What's new

They surrender to martial law but attack parliament - CJP Qazi Faez Isa

SC upholds parliament’s act clipping CJP’s powers​

10-5 majority verdict throws out all challenges to procedure act; right of appeal retrospectively struck down
Conceding the supremacy of parliament in enacting laws, the Supreme Court on Wednesday dismissed by a majority 10-5 all nine challenges thrown to a law that required formation of benches on constitutional matters of public importance by a committee of three senior judges of the court.

The last government of the PDM had enacted the Supreme Court (Practice and Procedure) Bill 2023, aimed at limiting the powers of the chief justice of Pakistan. The legislation deprives the office of the top judge of powers to take suo motu notice in an individual capacity.

"By a majority of 10 to 5 (Justice Ijazul Ahsan, Justice Munib Akhtar, Justice Sayyed Mazahar Ali Akbar Naqvi, Justice Ayesha A Malik and Justice Shahid Waheed dissenting), the Supreme Court (Practice and Procedure) Act, 2023 (‘the Act’) is sustained as being in accordance with the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and to this extent the petitions are dismissed,” read the short order.

Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Justice Qazi Faez Isa pronounced the short order, which was reserved earlier by a 15-member full court bench after all respondents concluded their arguments.

Headed by CJ Qazi Faez Isa, the bench consisted of Justice Sardar Tariq Masood, Justice Ijazul Ahsan, Justice Syed Mansoor Ali Shah, Justice Munib Akhtar, Justice Yahya Afridi, Justice Aminuddin Khan, Justice Sayyed Mazahar Ali Akbar Naqvi, Justice Jamal Khan Mandokhel, Justice Muhammad Ali Mazhar, Justice Ayesha A. Malik, Justice Athar Minallah, Justice Syed Hasan Azhar Rizvi, Justice Shahid Waheed and Justice Musarrat Hilali.

It further said, "By a majority of 9 to 6 (Justice Ijaz ul Ahsan, Justice Munib Akhtar, Justice Yahya Afridi, Justice Sayyed Mazahar Ali Akbar Naqvi, Justice Ayesha A Malik and Justice Shahid Waheed dissenting), Sub-section (1) of Section 5 of the Act (granting a right of appeal prospectively) is declared to be in accordance with the Constitution and to this extent the petitions are dismissed.”

 
NS done over like kipper
This was ridiculous case to make NS PM again but the establishment didn't want him back and at the same time pretend to want him back to keep the crook happy.
Isa played good cop for him but the establishment got one judge to flip and NS lost by one vote. The judge that flipped-Yaya Afridi is the corrupt judge on the SC and he flipped against NS. Me smells a rat but utter humiliation after he sold his soul
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Don’t recognise Zia as president: CJP Isa
Faiz Isa mentioned Ijaz-ul-Haq is son of ex-army chief Zia-ul-Haq, his lawyer replied his father was also President

ISLAMABAD: Chief Justice of Pakistan Qazi Faez Isa, during the hearing of the Faizabad sit-in case, remarked that he doesn’t recognise the late military dictator General Zia-ul-Haq as president, Geo News reported on Wednesday. During the hearing of the Faizabad sit-in case, Justice Faiz Isa, while addressing Ijaz-ul-Haq’s lawyer, said that he does not consider Zia-ul-Haq the President of Pakistan.

When the Attorney General revealed that Ijaz-ul-Haq’s lawyer had been asked to provide a written reply with an affidavit to withdraw the statement, the lawyer countered the Attorney General’s statement, denying that he had been asked to retract the statement.

Ijaz-ul-Haq’s lawyer informed the court that his client had merely stated that his name should be removed from the verdict. Chief Justice Faiz Isa remarked that Ijaz-ul-Haq’s name was only mentioned in the report by intelligence agencies and it was not included in the verdict.

During the conversation, when Chief Justice Faiz Isa mentioned that Ijaz-ul-Haq is the son of former army chief Zia-ul-Haq, his lawyer replied that his father was also the President of Pakistan.

In response, the Chief Justice stated, “I do not consider Zia-ul-Haq the President of Pakistan. No one can become the president by force of arms. Do not call Zia the president again in this court.” The lawyer of Ijaz-ul-Haq, the son of former military ruler Zia-ul-Haq, asserted that it was documented in the Constitution that Zia-ul-Haq was the president.

Chief Justice Faiz Isa responded by saying that Zia-ul-Haq was the only person whose name was written in the Constitution. He had forced it in the Constitution that he was the president, but the time was not mentioned. He said Zia’s five years did not complete, asking if it was not a violation of the Constitution.

 
Ex-army chief, spymaster not exempt from Faizabad sit-in probe: CJP
New fact-finding commission formed by Centre empowered to summon former PM, ex-COAS, then CJP, says SC

Centre's newly formed inquiry commission, tasked with probing the 2017 Faizabad sit-in, is empowered to summon the former premier, ex-army chief and then CJP for investigation, said Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa on Wednesday.

"The commission can call anyone for investigation...no one is exempt," he said.

CJP Isa made these remarks as a three-member bench of the Supreme Court (SC) took up a set of review petitions challenging the top court's 2019 judgment on the Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan's (TLP) sit-in in Faizabad, which crippled life in the federal capital and in Rawalpindi for 20 days in 2017.

Authored by CJP Isa, then a judge of the SC, the scathing judgment had directed the country's intelligence agencies, including the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Intelligence Bureau (IB), Military Intelligence (MI), and the army's media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), to not exceed their constitutional mandate.

The verdict had directed the defence ministry and tri-services chiefs to hold accountable the officers under their command who were found to have violated their oath. Besides, it had instructed the Centre to monitor those advocating extremism, hate and terrorism and prosecute them in accordance with the law.

...
 
SC to settle lifetime disqualification issue once and for all
ISLAMABAD: With the upcoming general elections around the corner, the Supreme Court on Monday referred an electoral disqualification dispute to the three-judge committee constituted under the Supreme Court (Practice and Procedure) Act 2023.

The committee will form a larger bench to determine once and for all the raging debate on whether aspirants disqualified under Article 62(1)(f) could contest polls in light of the amendments in the Elections Act 2017.

The legal dilemma arose in view of the April 13, 2018, Supreme Court judgement in the Samiullah Baloch case, when it shut the doors of parliament permanently for politicians disqualified under Article 62(1)(f) of the Constitution through a unanimous verdict, by ruling that such ineligibility was for life.

But on June 26, 2023, an amendment was brought in the Elections Act 2017, specifying that the period of the electoral disqualification will be for five years, not for life.

Headed by Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa, a three-judge Supreme Court bench ordered the matter to be placed before the committee, consisting of CJP, Justice Sardar Tariq Masood and Justice Ijazul Ahsan, to constitute the larger bench and fix it next year in Jan. The court was seized with an election dispute instituted by Sardar Imam Qasrani against Sardar Mir Bashah Khan Qaisarani.

...
 
CJP ‘disappointed’ by Justice Ijazul Ahsan’s letter
Immediately, on receipt of your letter I called you on the intercom, but it was not answered, CJP told Justice Ahsen

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Chief Justice Qazi Faez Isa has said that his door is always open to all his colleagues and he is available on intercom and cell phone.

The Chief Justice on November 18, replied to a letter of Justice Ijazul Ahsen, senior judge of the Supreme Court of 17 November 2023, concerning the working of the committee constituted under the Supreme Court (Practice and Procedure) Act, 2023 (respectively the Committee’ and ‘the Act’).

“I am disappointed to have received your letter of 17 November 2023 concerning the working of the committee constituted under the Supreme Court (Practice and Procedure) Act, 2023 (respectively the Committee’ and ‘the Act’)”, the CJP wrote to Justice Ahsen

“You allege that you have not been consulted with regard to the constitution of benches”, the CJP wrote adding that his door is always open to all his colleagues. The Chief Justice further said that he was also available on intercom and cell phone, but surprisingly he neither came to talk to him nor reached out to him by intercom or cell phone to express his concerns.

“Immediately, on receipt of your letter I called you on the intercom, but it was not answered”, the Chief Justice told Justice Ahsen. “Thereafter I asked my staff to contact your office and learnt that you had left for Lahore, early Friday afternoon and before the end of the working day”, the CJ said, adding, “We are paid to work six days, not four and a half days.”

The Chief Justice said that the primary, and first, responsibility of a judge is to attend to judicial work. “Therefore, I had initially scheduled the Committee to meet after all orders passed during the course of the day had been written, checked and signed, and this would be by Friday afternoon”, the CJP wrote

“But, conceding to your request, the Committee meetings were rescheduled to Thursdays, which I now consider may have been a mistake. If I did not want to consult either you or Justice Sardar Tariq Masood would I have supported, believed and imposed the process of consultation on myself when a Bench, of which you were a member, had suspended the operation of the Act?” the Chief Justice wrote

...
 
SC to issue notice to ex-ISI chief, not his boss

ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court on Friday decided to issue notice to the former head of Inter-Services Intelligence, retired Lt Gen Faiz Hamid, former Islamabad High Court chief justice Muhammad Anwar Kansi and others in a case relating to the removal of former high court judge Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui.

The court, however, chose not to issue the notice to former army chief Qamar Javed Bajwa though Mr Siddiqui had also named him in his petition. The court noted that Mr Siddiqui had not levelled any direct allegations against the former army chief.

Other individuals named as respondents include retired Brigadier Irfan Ramay and SC’s former registrar Arbab Muhammad Arif.

The notices will be issued only after the petitioners furnished amended petitions mentioning specific allegations against the individuals cited as fresh respondents in the case.

“Upon receipt of the amended petitions the court office will then issue notices,” said an order dictated by a five-judge SC bench headed by Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa.

The amended petitions will be filed by Mr Siddiqui through his counsel Hamid Khan, and Salahuddin Ahmed on behalf of the Islamabad High Court Bar Association and Karachi Bar Council within a week after which the case will be fixed for hearing next month.

“Since serious allegations have been levelled against the individuals, therefore it is not appropriate to proceed further without their response and hearing them,” said the order. “Let notices be issued when the petitioners filed their amended petitions along with paper books with respective addresses of the respondents.”

During the hearing, the CJP asked whether the allegations levelled by the petitioners were correct. When he was informed that they were correct, the CJP wondered when the petition had been filed by invoking Article 184(3) of the Constitution and when allegations of manipulating the 2018 elections had been levelled, then who was the real beneficiary of all this.

No general has claimed that the purpose of manipulating the elections was to become the prime minister himself, the CJP observed, adding that in fact they were acting as a facilitator to benefit someone and to damage the other.

If the allegations are proven right then the consequences that flow may encompass many for violating the Constitution, he noted.

...
 
Justice Sardar Tariq Masood, the senior-most judge of the Supreme Court, took oath as the Acting Chief Justice of Pakistan.

Senior Judge Justice Ejazul Hassan administered the oath of office of the Acting Chief Justice to Justice Sardar Tariq.

The swearing-in ceremony took place at the Supreme Court, which was attended by judges and lawyers.

It should be noted that yesterday President Dr. Arif Alvi approved the appointment of Justice Sardar Tariq Masood as Acting Chief Justice of Pakistan.

Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Qazi Faiz is leaving for abroad on winter vacation.

Justice Masood will perform the duties of acting CJP for two weeks.

Source: AAJ News

 
Practice of taking every matter to SC needs to end: CJP Isa

Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa said on Saturday that the practice of taking every matter to the Supreme Court (SC) must end.

Speaking in Islamabad at an event at the Federal Judicial Academy (FJA), where the CJP is chairman, he stressed the need to raise the status of the lower courts in order to reduce the burden on courts higher up.

“This concept that has developed in the country, of taking virtually every matter right up to the SC before one is satisfied, must come to an end if we want this system to survive,” he said.

He noted that the first point of contact with a litigant is not the SC or high courts, but rather a civil judge or judicial magistrate, which is why their status must be raised so that their ruling is “acceptable to peers and superiors”.

Source : Dawn News
 
Practice of taking every matter to SC needs to end: CJP Isa

Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa said on Saturday that the practice of taking every matter to the Supreme Court (SC) must end.

Speaking in Islamabad at an event at the Federal Judicial Academy (FJA), where the CJP is chairman, he stressed the need to raise the status of the lower courts in order to reduce the burden on courts higher up.

“This concept that has developed in the country, of taking virtually every matter right up to the SC before one is satisfied, must come to an end if we want this system to survive,” he said.

He noted that the first point of contact with a litigant is not the SC or high courts, but rather a civil judge or judicial magistrate, which is why their status must be raised so that their ruling is “acceptable to peers and superiors”.

Source : Dawn News
LHC shoots down the apponitmment of ROs, Qazis London plan is about to go pear shape, so he shoots it down. Corrupt Qazi
 

CJP Isa says efforts afoot to run Supreme Judicial Council in ‘proper manner’​

Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa on Saturday said efforts were afoot to manage the operations of the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) in a “proper manner”.

Speaking at a workshop held at the apex court, the chief justice remarked that there would have been fewer complaints if the SJC had completed its tasks.

Justice Isa emphasised the importance of public awareness about institutions funded by taxpayers, noting that “information leads to accountability.”

He added that the top court also presented itself to accountability before the public.

The CJP mentioned that he convened a full court meeting shortly after assuming office, highlighting that such a gathering had not taken place for four years.

He noted that all judges had supported the live broadcast of Supreme Court proceedings. “We aim to broadcast cases live to prevent any misconceptions that may lead to allegations,” he added.

The chief justice reported that over 5,000 cases were resolved during his tenure so far, highlighting that 504 cases were resolved in the past week alone.

“We are making efforts to conclude as many cases as possible within the limited time available,” he emphasised.

Reflecting on the initiatives implemented during his term, the CJP mentioned the removal of all barriers in front of the Supreme Court and the construction of a monument dedicated to fundamental rights at the site.

He mentioned that a meeting of the Federal Judicial Academy, which was overdue for a considerable period, was finally convened on September 25.

CJP Isa recalled an instance where a citizen inquired about the number of employees in the apex court. He noted that the court promptly provided the details and affirmed that access to information is a right of the public.

Source: DAWN
 
CJP wants govt to assure army won't have any role in business

Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa has asked the government for affirmation that the army would not play any role in business-related affairs and would work only on the country's defence.

The CJP directed the attorney general for Pakistan to assure this on the government's behalf during the hearing of a petition filed against commercial activity being done on military land



 
CJP wants govt to assure army won't have any role in business

Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa has asked the government for affirmation that the army would not play any role in business-related affairs and would work only on the country's defence.

The CJP directed the attorney general for Pakistan to assure this on the government's behalf during the hearing of a petition filed against commercial activity being done on military land



Wait for a black vigo now! :ROFLMAO:
 
CJP wants govt to assure army won't have any role in business

Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa has asked the government for affirmation that the army would not play any role in business-related affairs and would work only on the country's defence.

The CJP directed the attorney general for Pakistan to assure this on the government's behalf during the hearing of a petition filed against commercial activity being done on military land



The CJP is a crook and his worth is less than peon. He sold himself and today pretends to CJP. As IK said, he can't free me, he isn't free himself
 
A catch 22 it is for QFE when the 6 judges simultaneously raise suspicions regarding judicia; matters
 
CJP has become a figure of controversy now. He should be giving up on his role as CJP. The judiciary is attracting many controversies nowadays and they are not capable enough of bringing justice in Pakistan.
 
CJP has become a figure of controversy now. He should be giving up on his role as CJP. The judiciary is attracting many controversies nowadays and they are not capable enough of bringing justice in Pakistan.
What do you mean now?. He has been shown to be a criminal. He hid his property's in London, got caught, made a deal with the devil and has been doing the work for the devil for the last 3 years. His tenure has been an absolute disaster for PK
 
What do you mean now?. He has been shown to be a criminal. He hid his property's in London, got caught, made a deal with the devil and has been doing the work for the devil for the last 3 years. His tenure has been an absolute disaster for PK
I said now because these guys have been exposed in recent times. Before that, they were all looting the country hiding behind the closed door taking turns on this country. Exposure came in the last couple of years.
 
I said now because these guys have been exposed in recent times. Before that, they were all looting the country hiding behind the closed door taking turns on this country. Exposure came in the last couple of years.
But they have been exposed for a long time. We exposed the crook years ago.
 
With challenges ahead, the jury's still out on CJP Isa's legacy

Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Qazi Faez Isa finds himself in the hot seat as he enters the remainder of his term, grappling with a slew of challenges amid a mixed bag of reviews regarding his performance over the past six months.


While some hail his tenure for its historic strides, others remain sceptical about CJP Isa's effectiveness, who is set to hang up his robes on October 26.

From the get-go, CJP Isa set the tone by convening a full-court meeting on his first day, where the majority of judges gave the nod to live-streaming court proceedings.

Flexing his authority judiciously, he streamlined bench formations and gave precedence to public interest cases with the backing of the Supreme Court Practice and Procedure Act 2023, effectively clipping the wings of discretionary powers of the CJP.

Furthermore, the lifetime disqualification of political titans such as Nawaz Sharif and Jahangir Tareen under Article 62 (1) (f) of the constitution has been abolished.

The SC chimed in on the presidential reference, revisiting the murky waters of ex-prime minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto's murder case while ousting SC judge Mazahar Ali Akbar Naqvi over alleged misconduct.

Meanwhile, the gavel came down hard on ex-army chief Pervez Musharraf's conviction.

Through it all, CJP Isa notably held the reins of suo motu jurisdiction with integrity.

Observers note the SC, under CJP Isa's helm, has been focused to right the wrongs of the past.
However, the superior judiciary showed judicial restraint in navigating the turbulent waters of clashes between powerful circles and the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI).

Regarding the future challenges of CJP Isa, Advocate Abdul Moiz Jafferii said, in one sentence: That the CJP’s greatest challenge for the next six months is the same as his greatest challenge for the past three months: to recover from the decision given on January 13.

It's noteworthy that on January 13, a three-judge bench headed by CJP Isa declared the intra-party elections of PTI illegal, resulting in the party being stripped of its election symbol. Later, PTI was unable to secure reserved seats post-election.

Jafferii further elaborated that the CJP’s biggest challenge for the rest of his remaining tenure is to shed the perception that his court has assisted the incumbent coalition government both by knocking out the most popular party in the country on a technicality and by allowing the government a wide berth to operate.

"Another challenge will be to take the IHC judges’ allegations towards a conclusion which strengthens the institution and doesn’t just look like a self-serving exercise which ends with letting the executive do what it wishes,” he added.

Jafferii opined that if the Supreme Court could write to the high courts to ask what to do next, it could also have asked them if they had any experiences of establishment interference of their own to convey.
"This court looks like it’s either stuck in the past, with a focus on the Bhutto sentence correction or the fixation with the 2018 election and government-related issues, or it seems to be focused on moving on to the future.

Jafferii suggested that what might be lacking is justice in the present moment, precisely when it is most needed and “when it is actually the job of this Supreme Court”.

Erosion of judiciary’s standing

Barrister Asad Rahim Khan noted that the recent spate of SC decisions, as well as near-complete inertia in response to the IHC judges’ letter, was eroding the judiciary’s standing each day.
This chief justice would be better served acknowledging that citizens’ fundamental rights have all but collapsed, rather than pass statements about getting out of the kitchen.

He further said that another challenge was that the trash fire of a law was the Practice & Procedure Act has so far only succeeded in suspending the landmark military courts judgment.

"At no point since 2009 has confidence in the judiciary been this low; so far, it’s not quite been this chief justice’s priority to restore even a fraction of it,” he added.

"The challenge is to build consensus within 17 Judges of the SC. To overcome poisonous divisions. To renew faith in shared goals of achieving Jinnah’s Pakistan which we all dream of", Advocate Zahid F Ebrahim opined.

Legacy and ‘imposed battles’

Advocate Umer Gilani believed that Justice Qazi Faez Isa assumed office of CJP at a moment in our judicial history when all state institutions, including the courts and the armed forces, were deeply fractured, with pro-Imran and anti-Imran camps fighting an existential battle.

"In such an environment, there was probably nothing that CJ Isa could have realistically done to fully placate his pro-Imran critics. However, what he can, and should do is to set up a reform agenda of his own. The Supreme Court can, and should, play a proactive role in the reform of the lower courts to reduce delays in contract enforcement and in the punishment of crime.

The court can also step up in a major way for the enforcement of the fundamental rights of economically deprived segments of society such as coal miners, bonded labourers, "servants" of autonomous bodies locked in exploitative relationships, losses to public exchequer inflicted by blocking of public highways and internet signals and losses inflicted by the negligence of state officials.

Gilani further stated that the chief justice should pick up a few battles of his own; if he doesn't seize the initiative, his legacy will be defined completely by the battles imposed on him by his critics.

Former additional attorney general Tariq Mahmood Khokhar says that the CJP’s challenge is to take a step back from the precipice of constitutional, democratic and judicial ruins.

"It is bleeding obvious that the six judges are crime victims; that the PTI election symbol case diminished our nascent democracy; that mainstream media is controlled; that we have unrepresentative governments; that the rule of law is flexible; that the Supreme Court is fractured again; that our institutions lack legitimacy and public confidence; and, that the trichotomy of powers is a mere illusion now,” Tariq Khokhar said.

It has also been learned that a government committee is deliberating on finalising a judicial package, expected to be unveiled shortly after the Eid holidays.

Despite the government's official denial of media reports suggesting a constitutional amendment to impose a fixed three-year tenure for the office of the CJP, debates persist on this proposal.

Both PTI and the Professional Lawyers Group have jointly decided to oppose any such notion, casting serious doubts on the recent election results.

The unfolding scenario has prompted curiosity regarding whether the current CJP stands to gain from such a governmental initiative and what the reaction of other superior court judges will be.

During CJP Isa's tenure, the FIA issued notices to journalists and other social media activists for their criticism of the January 13 order. CJP Isa has consistently expressed concern about the use of social media. His comments against social media could potentially be exploited by influential circles to stifle dissenting voices.

None of CJP Isa's actions have displeased the current government. However, the PTI is expressing disappointment over his perceived inaction regarding the party's female workers who remain incarcerated.

The PTI has already filed an appeal with the Supreme Court regarding the issue of election rigging. It has also contested the Peshawar High Court's decision regarding the denial of reserved seats to the PTI. The suo motu case involving six IHC judges will be heard by the full court on April 28.

SOURCE: EXPRESS TRIBUNE
 
He has allowed Millitary trials of civilians on fake cases, where a press conference apparently stops the cases, he has banned a political party which was decided by NS and Establishment
 
Last edited by a moderator:
CJP Isa faces heat over controversial ruling

Chief Justice of Pakistan Qazi Faez Isa is once again in the midst of controversy as he defends the apex court’s January 13 ruling, which declared the intra-party elections of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) as unlawful, leading to the party being stripped of its election symbol in the recent general elections.

Acting on CJP Isa’s directives, the SC Registrar penned a letter on May 3 to British High Commissioner, Jane Marriott.
The response was prompted by Marriott's remarks at the Asma Jahangir Conference, where she emphasised the importance of democracy, elections, and the necessity for open societies.

It's worth noting that CJP Isa himself authored the controversial January 13 ruling, which has been criticised as one of the worst judgments in recent memory, severely impacting the credibility of the February 8 general elections.

The ramifications of this ruling were vast and far-reaching. PTI was unable to secure reserved seats, and winning candidates who had initially secured victory on PTI tickets faced no repercussions under Article 63 A of the Constitution when they switched allegiances.

However, the SC's letter argues that elections in Pakistan were legally required to be held within 90 days of the completion of the National and provincial assemblies' tenure.

Yet, due to discord between the president and the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) over who holds the authority to announce the election date, this deadline was not met.

“The matter was resolved in just 12 days by the Supreme Court, and general elections were held throughout Pakistan on 8 February 2024," the letter said.

The letter skirts the issue of the elections' fairness. In the wake of the January 13 order, PTI's legal team decided to withdraw their contempt petition against another SC order directing the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) to level the playing field for the party.

Whispers in the corridors suggest that PTI candidates were hamstrung in their campaigning during the elections. Many PTI leaders found themselves either behind bars or on the run. Since the May 9 incidents, pressure has mounted on PTI leaders to jump ship and join the Istehkam-e-Pakistan Party (IPP).

Moreover, the judiciary, with CJP Isa at the helm, has been unable to spring PTI's female members from custody, where they remain as under-trial prisoners.

The SC also remained silent on the banning of PTI's gatherings during the election campaign. The returning officers (ROs) were appointed from the civil administration, raising serious questions about their conduct.

The SC Registrar states in the letter that many candidates faced lifetime bans in previous elections because they were not considered honest and trustworthy ('sadiq' and 'ameen') by the top court. However, a larger seven-member bench overruled this earlier decision, deeming it non-compliant with the Constitution and the law.

The letter does not specify who benefitted most from this verdict. Notably, the SC judgment ended the lifetime disqualification of Mian Nawaz Sharif and Jahangir Khan Tareen.

Earlier, there was a clash between Nawaz Sharif and powerful circles following the Panamagate scandal. He was disqualified not only as an MNA but also as the head of his party, and subsequently, he was sent to jail.

However, after mending his relationship with these powerful circles, Nawaz Sharif managed to secure relief in all his cases.

Currently, the relationship between Imran Khan and the security establishment is tense. Superior court judges are now facing difficulties in granting relief to Imran Khan in any matter. This tension was evident in the Islamabad High Court, where six judges wrote a letter to the Supreme Judicial Council about the interference of agencies in judicial functions.

Likewise, the SC letter defending the January 13 order has stated that the law enacted by parliament (Elections Act, 2017) requires democracy within political parties via the holding of periodical intra-party elections to forestall autocracy or even dictatorship within them.

“To ensure compliance with this democratic principle the law stipulates that if a political party does not hold intra-party elections, then it would not be eligible for an election symbol. A political party (which had itself voted in this law) did not hold the mandated intra-party elections. The Supreme Court reiterated what the law stipulated,” says the SC letter.

"Therefore, your Excellency's criticism about this decision, with utmost respect, was unjustified.”

It is worthy to mention that it was upon the current CJP’s assumption of office that cases of public importance began to be broadcast live for the first time in Pakistan's history.

“This allowed the public at large to view Supreme Court proceedings in their entirety, with transparency in regard to how decisions came to be made. The decision regarding intra-party elections and party symbols was one of many to be broadcast live as such."

The letter said that it was gratifying that the British high commissioner had repeatedly stressed the importance of 'open societies' saying that they were necessary for vibrant democracies. “You will be pleased to learn that the Supreme Court has recognised the right to information and vigorously applied it to itself."

There is no doubt that CJP Isa has initiated live streaming of court proceedings. However, he still exercises discretion regarding which cases are live-streamed.

For instance, there was no live streaming during the last two hearings of the journalists' harassment case. Similarly, when PTI chief Imran Khan appeared for the NAB law amendments case, live streaming was not allowed. There is still no clarity about the SOPs for live-streaming court proceedings.

It is also noteworthy that X was banned in Pakistan after the general elections, yet the Supreme Court did not take notice. Recently, PEMRA issued a notification banning the broadcast of court proceedings on TV channels.

Journalists received notices from the FIA Joint Investigation Team (JIT) over their criticism of the January 13 order.

One journalist, Asad Toor, was imprisoned for three weeks on false charges.The SC letter emphasises that continuing the violent undemocratic errors of the past condemns both present and future generations, perpetuating cycles of violence."Let us embrace truth, which sets us free.

Should the overthrow of the elected democratic government of Mohammad Mossadegh in 1953, to capture Iranian oil, not be revealed after over seven decades of cover-up? Will this not prove therapeutic for the perpetrator and the victim? Will it not engender trust, possibly friendship, and peace?”Ceding to what it described as 'Jewish Zionist aspirations', the British government wrote to an individual, its own citizen, on November 2, 1917, conveying its decision to establish a settler-colonial state.

“This decision was not voted upon by the people of the area who were impacted by it, nor even by your own. The British government, and not Parliament, unilaterally decided it. The Balfour Declaration became the foundation on which an ethnic state was established,” the letter said.“Those who had always lived there were excluded from this ethnic state; contained in ghettos, humiliated, deprived, brutalised, maimed and killed."

"Let us step back from the precipice of settler-ethnic superiority. Deaths of thousands of children and many thousands more innocents may unjustifiably come to define a people, which would be an abomination. Let us all stand up and be counted for equality, peace and humanity.”

"Let us be honest and acknowledge past mistakes in the spirit of openness, advocated by your Excellency. And, jettison the unholy concept of ethnic superiority, and its concomitant an inferior humanity."

"The Supreme Court of Pakistan has acknowledged the mistakes made in its past, addressed them in detail, and taken steps to ensure that they are not repeated.

Since the Government of His Majesty King Charles III has stressed the need for open societies and democracy, and offered criticism on the decisions of the Supreme Court of Pakistan, reciprocity would presumably be acceptable."

“This letter is written on instructions of the Chief Justice of Pakistan, who extends to you and the people of your country his yearning for openness and democracy, and his best," the letter stated.

A copy of this letter was also sent to Lord Robert John Reed, President of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom and Baroness Sue Lascelles Carr, Lady Chief Justice of England and Wales.

‘Bizarre’

Commenting on it, advocate Abdul Moiz Jaferii said that it was bizarre that the registrar of the SC was writing on the CJP’s instructions to a diplomat in defence of the chief justice’s own judgments.

“It is further bizarre that the letter not only defends those judgments on their merits but goes on to attack the historical position of the country the diplomat represents as an answer to the criticism,” he added."I don’t know of any other instance where such a correspondence has been attempted.

I don’t know of any other instance where it would be considered proper,’ Jaferii said.Meanwhile, the debate has been stirred over whether this letter will impact PTI's pending review petition in the case.

EXPRESS TRIBUNE
 
CJP Isa faces heat over controversial ruling

Chief Justice of Pakistan Qazi Faez Isa is once again in the midst of controversy as he defends the apex court’s January 13 ruling, which declared the intra-party elections of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) as unlawful, leading to the party being stripped of its election symbol in the recent general elections.

Acting on CJP Isa’s directives, the SC Registrar penned a letter on May 3 to British High Commissioner, Jane Marriott.
The response was prompted by Marriott's remarks at the Asma Jahangir Conference, where she emphasised the importance of democracy, elections, and the necessity for open societies.

It's worth noting that CJP Isa himself authored the controversial January 13 ruling, which has been criticised as one of the worst judgments in recent memory, severely impacting the credibility of the February 8 general elections.

The ramifications of this ruling were vast and far-reaching. PTI was unable to secure reserved seats, and winning candidates who had initially secured victory on PTI tickets faced no repercussions under Article 63 A of the Constitution when they switched allegiances.

However, the SC's letter argues that elections in Pakistan were legally required to be held within 90 days of the completion of the National and provincial assemblies' tenure.

Yet, due to discord between the president and the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) over who holds the authority to announce the election date, this deadline was not met.

“The matter was resolved in just 12 days by the Supreme Court, and general elections were held throughout Pakistan on 8 February 2024," the letter said.

The letter skirts the issue of the elections' fairness. In the wake of the January 13 order, PTI's legal team decided to withdraw their contempt petition against another SC order directing the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) to level the playing field for the party.

Whispers in the corridors suggest that PTI candidates were hamstrung in their campaigning during the elections. Many PTI leaders found themselves either behind bars or on the run. Since the May 9 incidents, pressure has mounted on PTI leaders to jump ship and join the Istehkam-e-Pakistan Party (IPP).

Moreover, the judiciary, with CJP Isa at the helm, has been unable to spring PTI's female members from custody, where they remain as under-trial prisoners.

The SC also remained silent on the banning of PTI's gatherings during the election campaign. The returning officers (ROs) were appointed from the civil administration, raising serious questions about their conduct.

The SC Registrar states in the letter that many candidates faced lifetime bans in previous elections because they were not considered honest and trustworthy ('sadiq' and 'ameen') by the top court. However, a larger seven-member bench overruled this earlier decision, deeming it non-compliant with the Constitution and the law.

The letter does not specify who benefitted most from this verdict. Notably, the SC judgment ended the lifetime disqualification of Mian Nawaz Sharif and Jahangir Khan Tareen.

Earlier, there was a clash between Nawaz Sharif and powerful circles following the Panamagate scandal. He was disqualified not only as an MNA but also as the head of his party, and subsequently, he was sent to jail.

However, after mending his relationship with these powerful circles, Nawaz Sharif managed to secure relief in all his cases.

Currently, the relationship between Imran Khan and the security establishment is tense. Superior court judges are now facing difficulties in granting relief to Imran Khan in any matter. This tension was evident in the Islamabad High Court, where six judges wrote a letter to the Supreme Judicial Council about the interference of agencies in judicial functions.

Likewise, the SC letter defending the January 13 order has stated that the law enacted by parliament (Elections Act, 2017) requires democracy within political parties via the holding of periodical intra-party elections to forestall autocracy or even dictatorship within them.

“To ensure compliance with this democratic principle the law stipulates that if a political party does not hold intra-party elections, then it would not be eligible for an election symbol. A political party (which had itself voted in this law) did not hold the mandated intra-party elections. The Supreme Court reiterated what the law stipulated,” says the SC letter.

"Therefore, your Excellency's criticism about this decision, with utmost respect, was unjustified.”

It is worthy to mention that it was upon the current CJP’s assumption of office that cases of public importance began to be broadcast live for the first time in Pakistan's history.

“This allowed the public at large to view Supreme Court proceedings in their entirety, with transparency in regard to how decisions came to be made. The decision regarding intra-party elections and party symbols was one of many to be broadcast live as such."

The letter said that it was gratifying that the British high commissioner had repeatedly stressed the importance of 'open societies' saying that they were necessary for vibrant democracies. “You will be pleased to learn that the Supreme Court has recognised the right to information and vigorously applied it to itself."

There is no doubt that CJP Isa has initiated live streaming of court proceedings. However, he still exercises discretion regarding which cases are live-streamed.

For instance, there was no live streaming during the last two hearings of the journalists' harassment case. Similarly, when PTI chief Imran Khan appeared for the NAB law amendments case, live streaming was not allowed. There is still no clarity about the SOPs for live-streaming court proceedings.

It is also noteworthy that X was banned in Pakistan after the general elections, yet the Supreme Court did not take notice. Recently, PEMRA issued a notification banning the broadcast of court proceedings on TV channels.

Journalists received notices from the FIA Joint Investigation Team (JIT) over their criticism of the January 13 order.

One journalist, Asad Toor, was imprisoned for three weeks on false charges.The SC letter emphasises that continuing the violent undemocratic errors of the past condemns both present and future generations, perpetuating cycles of violence."Let us embrace truth, which sets us free.

Should the overthrow of the elected democratic government of Mohammad Mossadegh in 1953, to capture Iranian oil, not be revealed after over seven decades of cover-up? Will this not prove therapeutic for the perpetrator and the victim? Will it not engender trust, possibly friendship, and peace?”Ceding to what it described as 'Jewish Zionist aspirations', the British government wrote to an individual, its own citizen, on November 2, 1917, conveying its decision to establish a settler-colonial state.

“This decision was not voted upon by the people of the area who were impacted by it, nor even by your own. The British government, and not Parliament, unilaterally decided it. The Balfour Declaration became the foundation on which an ethnic state was established,” the letter said.“Those who had always lived there were excluded from this ethnic state; contained in ghettos, humiliated, deprived, brutalised, maimed and killed."

"Let us step back from the precipice of settler-ethnic superiority. Deaths of thousands of children and many thousands more innocents may unjustifiably come to define a people, which would be an abomination. Let us all stand up and be counted for equality, peace and humanity.”

"Let us be honest and acknowledge past mistakes in the spirit of openness, advocated by your Excellency. And, jettison the unholy concept of ethnic superiority, and its concomitant an inferior humanity."

"The Supreme Court of Pakistan has acknowledged the mistakes made in its past, addressed them in detail, and taken steps to ensure that they are not repeated.

Since the Government of His Majesty King Charles III has stressed the need for open societies and democracy, and offered criticism on the decisions of the Supreme Court of Pakistan, reciprocity would presumably be acceptable."

“This letter is written on instructions of the Chief Justice of Pakistan, who extends to you and the people of your country his yearning for openness and democracy, and his best," the letter stated.

A copy of this letter was also sent to Lord Robert John Reed, President of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom and Baroness Sue Lascelles Carr, Lady Chief Justice of England and Wales.

‘Bizarre’

Commenting on it, advocate Abdul Moiz Jaferii said that it was bizarre that the registrar of the SC was writing on the CJP’s instructions to a diplomat in defence of the chief justice’s own judgments.

“It is further bizarre that the letter not only defends those judgments on their merits but goes on to attack the historical position of the country the diplomat represents as an answer to the criticism,” he added."I don’t know of any other instance where such a correspondence has been attempted.

I don’t know of any other instance where it would be considered proper,’ Jaferii said.Meanwhile, the debate has been stirred over whether this letter will impact PTI's pending review petition in the case.

EXPRESS TRIBUNE
Isa is lecturing the British about history while under his reign 1000s are in jail.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Back
Top