is under consideration by the government.
He claimed the peaceful protest and boycott of examinations turned violent, and there was chanting of slogans against the college authorities and Aptma management and forcible closure of college office, library and other development activities in the college.
The principal said we ignored all this considering that better sense would prevail and kept on explaining to them that the college was never a government institution and was being funded by Aptma who had been paying a sum of Rs12 million annually in addition to the cess being paid to the government. Moreover, it was up to the government to make it a private or government university.
He claimed, in fact, some misguided students wanted to keep the issue alive by joining hands with teaches and students of the government colleges who were protesting against government policies. They forced the outgoing class of final year not to appear in the examinations and blocked their entry into the examination hall causing mental torture and financial loss to the students who had to join service immediately after the examinations, he said. According to the students, Aptma has converted NCTE into an earning institution. The policy is to attain a complete hold on the institution and to eliminate government intervention. Aptma is also trying to make it a private university so that it may increase the dues according to its wishes.
FEE 1990 1992 1999 2001 2002
Registration Fee Rs. 250 300 600 600 758
Admission Fee Rs. 350 450 8000 10125 12825
College Security Rs. 800 800 2500 2500 3150
Re-Admission Fee (In case
name of the student
is struck off)
Rs. 350 450 8000 10125 12825
Verification Fee Rs. 100 200 1500 1500 1913
Students Activity Fund Rs. 250 300 300 350 563
Magazine Subscription Rs. 100 100 200 250 450
Sports & Tournament Fee Rs. 200 200 200 250 450
Medical Fee Rs. 100 200 635 800 1013
Transport Fee Rs. 240 300 1000 1265 1603
Tuition Fee Rs. 2400 2400 14400 28800 40500
Hostel Admission Fee Rs. 100 100 800 1015 1294
Hostel Activities Rs. 100 200 200 250 450
Sui-Gas Charges Rs. 300 400 1600 2025 2588
Electricity Charges Rs. 360 360 2500 3150 3994
Hostel Security
(refundable) Rs. 360 500 1000 1000 1406
Service Charges Rs. 480 600 1520 1920 2430
Room Rent Rs. 840 840 2500 2250 2868

