ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) opposition party of former Prime Minister Imran Khan has announced it will hold rallies in Islamabad on May 14 in solidarity with the judiciary, amid an ongoing tussle between the federal government and senior judges.
The coalition government led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, and the country’s higher judiciary, have been at loggerheads ever since the Supreme Court took up cases of delays in announcing elections in the Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, whose legislative assemblies were dissolved by Khan and his allies in January to force the government to announce early national elections.
The court has ruled that the polls should be held in both the provinces within 90 days of the dissolution of their assemblies, as per the constitution, while the Sharif government insists all elections in the country should be held on the same date in October, when general elections are scheduled. In defiance of court orders, the government has refused to release funds worth Rs21 billion and arrange security in time for Punjab elections on May 14, the date given by the Supreme Court.
Against this background, the PTI has formally sought permission to hold public gatherings at 101 spots in the capital from the Islamabad district administrator.
“The Constitution provides the citizens with the rights, including freedom of movement, assembly and speech,” PTI Islamabad region President Ali Nawaz Awan said this week in a letter to the Deputy Commissioner Islamabad, saying the party planned to organize “peaceful gatherings” at 101 designated places in the capital to express solidarity with the constitution, the chief justice and the judiciary.
The call for protest also comes as Pakistan’s parliament has passed a new law to curtail the powers of the Supreme Court chief justice. The government notified the law last month despite a stay order from the court, creating new discord between the judiciary and the government amid months of political and economic turmoil.
An eight-member bench of the Supreme Court led by the chief justice is currently hearing a set of petitions against the new law, the Supreme Court (Practice and Procedure) Bill 2023, which aims to clip the powers of the chief justice to take suo motu notices in an individual capacity and hear appeals and assign cases to other judges.
Parliament first passed the bill in March but President Dr. Arif Alvi, a key ally of opposition politician Khan, refused to sign off on it and sent it back to parliament, saying it traveled “beyond the competence of parliament.”
A joint session of the parliament then passed the bill on April 10, but the top court barred the government from enforcing it. The ruling coalition rejected the court’s ruling and the bill became an act of parliament on April 21.