Wednesday, January 11, 2012

PTI will not support any unconstitutional step by army: Imran Khan


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LAHORE: Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan said that even though his party and the people of Pakistan want to get rid of the present government, PTI would never accept any undemocratic and unconstitutional step by the army to remove the government.
Talking to the media at his residence, Khan said that the present confrontation between the institutions was unfortunate but the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) pushed itself into it, so that they can get sympathy votes in the upcoming elections.
PTI media advisor Shafqat Mehmood said that the Supreme Court is as supreme as the parliament and no institution is less significant than others. “The PPP just wants to become a siyasi shaheed,” Mehmood said.
However Mehmood said that he doubted if the military will takeover. “I think the situation would eventually fizzle out and I don’t see any signs of a coup,” the PTI media advisor said.
Earlier PTI Chairman Khan welcomed former PPP leader Khalid Kharal and former Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) provincial leader Inamullah Niazi along with former PPP provincial minister Shah Nawaz Cheema from Gujranwala into the PTI fold.
“I pledge to work for the implementation of Quaid’s vision in the country. The current political system has become rotten and the political parties have turned into dynasties,” Khan said.
The PTI Chairman further said that his party has gained momentum on its own and those who say that it is supported by the security agencies, are themselves the creation of the agencies.
Khan said that at the moment, his party was busy organising itself for the upcoming elections.

SC forms larger bench for NRO review case


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ISLAMABAD: Supreme Court of Pakistan on Wednesday formed a seven-member larger bench for the hearing of NRO review case, FTNews reported.
The bench, headed by Justice Nasirul Mulk, will initiate hearing of the case on January 16.
The bench will be comprised of Justice Sarmad Jalal Usmani, Justice Asif Saeed Khosa, Justice Ejaz Chaudhry, Justice Gulzar, Justice Ejaz Fazal and Justice Ather.

Only democratic Pakistan can progress says CJ


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ISLAMABAD: Chief Justice Supreme Court of Pakistan Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry on Wednesday said Pakistan can only progress as a democratic country, FTNews reported.
While meeting a delegation of Supreme Court Bar Council, Chaudhry said “We have to remain united for the supremacy of law and constitution.”
“Only a democratic Pakistan can progress,” said the CJ.
He said that the bench and the bar have a common agenda of supremacy of law and constitution.
Bar Council’s president Yasin Azad said that any unconstitutional step will not be accepted. “A military government will not be accepted,” he added.
Earlier, a meeting of the Bar appreciated the apex court’s NRO verdict and demanded to handle noncompliant with an iron fist.

PM sacks Secretary Defence; COAS calls emergency meeting


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ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani on Wednesday sacked Secretary Defence Khalid Naeem Lodhi, FTNews reported. In a related development, the army chief summoned an emergency meeting of the corps commanders.

The prime minister revoked Lodhi’s contract and handed over the additional charge of secretary defence to Nargis Sethi.

Furthermore, FTNews quoted sources as saying that the military high command had appointed Brigadier Sarfaraz Ali commander of the 111 brigade.

Prime Minister Gilani’s office said in a statement that Lodhi was fired for “gross misconduct and illegal action which created misunderstanding” between state institutions.

The army earlier said the defence ministry had failed to process its submissions made to a Supreme Court inquiry into a controversial unsigned memo that sought US help in curbing the power of the military.

That failure triggered a row between the country’s military and civilian leadership, with the prime minister earlier in the week telling Chinese media the army top brass had acted unlawfully in failing to consult it.

Moreover, Lodhi was regarded as having more power than the defence minister because of his direct ties to the army high command.

Allegations by Gilani against COAS, DG ISI very serious: ISPR


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ISLAMABAD: Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) has taken notice of Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani’s interview to a Chinese newspaper in which he said that the army chief and DG ISI gave statements to the Supreme Court without the government’s approval.
A statement released on the ISPR website on Wednesday said that the allegations leveled against Chief of Army Staff General (COAS) Ashfaq Pervez Kayani and Director General Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) Ahmed Shuja Pasha were very serious and had “very serious ramifications with potentially grievous consequences for the country”.
It stated that Gilani gave the interview to The People’s Daily Online at the time when Kayani was also on an official visit to China.
“The Honourable Prime Minister inter alia termed the responses given by COAS and DG ISI in the alleged Memo Case to the Honourable Supreme Court of Pakistan as unconstitutional and illegal.” However, it added, that Gilani’s statement did not take into account the fact that the COAS and the DG ISI were cited as respondents in the Memogate scandal by the Supreme Court and were served notices directly.
It also highlighted that in an earlier meeting between the prime minister and Kayani, the PM had publicly stated that the replies submitted by the respondents were “in response to the notice of the Court through proper channel and in accordance with the rules of business” and no objection was raised at that time.
The statement said: “COAS and DG ISI in their response to the Honourable Supreme Court were obliged to state facts as known to them, on the Memo Issue. The issue of jurisdiction and maintainability of the Petitions was between the Honourable Supreme Court and the Federation.”

US aided Pakistan group which supported extremists


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ISLAMABAD: The US gave money to a Pakistani Muslim group that organised anti-Taliban rallies, but which later demonstrated in support of an extremist who killed a leading liberal politician, the US Embassy in Pakistan said Wednesday.
US government website Usaspending.gov shows that the group, the Sunni Ittehad Council, received $36,607 from Washington in 2009.
A US diplomat said that the embassy had given money to the group to organise the rallies, but that it had since changed direction and leadership. He said it was a one-off grant, and wouldn’t be repeated. He didn’t give his name because he wasn’t authorised to speak about the issue on the record.
The grant was first reported by the Council of Foreign Relations on its website.
The Ittehad council was formed in 2009 to counter extremism. It groups politicians and clerics from Pakistan’s traditionalist Barelvi Muslim movement, often referred to as theological moderates in the Pakistani context.
The American money was used to organise nationwide rallies against militants and suicide bombings, the embassy official said. The demonstrations received widespread media coverage, and were some of the first against extremism in the country.
The rhetoric at the rallies was mostly focused on opposing militant attacks on shrines, which Barelvis frequent but are opposed by Deobandi Muslims, Pakistan’s other main Muslim sect.
In 2011 and also this month, however, the council led demonstrations in support of the killer of Salman Taseer, a governor who was killed a year ago for his criticism of anti-blasphemy laws. The displays have appalled Pakistani liberals and stoked international fears that the country is buckling under the weight of extremism.
Taseer’s assassin, Mumtaz Qadri, is a Barelvi. He claimed he acted to defend the honour of Prophet Mohammed.
At its rallies, the group maintains its criticism of the Taliban even as it supports Qadri — a seemingly contradictory stance that suggests its leaders may be more interested in harnessing the political support and street power of Barelvis than in genuinely countering militancy.
Two leading members of the council who have been with the group from the beginning of its existence denied receiving any American funds. The apparent discrepancy could be explained by lack of transparency within the organisation. However, given the current anti-American climate, owning up to receiving funds from the United States would invite criticism.
”This propaganda is being unleashed against us because we are strongly opposed to Western democracy and American policies in the region and in the world,” said Sahibzada Fazal Karim, the head of the council, before reiterating the group’s support for Qadri.
”We are against extremism, but we support Qadri because he did a right thing,” he said.

Rumour has it: ‘OBL’s Abbottabad hideout to be razed’


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ABBOTTABAD: Osama bin Laden’s hideout in Abbottabad, where he was shot dead by US Navy Seals, will be flattened by rocket-propelled grenades and then bulldozed, British newspaper The Sun reported on Tuesday.
The report stated: “Military chiefs in Pakistan plan a spectacular blitz in front of TV cameras to prevent the walled complex becoming a sick shrine to the al Qaeda terror master.”
The report further quoted Interior Minister Rehman Malik as saying: “We will hit it like an enemy fort. But first we must erase everything related to Bin Laden from our country.”
It further revealed that the demolition will take place next month. Chief military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas was quoted as saying: “US and European officials will be invited. It will be a big event.”
ISPR denial
However, a spokesman for the Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) denied the report. A statement clarified the remarks attributed to the director general regarding the demolition of Bin Laden’s residence.
The spokesman said that remarks in an article by Nick Parker published in The Sun on Tuesday are totally baseless. The spokesman added that the DG ISPR never spoke to any reporter of The Sun as quoted in the news report.

Karachi TTP leader confesses to killing Iftikhar Hussain’s son


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KARACHI: The chief of Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Karachi chapter, arrested earlier this month, has confessed to killing the son of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain, confirmed Crime Investigation Department (CID) Sindh Police on Wednesday.
SSP CID Fayyaz Khan said that Abdul Qayyum Mehsood confessed to killing Rashid Hussain by firing at him in Nowshera on July 24 last year. The culprit also told the police that he was accompanied by Naqeebullah and Kaleemullah, two of his fellows who were later killed in a drone strike.
The TTP man also said that the killing was properly planned.
Hussain was out on a walk with his friend in the Pabbi area near Nowshera district when gunmen opened fire at them. They both were shifted to a hospital where Hussain succumbed to his injuries.
The SSP said that the TTP leader was arrested on January 5 along with three of his accomplices in a police encounter in Manghopir. Several weapons, suicide jackets and rockets were also recovered from their possession.
CID AIG Shabbir Shiekh had said that the suspects were involved in a dozen bomb attacks, kidnappings for ransom, murders and robberies in Karachi.
Police kills alleged terrorist, two flee at Empress Market.
The police claimed to have killed an alleged terrorist in an encounter at Empress Market in Karachi, reported FTNews.Two of his accomplices managed to escape, said the police.
A hand grenade has been recovered from the killed suspect; however, his identity still remains unknown.

SC admits Haqqani’s petition for hearing


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ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court on Wednesday admitted for hearing a petition by Husain Haqqani requesting the court to review its decision regarding the memo scandal, FTNews reported.
The review petition filed through Asma Jahangir stated that the Supreme Court’s decision on the scandal went beyond the authority bestowed to the court.
The petition stated that the high courts were not subordinate to the Supreme Court and therefore the apex court could not issue directives to high court judges.
Earlier, a nine-judge bench of the Supreme Court headed by Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry formed a commission headed by Balochistan High Court’s Chief Justice Qazi Faez Isa to investigate the memo scandal. Chief justices of the high courts of Islamabad and Sindh are members of the commission. — FTNews

Jamshed Dasti quits PPP


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LAHORE: Jamshed Dasti, MNA from Muzaffargarh, NA-178, on Wednesday announced that he was parting ways with the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP), FTNews reported.
Dasti moreover said that he was a party worker and could not work in cahoots with landlords.
He further said that he would contest the next general election as an independent candidate and vowed to defeat Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar in it.
He alleged that Khar was interfering in the matters of his constituency.

Suspected US drone kills three ‘militants’ in North Waziristan


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MIRANSHAH: After a lull of about 55 days, the valleys of Pakistan’s tribal region reverberated once more with missile fire from stealthy US air borne drones. Two missiles destroyed a militant compound in Pakistan’s tribal area near the Afghan border, killing four militants late on Tuesday, security officials said.
The missiles struck a compound on the outer skirts of Miranshah, in the North Waziristan region, killing four, one official said.
The attack triggered a fire in the building and flames could be seen from the roof of houses in Miranshah, five kilometres away, residents reported.
The drone attack and the casualties were confirmed by two other security officials.
The strike was the first since US-Pakistan relations plunged to their lowest level after the November 26 helicopter strikes on a border check post which killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.

Committee meets ‘under oath’: Beleaguered govt to take its case to parliament


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ISLAMABAD: While options for the beleaguered Pakistan Peoples Party appear to be narrowing, the ruling alliance has decided to use the platform of parliament to deal with threats emanating from the judiciary on the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) issue.
After a brief lull of a few days, the executive and the judiciary once again appear to be heading towards a head-on confrontation after Tuesday’s Supreme Court decision on the NRO implementation case.
President Asif Ali Zardari, who rushed to the capital, held a meeting with senior leaders of coalition parties. All of them advised the government to find a ‘middle way’ and not to adopt a hostile approach.
Before the meeting, President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani held a one-on-one meeting. The senior leadership of the PPP also had another meeting of their core committee. While an overwhelming majority of the core committee members wanted to fight the party’s case in the full glare of the public eye, quieter voices again urged the party leadership not to adopt a confrontational posture, a source privy to the meeting said.
Most of the participants of the core committee meeting declined to share details, saying that they were under oath that they would not divulge a word.
“I can tell you the meeting was held in a very serious atmosphere. We took an oath not to divulge any details,” one of the senators who attended the meeting said.
Another participant said that the party will continue to contest conspiracies against the government, irrespective of whether it was in power or not He said the party will fight its case openly and expose ‘conspirators’.
The government decided to call a National Assembly session on January 12 and use the platform of parliament.
Farhatullah Babar, the president’s spokesperson, said that, before the NA session, a joint meeting of the parliamentary parties will also be held in the Parliament House to work out the strategy to be adopted during the session.
The NA session was previously scheduled for January 25, while Senate will meet on January 16.
Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, president of the Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid, who was part of coalition meeting, proposed a ‘national dialogue’ between all sides to solve the current problems in the country.
“All the institutional heads and political leadership can solve the problem in one week because all the forces want to solve the issues and no one is ready to take an extreme decision,” he told the media.
Sources said the top PPP leadership has given its legal gurus the task of chalking out a ‘time- buying strategy’ once again in the wake of new SC directives. “We will be looking for something within the SC’s six options … one of these is throwing the ball in the court of parliament as the court itself said,” a PPP leader said before the core committee meeting.
The party at the same time will be mobilising the public at large through political gatherings. The first such rally will be held in Sargoda on January 21, and the prime minister will also make an address.
“It had been tradition of PPP workers that they neither submitted themselves to coercion nor gave in to dictatorship,” were the words of PM Gilani when the court verdict came in. Gilani and other PPP leaders had converged in the Prime Minister’s House when the court proceedings were in progress, sources said.

Gilani says PPP can’t be frightened


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ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani continued to flaunt his defiance on Tuesday, but his criticism was not directly aimed at the Supreme Court options about implementation of the NRO suggested earlier during the day.
Addressing People’s Party MNAs, MPAs and office bearers from the Sargodha division at the prime minister house, he said the PPP had the tradition of neither submitting to coercion nor giving in to dictatorships and while doing so its heads had faced rigours of imprisonment.
“Zulifkar Ali Bhutto and Benazir Bhutto bore the rigours of imprisonment and also laid down their lives but their ideologies could not be eliminated”,a press release issued by the prime minister house quoted Mr Gilani as saying.
Referring to the SC order in which the prime minister prima facie has been described as ‘dishonest’, Mr Gilani said: “Regretfully all dictators are portrayed as innocent while all politicians are considered corrupt”.
Addressing the subject of NRO, on which the Supreme Court apparently issued a harsh ruling, the prime minister said: The NRO is in the thick of discussions these days, but NROs have been the order of the day in the past which were named as plea bargains.
Referring to Mian Nawaz Sharif’s exile in Saudi Arabia, Mr Gilani said that going abroad under a deal was also NRO, adding, in essence, there is no difference between both except that we are victimised while others are rewarded.
Further defending his party`s right to be in government, Mr Gilani said it came to power because of people while others stepped into corridors of power through other means.
“We play politics of principles whereas others change their principles for sake of power,” he said.
Referring to a recent federal cabinet decision under which civil bureaucracy and army officers would be bound to make public their assets, the prime minister said that now onwards it would be incumbent upon all government employees to declare their assets as public document.
Earlier, the civil servants used to file details of their assets but only for government consumption, but for the first time not only civilian officials but also army officers have been asked to declare their assets as public documents.
The prime minister said the media had reported former president Gen Musharraf’s assets worth billions of rupees, but no action would be taken against him.
In an obvious dig at two former party members of the National Assembly-Shah Mehmood Qureshi and Sardar Assef Ahmad Ali-who have recently joined the PTI, the prime minister said that those who came and left the party were opportunists.
“The PPP workers are loyal to their ideology and I appeal to intellectuals to regard PPP and its leaders as an asset and protect them,” Mr Gilani said.
He said that it was not easy to struggle anddo politics in this country.
He said that ‘angels’ would come to him in jails and invite him and members of PPP to support Musharraf.
He said that these ‘angels’ promised power in return for trading conscience, but “we never considered any backdoor entry into power nor did we commit disloyalty”.
Mr Gilani said the PPP believed that only the people were the source and repository of all powers.
He also recounted successes of his government mainly comprising restoration of 1973 Constitution, passage of NFC award, and giving of identity to the people of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Gilgit-Baltistan.
A senior PPP office-bearer told FTNews that although it was a fact that with every passing day the government was being cornered from all sides,`we will not leave the field just like that` Asked about the PPP’s course of action after the Supreme Court ruling on implementation of the NRO, the PPP official said the party would fall back on the supremacy of parliament.
If agreed upon among all coalition partners, the government might go for moving a resolution in parliament in its support, the PPP leader said.

NA session on Thursday to discuss crisis


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ISLAMABAD, Jan 10: Coalition partners went into an emergency meeting on Tuesday night to review the situation arising out of the Supreme Court’s ruling in the NRO implementation case and decided to convene a session of the National Assembly on Thursday evening to chalk out a future course of action.
The meeting was held immediately after arrival of President Asif Ali Zardari from Karachi. The president chaired the meeting which was also attended by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.
“Before the National Assembly session a joint meeting of parliamentary parties will be held in the Parliament House to work out a strategy to be adopted during the assembly session,” president’s spokesman Farhatullah Babar said.
The president and the prime minister also chaired a meeting of the PPP core committee to discuss various challenges faced by the government, including early general elections, ‘memogate’ scandal and the court verdict on the NRO implementation case.
“The heads of allied parliamentary parties suggested that a session of the National Assembly be urgently called to discuss political issues,” Mr Babar said, adding that it would be held at 4pm on Thursday.
The apex court gave six options to the government to implement its verdict on the NRO. Some TV channels quoted President Zardari as telling the coalition partners that he had been the president only because of their support and that he could not stay in the office without it.
The president’s arrival in Islamabad trashed rumours that he was leaving for Dubai. He first held a meeting with Prime Minister Gilani in the Presidency. The president and the prime minister later met leaders of coalition parties and discussed with them measures to overcome the prevailing crises.
The coalition partners’ meeting was attended by Pakistan Muslim League-Q president Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, Awami National Party chief Asfandyar Wali Khan, Muttahida Qaumi Movement leader Farooq Sattar, Afrasiab Khattak, MirIsrarullah Zehri, Babar Khan Ghauri, Munir Khan Orakzai, Khursheed Shah, Babar Awan, Raja Pervez Ashraf and Farhatullah Babar.
Farhatullah Babar said: “The meeting discussed the current political situation with particular reference to the latest developments.”
Meanwhile, Chaudhry Shujaat suggested after a meeting with PPP leader Raja Pervez Ashraf that all persons concerned should sit together and find a way to resolve the memo issue which, according to him, had really got on people’s nerves.

Confrontation delayed


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ISLAMABAD: The short order that came on Tuesday afternoon was expected to cause fireworks but in reality it simply delayed a confrontation till next week. The curtain that was predicted to fall on the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) government did not move.
The Supreme Court was the focus of attention all morning as people waited with bated breath for the judgment of a five-judge bench on the NRO implementation case.
Lawyers, government officials and journalists crowded the building on Constitution Avenue though it was not Courtroom One (where the chief justice usually presides in) they all made a beeline for. Instead they all headed for the bench presided over by Justice Asif Saeed Khosa.
But the order, when it came, simply passed the buck to a larger bench it suggested be set up to hear the case next week.
However, this did not stop observers and journalists from going into a tizzy and predicting yet another conflagration between the government and the judiciary.
Unprecedented in its tone and form, the order provided no judgment; instead it laid out six options in front of the court of which one could possibly be a part of the final judgment.
It referred the matter back to Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, suggesting that a larger bench hear the matter on January 16.
Apart from that, it is noteworthy that the language of the order is hard hitting and it takes to task the prime minister in particular. `In such a case of a brazen and blatant failure or refusal of the federal government to obey the buck stops at the office of the chief executive of the federation i.e. the prime minister, Justice Asif Saeed Khosa said while reading out the judgment.
Justice Khosa asked Attorney General Maulvi Anwarul Haq to get instructions from the government before arguing why the court should not exercise any of the six options.
Disqualification on the basis of Article 62: In the first option, the order said, the apparent persistent, obstinate and contumacious resistance or refusal of the chief executive to obey and carry out the court`s directions reflected, on the face of it, that he (prime minister) may not be an `honest` person as he was not honest to the oath of his office.
It then went on to warn that the court had the option of handing down a declaration in terms of Article 62(1 f) of the Constitution that could affect prime minister`s qualification to be a member of parliament.
It then, in a less cursory manner, pointed out that the behaviour of the PPP co chairperson (President Asif Ali Zardari) and the law minister could also fall in the same category.
It criticised the ruling officials for making it clear that their loyalty to their party outweighed their loyalty to the state and their `inviolable obligation` to obey the Constitution.
Disqualification on the basis of committing contempt of court: Option two outlined the possibility of initiating contempt proceedings against the prime minister, the law minister and the secretary law for persistently resisting implementing the directions in the NRO judgment.
Once again the order pointed out that this could once again lead to disqualification from being elected or chosen as member of parliament.
Formation of a commission: The third option suggested the appointment of a commission under Article 187 of the Constitution and Rules 1 and 2 of Order 32 of the Supreme Court Rules 1980 to execute relevant parts of the NRO judgment.
Opportunity to hear affected people: The fourth was not an alternative ruling, but instead it said that the opportunity could be provided to any affected person to be heard before exercise of any of these options. As this option referred to the president`s immunity, it could be interpreted as an opportunity for the court to discuss the legal aspects of the immunity enjoyed by the president.
Removal of NAB chairman: In option five, the order trained its guns on the NAB chairman who was censured for his alleged failure to attend to the appointment of Adnan Khawaja as Managing Director of the Oil and Gas Development Company Ltd (OGDCL) in disregard of merit and the promotion of Ahmed Riaz Sheikh as Additional Director of the Federal Investigation Authority at a time when both of them were convicted.
It also castigated him for not initiating any action against former attorney general MalikMohammad Qayyum.
The order pointed out that the chairman`s inaction, on the face of it, amounted to misconduct that could lead to him being removed.
Let the people decide:The last option focused on the court exercising judicial restraint and leaving the matter to the better judgment of the people of the country or their representatives in parliament. In this option the court conceded that the constitutional balance was delicately poised and insistence on the implementation of the judicial verdict and thereby running the risk of bringing down the constitutional structure the court could exercise restraint, the verdict said.
The ruling drew a mixed reaction from legal experts as the country was forced to another bout of endless debates on a possible con-frontation between the government and the judiciary in which the supporters of both institutions thundered against the other. However, all it revealed was the political polarisation present instead of a nuanced debate on the legal positions of either.
Barrister Zafarullah of the PML-N said the court had shown judicial restraint.
`The court has provided a last opportunity to the government to act because defiance on part of it against the Supreme Court order would lead to chaos in the country, he said. However, Roedad Khan, one of the petitioners against the controversial NRO, openly expressed disappointment over the order and questioned why the court was not punishing the delinquents. He regretted that the court had shifted the entire responsibility to the larger bench, despite the fact that it was being maligned and it was being held in contempt by the government.
However, the PPP stuck to a defiant note with the statement of former law minister Dr Babar Awan: `Who is popular and who is not is a question that rests with the people of Pakistan.` He pointed out that President Asif Ali Zardari and former prime ministers Benazir Bhutto and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had been elected by the people of Pakistan.