Monday, January 23, 2012

Decade-old petition finally finds its way to the court


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ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court on Monday finally set a date for the hearing of a decade-old petition filed by Asghar Khan, reported FTNews.
The court set February 29 as the date for the hearing of Asghar Khan’s petition filed in the apex court a decade earlier.
Asghar, who was heading the little-known Pakistan Tehrik-e-Istaqlal, recently joined the more prominent PTI at a joint news conference with Imran Khan.
Both Khans had called upon Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry to immediately take up the filed by Asghar to punish those politicians and political groups who have been receiving funds from the Inter Services Intelligence agency (ISI).
Figures from Pakistan Muslim League – Nawaz are among those groups who have allegedly received money from the ISI in the past to run their election campaigns. Nawaz Sharif’s party is one of Imran’s major rivals, and both parties have publicly critised each other of late.
“I urge the Chief Justice of Pakistan that the Asghar Khan petition is immediately reopened,” Imran had said. “Those political parties who have been getting money from the agencies don’t have any right to rule the country. Neither can they protect the public interest.”
Asghar was one of the top leaders at the centre of a mass movement that culminated in what the PPP terms the judicial murder of its first leader Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in 1979.
He had called for hanging Bhutto publicly and allegedly wrote a letter to the country’s powerful military to further this case. The retired air force officer has not held a significant position in politics since then.

‘Electoral rolls cannot be finalised before May’


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ISLAMABAD: New electoral rolls for the 2013 elections cannot be finalised before May this year, said Chief Election Commissioner Justice (retd) Hamid Ali Mirza on Monday.
During a meeting of the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) and political parties, Mirza explained why the commission was unable to comply with Supreme Court’s order to finalise the electoral rolls by February 23.
Mirza said that the responsibilities of every institution are chalked out clearly in the Constitution, and unnecessary interference of institutions results in anarchy. He added that the task of finalising new electoral rolls should remain with the ECP without interference from any institution.
He also said that if the electoral rolls were not finalised as per the law then it will be held against the Constitution.
In December last year, the Supreme Court ordered the commission to wrap up the process of finalising the electoral rolls and gave a final deadline of February 23. The order was handed out during the hearing of a petition filed by Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Chairman Imran Khan, who had asked the court to remove fake votes from the electoral rolls.
The ECP in a statement had also admitted that some 37 million votes were bogus and could not be verified.

Secret election schedule talks between PPP, PML-N stall


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ISLAMABAD: Secret talks between the government and the main opposition party to finalise the schedule for fresh parliamentary elections later this year have stalled over whether the key announcement should be made before or after the budget, which is due in June.
Interlocutors from the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) are insisting that the announcement must be made after the incumbent government presents what they said would be an incentive-laden budget, with polls to be held in October.
Countering that position, negotiators representing the opposition Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) are pushing the embattled administration to call snap elections in March immediately after polls for half of the Senate seats.
“We are stuck on this point. Both groups are adamant on their demand and it looks like the agreement may take more time than we initially anticipated,” said a top PPP leader.
Both sides, however, were confident that they could overcome the differences on the most important point to pave the way for a smooth run-up to the elections, which are being seen as a test case for the country’s politicians to save the democratic system from what they fear are threats from a ‘hidden force’.
Top leaders from the two largest parties entered late last year into what they called ‘conciliatory’ negotiations after signs appeared that the powerful military might be supporting groups hostile to both of them.
Their main fear was what appeared to be an unprecedentedly rapid rise of Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) of cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan as a ‘third force’ on the country’s political horizon which was dominated by the PPP and PML-N in the 1990s.
It was reported earlier in the month that both sides are holding behind-the-scene negotiations through interlocutors appointed by President Asif Ali Zardari and PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif and they had agreed on four out of six point of what they called a smooth democratic transition to elections.
None of the parties, however, publicly admit to the talks, which are reportedly taking place in Islamabad and Lahore and regularly monitored not only by Zardari and Sharif but also by Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani.
According to media reports, Gilani will soon be holding direct interaction with Nawaz Sharif to seal the deal once a roadmap is prepared by negotiators. A spokesperson for the premier, however, denied this.
“I’m not aware of any such thing planned,” said Akram Shaheedi, an information department official who deals with media on behalf of Gilani.
But the premier himself dropped a strong hint on what experts believed was going to be a pro-people budget, containing many concessions for the ‘downtrodden masses’ who have suffered at the hands of multiple crises since the PPP took over back in 2008.
“We will overcome the energy shortage in six months … the people will start having the benefits our economic policies soon,” the premier told the media in Lahore last week, giving an idea of how the PPP was planning to take advantage of the incumbency for elections.
On the other hand, a spokesperson for the PML-N told FTNews it would be a totally ‘political budget’ if the PPP government presents it with the parliamentary polls in the mind.
“This,” said Senator Mushahidullah Khan, the information secretary of the PML-N, “will be a situation we will never like.”
He, however, said his party believed the Zardari-Gilani administration won’t survive the current standoff with the judiciary and the military in the form of contempt case against the premier and Memogate scandal.