Pak Supreme Court upholds law seeking to curtail powers of chief justice

Islamabad, 11 Oct: In a major blow to Pakistan’s former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, the Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld a controversial law seeking to curtail the powers of the chief justice but barred its retrospective application to give the right of appeal to the aggrieved parties in the cases decided under the suo motu jurisdiction.

The law upheld by the majority of judges, including the sitting chief justice, deprived the chief justice of forming benches for different cases as the new law provided that a committee of the chief justice and two senior judges would form judges.

The law also provided the right of appeal in the cases decided through suo motu notices which was not available previously. The bench by a majority of 9 to 6 upheld the part of the law to grant the right of appeal.

The verdict is a blow to Sharif, who is scheduled to return to Pakistan on October 21 ending his four-year-long self-imposed exile in the UK, as his chances of appealing against the disqualification are dashed down.

A full court bench led by Chief Justice Qazi Faez Isa announced the reserved judgment after the completion of a hearing of multiple petitions challenging the Supreme Court (Practice & Procedure) Act, 2023.

In a split verdict, the court upheld the law with 10 judges supporting it while five others opposed it and rejected all petitions against it.

Reading the reserved verdict, which was streamed live, Justice Isa said, “A majority of 10-5…, the SC Practice and Procedure Act 2023 is sustained as being in accordance with the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and to this extent, the petitions are dismissed.”

However, it rejected the application of the law to the past cases by a narrow majority of 8 to 7, giving a blow to former prime minister Sharif who was disqualified in 2017 after the court had taken suo motu notice of his case and the verdict left no window for the review of his disqualification.

“By a majority of 8-7…sub-section (2) of section 5 of the Act (granting a right of appeal retrospectively) is declared to be ultra vires the Constitution and to this extent the petitions are allowed,” according to the verdict.

“By a majority of 9-6 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,” the court ruled.

The law was passed by the previous parliament in April with the backing of the then government of Shehbaz Sharif to curtail the powers of the chief justice regarding taking suo motu action.

The petitioners smelled a rat in the attempt as the government was wary of then chief justice Umar Ata Bandial who was accused of having a soft corner for former premier Imran Khan. (PTI)