ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court on Friday ordered the government to ensure the conduct of general elections in Pakistan on February 8, a day after President Arif Alvi and Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) Sikandar Sultan Raja unanimously agreed on the said date.
The verdict came after a lawyer for the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) informed the Supreme Court on Thursday that polls in the country would be held on February 11.
But Chief Justice Qazi Faez Isa instructed the ECP to appear before the court on Friday, after consulting on the date with President Dr. Arif Alvi, as is mandated by the constitution. ECP officials then met with the president and announced that elections would be held on Feb 8.
On Friday, a three-member bench, led by Chief Justice Isa, resumed hearing multiple petitions seeking a final date for elections and asked all stake-holders if they had any objection to the election date. Everyone replied in the negative.
“After all the requirements are fulfilled, the Election Commission should announce the election schedule,” the chief justice said. “Elections will definitely be held on February 8, God willing.”
Elections in the politically and economically troubled South Asian nation had to be held in November but were delayed due to fresh demarcation of constituencies under a new census. In September, the ECP said it needed until at least January to hold polls.
Recently, amendments to Sections 57 and 58 of the Election Act 2017 allowed the ECP to bypass the president and unilaterally announce election dates. However, independent legal analysts believed the power of the president to set a date for elections under Article 48(5) was an independent power under the Constitution and not subservient to any other provision of the Constitution.
During Friday’s hearing, held in two phases, the chief justice asked the Attorney-General of Pakistan Mansoor Usman Awan to get President Alvi’s signature on the minutes of the meeting held with the chief election commissioner as the minutes he had filed earlier did not bear the signature.
Awan, following an adjournment of the hearing, submitted the signed meeting minutes in the court.
In its verdict, the top court mentioned that a notification of the general election date had also been issued by the ECP and that no party had any objection to holding elections on Feb 8.
Pakistan is currently being run by a caretaker government under interim Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar that is meant to oversee a general election.
Despite the delay, the announcement of polls is likely to ease political uncertainty as the country struggles to stay on a narrow stabilization path under a $3 billion bailout plan by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).