On first day, CJP Afridi reconstitutes judges committee to bring Justice Akhtar back

 On first day, CJP Afridi reconstitutes judges committee to bring Justice Akhtar back
By: Geo News Posted On: October 26, 2024 View: 29

Supreme Courts Justice Munib Akhtar (left), Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Yahya Afridi and Justice Mansoor Ali Shah. — SC website
Supreme Court's Justice Munib Akhtar (left), Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Yahya Afridi and Justice Mansoor Ali Shah. — SC website 
  • CJP Yahya Afridi to head key panel. 
  • Committee also includes Justice Shah. 
  • Top judge also becomes chairman of SJC. 

Newly-appointed Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Yahya Afridi on Saturday reconstituted the SC Practice and Procedure Committee, bringing back Justice Munib Akhtar to the three-member key panel established for the purpose of fixing cases and forming benches. 

The development comes hours after Justice Afridi was sworn in as Pakistan's 30th chief justice earlier today, succeeding Justice Qazi Faez Isa as the top judge.

According to a notification, the chief justice will head the special bench formed by the judges committee under the SC (Practice and Procedure Act), 2023. He also included senior puisne judge Justice Mansoor Ali Shah and Justice Akhtar to the judges' committee. 

On September 20, President Asif Ali Zardari approved the Supreme Court (Practice and Procedure) Amendment Ordinance 2024, allowing the CJP to pick any judge of the apex court to be the third member of the body. 

Soon after the president's approval, then-CJP Isa exercised his powers under amended law and appointed Justice Amin-Ud-Din Khan to the judges' committee, replacing Justice Akhtar.

The ordinance, promulgated in September this year, empowers the chief justice to nominate a judge of his choice in the committee that constitutes the benches. As per the ordinance, the body will comprise the chief justice, the senior puisne and any judge nominated by the CJP.

Following Justice Akhtar's removal, Justice Shah wrote a letter to the secretary of the Supreme Court, expressing concerns over the ordinance. 

Justice Mansoor, in his letter, noted that no reasons were given as to why the second senior most judge, Justice Akhtar, was removed from the composition of the committee. “Furthermore, no reasons were given why the next senior most judge was ignored and instead, the fourth senior most judge was nominated as a member of the Committee.”

“Such unfortunate cherry picking and undemocratic display of one-man show are precisely what the Act tried to discourage and replace-a stance that was upheld by the Full Court Bench of this Court in Raja Amer,” he wrote.

Justice Shah had also refused to become a member of special bench, stating he was unable to participate in the bench over his concerns regarding amendments to the practice law via ordinance. 

In his October 23 letter, the senior judge also made his participation in the special bench conditional, saying that “until the full court bench determined the constitutional validity of the promulgation of the ordinance as well as of the amendments made thereby or the judges of the SC resolve to act upon these amendments in a full court meeting pending adjudication upon the constitutionality thereof, or the earlier committee comprising the HCJP and two senior most judges is restored, I will not participate in special benches formed by the new committee and will only attend sittings of the regular benches to hear the cases of ordinary litigants in the larger public interest."

Responding to Justice Shah's letter, then-CJP Isa had said legally he could not be asked about why he nominated a judge as the committee’s third member. Still, the then chief justice had provided the reasons for his action, saying he did it because he "always advocated accountability and transparency".

Moreover, the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) was also reconstituted with CJP Afridi becoming the chairman. Earlier, the newly-appointed top judge was not part of the SJC. 

The council also includes Justice Mansoor, Justice Akhtar and chief justices of the high courts. 

Read this on Geo News
This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this site you agree to our use of cookies.
Read more I agree