PHC allows Turkish teachers to file fresh petition
PESHAWAR: The Peshawar High Court (PHC) on Monday allowed Turkish teachers and staff at Pak-Turk International Schools and Colleges to withdraw the writ petition and file a fresh one with certain documents as they are seeking asylum in other countries through United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to avoid prosecution in Turkey.
The petitioners' lawyer Qazi Muhammad Anwar informed a division bench comprising Justice Syed Afsar Shah and Justice Younas Thaheem that he is going to withdraw the petition to file another one with important documents.
The court accepted the plea after the deputy attorney general did not raise any objection to withdrawal of the case to file a fresh one. Attorney General of Pakistan Ashtar Ausaf Ali appeared before the court in the case.
Deputy Attorney General Musarratullah told The News with the withdrawal of the petition, the high court's stay order was automatically recalled and now the government may deport the Turkish nationals immediately as they were wanted by the Turkish government.
However, the petitioners, including Shah Muhammad told The News that the federal government cannot forcibly deport the Turkish citizens as they have got the UNHCR Asylum Certificates and their cases were under process.
"We are going to file another petition within three days," he claimed. "Due to serious threats to life of Turkish citizens, the United Nations (UN) issued asylum certificates to them and is trying to settle them in another country," he told The News. He said that Pakistan, being a signatory member nation of the UN, cannot deport the Turkish citizens.
At the previous hearing, the Interior Ministry had submitted reply to the PHC. It had said it was the prerogative of the federal government to extend or cancel visas of the foreign nationals, requesting the court to dismiss the writ petitions.
"Cancelling or extending visas of the Turkish staff is part of the country's foreign policy and now the government has issued them exit permits," the ministry added in the reply. There are 1,500 staff members, including 110 Turkish nationals, at these institutions.
-
Scarlett Johansson Shares Wild First Concert Story -
Inside King Charles, Queen Camilla's First US State Visit -
Tiger Woods' Situation Deemed 'too Far Down The Line' After DUI Crash -
List Of Blake Lively’s Dismissed And Allowed Claims Against Justin Baldoni -
Dolly Parton's Rare Approach To Battle Grief Following Tragic Loss Of Late Husband Laid Bare -
How Queen Elizabeth's Silence Impacted Diana And Meghan -
Olivia Munn Raves About Her 'Your Friends & Neighbors' Costar James Marsden -
Khloe Kardashian Gets Candid About Weight Loss Struggles -
Jon Hamm Weighs In On ‘dark’ Modern Dating Culture: 'I Was Never Really Good At Dating Anyway' -
Miley Cyrus Receives Heartfelt Praise From 'Love On The Spectrum's Logan Pereira -
DeepSeek V4 Model Bets On Huawei Chips As Demand Surges -
Ty Herndon Talks 'building A Future' With Partner Amid Memoir Release -
'General Hospital' Star Sofia Mattsson Spills The Truth About 'Days Of Our Lives' Role -
Ben Stiller Reveals Hidden Struggles Of Bro Bowlers -
Brian Cox Launches Savage Attack On Johnny Depp -
Pooh Shiesty, His Father Arrested Over Gucci Mane Kidnapping