ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court will resumed hearing a petition today, Tuesday, on a delay in holding of elections in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, an issue that has pitted ex-Prime Minister Imran Khan against the election regulator and the federal government and deepened political crisis at a time of intense economic turmoil.
Khan and his allies dissolved the legislative assemblies in the two provinces in January, hoping the move would force the federal government to call snap national polls. Under Pakistani law, fresh polls for the two provincial assemblies should be held within 90 days, and Khan’s PTI is gambling on the national government being unable to afford to hold the provincial elections separately from a national election, which is otherwise due by October.
Earlier this month, the Supreme Court ordered that polls must be held within 90 days, after which dates were announced for elections in both provinces. However, last week, the Election Commission (ECP) announced postponing provincial polls in Punjab from April 30 to October 8, citing lack of funds and the country’s precarious security situation as reasons for the decision. The governor of KP has also since proposed elections in the northwestern province also on October 8.
Khan’s PTI party has petitioned the top court on the delay and a five-member bench, headed by Chief Justice Umar Ata Bandial, started hearing the case yesterday, Monday.
“Our [PTI] standpoint is the same as the people of Pakistan,” senior PTI leader Chaudhry Fawad Chaudhry said on Tuesday outside the Supreme Court where he had come to represent his party at the hearing.
“Pakistan’s people want to see an independent and strong Supreme Court.”
On Tuesday, the ruling alliance also decided to become a party to the case. The Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) of PM Shehbaz Sharif as well as the Pakistan Peoples Party and Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) have filed pleas in the SC to become a party in the case and will present their stance when the hearing resumes.
On Monday, Pakistani media widely reported the chief justice questioning the ECP’s authority under the constitution to postpone elections.
Bandial observed that timely general elections held “honestly, justly, fairly and in accordance with law” were crucial under a democratic system of government mandated by the constitution.
“Any flaw, deficiency or failing in the holding of general elections is, prima facie, a matter of public importance that affects the fundamental rights of the voting public,” he was widely quoted by Pakistani media as saying.