The government's plan to set up 105 new mono- and polytechnic institutes in the country is a welcome step. These will be in addition to the existing 78 such institutes, most of which are located in the big cities.
The federal education minister's argument - that every district must have at least one such institute - is refreshingly original for a country where governments have been notoriously mean when it comes to spending on education.
This, unlike the practice in the past, will ensure that vocational training is made available to people living in far-off districts, too, who have had restricted access to such facilities.
The plan also provides for interest-free loans on soft terms to polytechnic diploma holders so as to help them set up their own workshops and businesses after completing their training.
This is something that should have been part of the education ministry's priorities considering the large number of people who qualify from the existing polytechnics every year.
Only a few of them are able to find gainful employment in the organized-sector job market. Loans on easy terms as part of the government's technical education plan should come as a long-awaited relief to those polytechnic students who wish to have small businesses of their own.
For a country like Pakistan, where agriculture remains the mainstay of the economy, the need for technical education as a means leading to gainful employment cannot be overemphasized.
Given a jumpstart in the form of a business loan, immense potential can be created in the job market to absorb the technically trained diploma holders in various fields, including electronics, automobiles and the mechanical and industrial sectors.
The importance of formal university education cannot be understated, but the truth is that in recent years a majority of degree holders, particularly those in the humanities, have found it hard to find jobs matching their qualifications.
An increase in the number of institutes imparting technical education can offer at least high school and intermediate-level students a wider career choice and greater employment opportunities.
A grave mess
A spate of news reports on the sorry state of graveyards across the country should be reason enough for the government to sit up and take notice. Earlier this week, there was a report in which a private graveyard contractor and a town nazim got into a dispute after the contractor was caught providing space in a graveyard that had officially been declared full and closed.
More recently, the Karachi city council approved by-laws for graveyards in its jurisdiction but warned that if the government did not build boundary walls, there were chances that the land earmarked would be encroached upon.
The problem of availability of space at graveyards in cities is not new and this just keeps getting worse. As cities grow, and the demand for land increases, graveyards tempt encroachers.
There are several examples in different cities across Pakistan, especially in Karachi and Lahore, where portions of graveyards have been appropriated for shops and other commercial activity or for residential purposes, with the result that the land available for burying the dead keeps getting more scarce.
Christian graveyards are even worse off as the community has complained to the government several times that most of its graveyards across the country have been encroached upon.
The inability of city governments to earmark and develop new graveyards for cities adds to the problem. As a result, there are cases where existing graves are built upon by caretakers and contractors to meet the demand for space.
The government needs to look at this matter and come up with a solution. New graveyards need to be created and more attention given to their maintenance and development.
The present state of graveyards in most cities leaves a lot to be desired. This should be taken care of in new sites where more effort should be put in to plan and maintain graveyards in an appropriate manner.