The government reduces the construction budget for the Cyber Security Academy by Rs. 3.5 billion

Govt Cuts Construction Budget for Cyber Security Academy by Rs. 3.5 Billion

The federal government will spend Rs. 1.5 billion to establish the country’s first National Cyber Security Academy (NCSA).

The project originally cost more than Rs. 5 billion. According to official documents, it has been reduced to Rs. 1,500 million due to the current economic situation.

According to the documents, the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) will contribute Rs. 240 million to this project.

The project’s foreign exchange component is Rs. 180 million, with PSDP funding of Rs. 1,320 million.

The project is sponsored by Pakistan’s Higher Education Commission (HEC) and is being carried out by Air University Islamabad. The project will take 36 months to complete.

The President of Pakistan successfully inaugurated NCSA on November 23, 2021, recognising its national relevance and the commitment of the Government of Pakistan and HEC to achieving the academic goals of the National Cyber Security Policy 2021.

The approval of the NCSA is an important step toward gaining control of a domain critical to Pakistan’s national security.

The NCSA will strengthen Pakistan’s cyber security capabilities and serve as a stepping stone to further progress in the sector, in addition to producing and nurturing a professional workforce.

The National Cyber Security Academy at Air University (AU) will be equipped with cutting-edge academic facilities, highly qualified human resources, and in-house industrial space in the form of a Cyber Security Incubation and Business Centre.

The proposed project has four major development components:

The academy will hire national and international experts as permanent and part-time academics and researchers. The following are the proposal’s key features:

  1. Undergraduate, postgraduate, diploma, and special hi-tech programs/courses in various domains of cyber security are available.
  2. NCSA will incorporate the existing AU cyber security, information security, and development labs.
  3. Create a national cyber range, multiple security labs for training, and next-generation research labs for advanced level R&D in specific domains for the development of indigenous cyber security tools and technologies.
  4. Create a national platform for interacting, training, and leveraging the strengths of the country’s existing cyber setups.
  5. Create a certification framework for indigenous cyber security software/hardware tools, as well as a screening process for foreign products received in the country for key organisations.
  6. Collaborate with global cyber security leaders to form academic and entrepreneurship partnerships.

Cyber Security Business Park

By having its own strong R&D base, NCSA will assist the local Cyber Security industry and stakeholders in meeting Cyber Security self-reliance objectives.

As a result, highly qualified HR would be trained and retained, completing the Cyber Security Ecosystem. This will aid future design and technological activities in Pakistan’s Cyber Security industry.

NCSA will also build a much-needed bridge between academia and industry in order to improve R&D capabilities by realizing a dream of product-related research, the continuation of design activity in an academic institution, and access to an R&D and technical knowledge bank of Cyber technologies.

To read our blog on “Government officials criticize their own cyber security units as ineffective,” click here

 

 

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