ISLAMABAD: The Islamabad High Court (IHC) has set aside the stay against the promotion of officers of the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR), allowing the high powered selection board to consider suitable candidates for BS-22.

The petition was filed by BS-21 officer Shah Bano Ghaznavi, who appeared in the court with her counsel.

During the hearing, the FBR informed the court that it had issued a notification on March 13 following the petition.

Justice Khan stated that since the promotion process had not been completed, the court was ending the stay order, thereby enabling the board to make its decisions.

Speaking to the media outside the courtroom, Shah Bano Ghaznavi claimed that the case was not against the FBR chairman but rather the Prime Minister’s Secretariat and the Secretary Establishment Division, both of whom, she alleged, failed to respond to her petition.

She further accused the administration of using active positions as a means to block officers’ promotions, stating that she had been placed in such a role for seven years and later denied promotion based on performance evaluations. “There are hundreds of officers in Pakistan who are deliberately kept in active positions to stall their career progression,” she said.

Ms Ghaznavi also criticised what she described as a politically influenced promotion system, where officers who refuse to comply with political interests are sidelined. “Those who do not sell their conscience or faith do not receive even their rightful promotions,” she stated.

She alleged that OPS (acting) officers are running key FBR operations, while qualified officers remain overlooked. “For the past 30 years, the system has been functioning on an ad hoc basis. If an officer challenges the process in court, they are accused of violating others’ rights,” she added.

Published in Dawn, March 15th, 2025

Follow Dawn Business on X, LinkedIn, Instagram and Facebook for insights on business, finance and tech from Pakistan and across the world.

Opinion

Editorial

Time for restraint
Updated 26 Apr, 2025

Time for restraint

Neither Pakistan nor India can afford another war. It is time again to give diplomacy a chance.
A wise decision
26 Apr, 2025

A wise decision

GOOD sense seems to have finally prevailed, with the federal government deferring the planned canal projects,...
‘Fake’ Pakistanis
26 Apr, 2025

‘Fake’ Pakistanis

THE revelation is shocking. Hundreds of individuals holding Pakistani passports who were detained by the Saudi...
Wheat worries
25 Apr, 2025

Wheat worries

PUNJAB’S farmers are enraged. They are not getting what they call a fair price for their wheat harvest this year...
Ending rabies
25 Apr, 2025

Ending rabies

RABIES remains one of Pakistan’s most deadly, yet neglected public health crises. Across the country, hundreds die...