SSGPA1
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no. well how should i explain it
1 CJ sent a proposal which government didnt like
2 Then president was supposed to send written reply citing the reason (it didnt happen)
3 CJ should have reconsidered his recommendation and then send another summary to president (time never came)
.................. and by doin this they should reached some conclusion
gov should have done (2) and waited for (3) and then done something to show public that CJ is not being flexible
No the events unfolded like this:
1. CJP sent recommendations to make Justice Ramday an Ad-Hoc judge of the SCoP ut it was denied by the GoP and Justice Ramday retired.
2. CJP sent recommendation to elevate Justice Saqib to the SCoP which was also denied based on advice from PM Gillani (murshid pak sarkar.
3. CJP was informed and requested to review his recommendation.
4. No response from the CJP's office was issued officialy and now the GoP issued the notification of appointments.
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ISLAMABAD: In a significant development, President Asif Ali Zardari on Saturday turned down a recommendation by Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry to elevate Justice Mian Saqib Nisar, senior puisne judge of the Lahore High Court, to fill the seat which has fallen vacant after the retirement of Khalilur Rahman Ramday.
Keeping in view the lego-constitutional position, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has advised President Asif Ali Zardari to request Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry to reconsider his recommendation of Dec 19, 2009, for making recommendation afresh for elevation of the senior-most judge of the LHC to the Supreme Court, an official announcement issued here by the law ministry said.
It said LHC Chief Justice Khawaja Mohammad Sharif was the most senior judge and, therefore, it was his right to be elevated to the Supreme Court.
The announcement was seen by some analysts as a foretaste of a new wave of confrontation between the executive pitted against the judiciary.
But others stressed the need for laying down an unambiguous principle in the wake of three judgments regarding elevation of judges to the Supreme Court.
After considering the chief justices recommendation, the announcement said, the prime minister had advised the president that in view of the legal position and guidelines laid down in the Al Jihad Trust case (PLD 1996 SC 324), primacy should always be given to seniority in elevation of a high court judge to the Supreme Court unless found to be unsuitable by the CJP for such elevation.
Thus the president, while accepting the advice of the prime minister, has also requested the chief justice to reconsider his earlier recommendation so that senior-most judge in the LHC (Justice Khawaja Sharif) is appointed as judge of the Supreme Court. The chief justice has been informed accordingly, it said.
This is the second such request turned down by the government. Earlier, the government had refused to appoint Justice Khalilur Rehman Ramday as ad hoc judge after his retirement on Jan 12, citing the same reason of the command issued by the apex court in the Al-Jihad trust case.
According to Justice (retd) Tariq Mehmood, a prominent constitutional expert, if the name of Justice Saqib Nisar is sent by the chief justice for the second time in his fresh recommendation despite the reasons given by the president, the matter will then come before a bench of the Supreme Court for an authoritative decision.
He, however, was of the view that if rules of principle were to be followed in letter and spirit, seniority principle should be given primacy.
Quoting the Al-Jihad trust case, Mr Mehmood said every puisne judge had a legitimate expectancy to become the chief justice of a high court after the elevation of its chief justice.
Although former chief justice Sajjad Ali Shah was leading the bench that laid down the seniority principle in the Al-Jihad trust case in 1996, his own appointment was held illegal by a bench, headed by former chief justice Saiduzzaman Siddiqui, in the 1998 Malik Asad Ali case.
Later in the 2002 Supreme Court Bar Associations case, another bench, headed by former chief justice Irshad Hasan Khan, had held that elevation in the Supreme Court was not a promotion, but a fresh appointment.
The judgment came against the backdrop of a controversy erupted when now retired judges -- Justices Khalilur Rehman Ramday, Mohammad Nawaz Abbasi and Faqir Mohammad Khokhar -- were elevated to the apex court, passing Justice Falak Sher who was chief justice of the LHC.
Justice Khokhar was then at 13th in the seniority list and was acting as law secretary.
After his appointment in the Supreme Court subsequently, Justice Falak Sher moved a reference to the government claiming that he was the senior-most judge then and, therefore, should be appointed as chief justice of the Supreme Court in place of Justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry. The reference is still pending.
MEETING
Law Minister Babar Awan has called a meeting in his ministry next week to hammer out the thorny issue of implementing the Supreme Court judgment on the controversial National Reconciliation Ordinance.
Attorney General Anwar Mansoor, Law Secretary Mirza Aqil and senior law advisers will attend the meeting called in line with the directives issued by the prime minister to implement the verdict.
DAWN.COM | Front Page | No presidential assent to CJ?s proposal