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The position of Chief Secretary is equivalent to the rank of Federal Secretary. [1] The current Chief Secretary of Sindh is Syed Asif Hyder Shah, in office since March 2024. [2] The Prime Minister directly appoints the Chief Secretary. The Chief Secretary also serves as the Cabinet Secretary of Sindh. [3] [4] [5] [6]
Mumtaz Ali Shah is a retired Pakistani civil servant who served in BPS-22 grade as the Maritime Secretary of Pakistan and Chief Secretary Sindh. Hailing from Sindh, Shah joined the Pakistan Administrative Service after passing the Central Superior Service examination in 1984. [1] [2]
The Chief Secretary is an appointed official by the Prime Minister of Pakistan. The Chief Secretary of Sindh is usually a Grade 22 officer, belonging to the Pakistan Administrative Service. Although the Governor is the head of the province on paper, it is largely a ceremonial position; and the main powers lie with the Chief Secretary of Sindh ...
The chief minister of Sindh (Sindhi: وزيراعلي, Urdu: وزیر اعلىٰ — Wazīr-e Aʿlá), is the elected head of government of Sindh and serves alongside the Chief Secretary. Syed Murad Ali Shah is the current Chief Minister of Sindh, serving since 26 February 2024.
To achieve this, the department collaborates closely with the media and journalists. It maintains regular communication with the Governor, the Chief Secretary’s administrative departments, and other government officials regarding press coverage. Additionally, the department prepares weekly reports on television coverage related to Sindh.
In Pakistan, the position of Chief Secretary (Urdu: معتمدِ اعلٰی) is occupied by the highest-ranking civil servant in each of provinces or administrative units (excluding Islamabad Capital Territory). The Chief Secretaries are the executive administrative heads of their respective provinces.
Working directly under the Chief Minister and Chief Secretary, the Chairman may take up any pending or fresh enquiry regarding any department. Thus the Chairman has to keep close liaison with Heads of Departments and Divisional Commissioners to unearth cases of corruption. [2] [3] There are 3 levels of committees in Sindh province. The first ...
This page was last edited on 29 November 2024, at 22:51 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.