The PGMI was detached from the Services
Hospital after the establishment of SIMS last year. The
department has yet to take any decision on the bifurcation
of the budget between both the institutions because of
differences on the ratio of segregation.
The delay has created a financial
impasse leading to problems in smooth functioning of the
institution. Besides problems in disbursement of salaries
in time, the PGMI is facing acute shortage of chemicals
to be used for research by the students. "The PGMI's
research activities have come to a standstill due to unavailability
of funds," according to its officials.
They say everything is breaking
down and they are not even able to pay utility bills in
time due to which the institute is daily facing threats
of electricity and phone disconnections.
According to the officials, the
control of the whole budget remained in the hands of SIMS/SHL
administration, which did not give them their due share.
It is learnt that Punjab Health Secretary Sohail Ahmad
had recently called a meeting to resolve the issue, but
it failed.
The PGMI/LGH administration has
taken a stance that the institution should be given its
sanctioned budget of Rs169.011 million (including Rs42.8
million already spent so far).
It has rejected the stand of SIMS
and the health department that the PGMI/LGH should be
given funds for the last quarter of this financial year
in proportion to the funds utilized in three previous
quarters. It says that it will be unfair to the PGMI/LGH
to deny its non-lapseable savings.
The PGMI/LGH board of management
says it must be provided with the funds saved from vacant
gazetted and deputation posts and other heads. The institution,
it says, will be requiring the budgets after vacancies
are filled.
When contacted, PGMI/LGH BoM chairman
Pervaiz Masood said the board had written to Punjab Health
Secretary Sohail Ahmad that the budget bifurcation should
be just and equitable. "We do not want to indulge
in controversies and nobody will be allowed to usurp our
rights," he said.
Answering a question, he said when
the institution was not given its due share in the first
nine months of this financial year, how it can spend.
"How can a man be blamed for not being able to swim,
if he is not allowed to enter the water?" he remarked.
Mr Masood said the control of the
whole budget remained in the hands of SIMS/SHL management
and they were just made to look on. He said PGMI/LGH Principal
Prof Dr Ali Ajwad Shah had written a letter to the health
secretary, endorsed by him, asking him to bifurcate the
budget in a fair and equitable manner.
"We are being victimized because
of remaining silent and avoiding exposing unjustified
decisions." He said he would soon talk to the health
and finance secretaries to resolve the matter.
Prof Shah, however, declined to
comment on the subject. SIMS/SHL Principal Prof Dr Faisal
Masood was not available for comments. The health secretary
said there was no issue of budget bifurcation. "There
is absolutely no problem."
He said it was just an internal
matter of the two government institutions, adding the
detachment of any two institutions was a difficult task
and he was here to remove problems.
Answering a question, he said, the
health department and the finance department had not stopped
payment of salaries to the PGMI/LGH salaries. Rather it
was trying that each institution got enough budget.