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Daily Time

Gross Betrayal

Published on: October 18, 2025 1:11 AM

Some numbers wound more than they inform. Four point seven million children in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa are out of school. Each one is a name erased from the future. It is a verdict on a state that has abandoned its own young.

The newly elected government inherited a province sitting atop an educational graveyard. Article 25-A of the Constitution promises every child between five and 16 years a free education. In KP, that promise reads like a cruel joke. Civil society estimates it would take fifty years to build enough schools to accommodate those left behind. The math is simple but the moral failure is not.

Girls suffer the most. In the merged tribal districts, nearly three-quarters of girls have never seen a classroom. Their futures have been traded away to the twin gods of neglect and corruption. Whole districts, Upper Kohistan, North Waziristan and Bajaur, live in a twilight between conflict and bureaucracy, where the state exists mostly on paper. That same paper, ironically, lists hundreds of “ghost schools”– institutions that exist only in files, drawing salaries for teachers who never teach, reporting results for children who never enrolled.

The government now calls outsourcing a reform. It is not. It is abdication sold as innovation. More than four thousand public schools, over half of them girls’ institutions, have been handed over to private operators. The logic is seductive: save money, improve results. The reality is darker. You cannot rescue a failing system by hollowing it out. You cannot outsource conscience.

Pakistan spends less than one per cent of its GDP on education, among the lowest in the world. The United Nations recommends four to six. Every budget that ignores that gap writes another chapter of national decline. An uneducated child does not disappear. She returns years later, as unemployment, as resentment, as the very instability the state spends billions to contain.

The 4.7 million out-of-school children of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa are not the province’s burden alone. They are Pakistan’s unfinished nationhood. Every ghost school, every unpaid teacher, every stolen childhood is a mirror held up to those who rule. The bomb is ticking, and it was built in silence. *

Filed Under: Editorial Tagged With: betrayal, gross

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