‘Mismanaged’ test for health dept jobs sparks protest in Gilgit

Published July 30, 2022
CANDIDATES tear up question papers outside an examination centre in 
Gilgit’s Chinar Bagh area before heading to Chief Minister House for a demonstration.—Dawn
CANDIDATES tear up question papers outside an examination centre in Gilgit’s Chinar Bagh area before heading to Chief Minister House for a demonstration.—Dawn

GILGIT: Hundreds of candidates boycotted a test for 32 posts in the Gilgit-Baltistan health department and protested outside Chief Minister House on Friday against “mismanagement” during the exam.

Protesters tore up the questions papers and chanted slogans against the GB government and health officials. Around 12,000 candidates applied for the recently advertised positions.

Soon after the test began, at a girls’ college in Gilgit’s Chinar Bagh area, hundreds of candidates started gathering outside the examination hall as a protest against mismanagement during the process, alleging that the question paper had already been leaked and there was no check on candidates carrying smartphones during the exam.

Candidates tear up question papers, boycott test, stage protest outside CM House

“It seems the test was just a formality. There were no arrangements,” Raza Khan, a candidate who appeared in the exam, said. “There was even no option of writing the candidate’s name on the answer sheet.”

The protest prompted GB Chief Minister Khalid Khurshid Khan to take notice of the incident and he ordered that the test be postponed.

Candidates alleged that the management had no interest in conducting a fair test because the positions had already been finalised.

Another protester, Shabbir Hussain, regretted that the GB government had cancelled a contract with a private testing service agency and was now conducting departmental tests, “which cannot be impartial” as it helped government officials to “adjust” their favourite candidates on the posts.

The protesters asked the authorities concerned to address the issue and resolved that they would continue to boycott such exams until they were conducted by independent testing agencies.

Published in Dawn, July 30th, 2022

Opinion

Editorial

Afghan strikes
Updated 24 Feb, 2026

Afghan strikes

IN the wake of the recent wave of terrorist attacks targeting Pakistan, with most of the atrocities linked to ...
Tug of war
24 Feb, 2026

Tug of war

THE timing may be questioned, but the issue is not new. The PPP and the MQM-P are once again engaging in their old...
Easier CNIC access
24 Feb, 2026

Easier CNIC access

NADRA’S decision to issue CNICs to first-time applicants without requiring them to produce a birth certificate is ...
Hollow applause
Updated 23 Feb, 2026

Hollow applause

The current account turnaround, though largely driven by import compression, rising remittances and bilateral debt rollovers, has eased external pressures.
Delayed appointment
23 Feb, 2026

Delayed appointment

THE recent appointment of a chief election commissioner for Azad Jammu & Kashmir has once again shone a ...
Fragile equilibrium
23 Feb, 2026

Fragile equilibrium

PAKISTAN is not short of food. It is short of resilience. The latest Integrated Food Security Phase Classification...