Pervez Musharraf verdict: Govt has reservation over whole verdict, not only para 66, says Azam Swati
'This is not judicial activism but judicial adventurism,' Swati told Geo Parliament,
ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Parliamentary Affairs Senator Azam Swati on Sunday termed the special court’s verdict against former president General (retd) Pervez Musharraf as ‘judicial adventurism’.
“This is not judicial activism but judicial adventurism,” Swati told Geo Parliament, while talking about the death penalty given to the former military ruler over his November 2007 steps of imposing emergency and suspending the Constitution.
A three-judge special tribunal, established under the orders of Supreme Court, on Thursday found Musharraf of committing crime under Article 6.
The senator questioned if the judges who wrote the verdict were writing a new history of the Constitution and the law. He added that the government had 'reservations over the whole verdict' and not just the controversial paragraph 66.
“The selection of words in the verdict point to the judge’s ego and bias,” said the minister.
Paragraph 66 of the verdict, authored by Justice Waqar Ahmed Seth, had "directed the law enforcement agencies to arrest Musharraf and if he was found dead, drag his body to the D-Chowk in Islamabad and hang it for three days". The observation drew ire from the government, political and legal analysts and the military.
The minister said that there were other people as well who were involved in decision making with Musharraf at that time. Swati added that 'action against the co-conspirators' will be included in the cabinet’s agenda.
When asked about the government’s options on the extension of the army chief’s tenure, the minister said the government had two to three options on the legislation.
The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf senator stated that the first option the government had was to 'amend the Army Act'.
“The second option is to bring a public bill and the third option is to table an explanatory bill,” said the senator. He added that under the third option the government will clarify on the army’s chief’s extension.
The minster said that the parliament’s clarity on a matter needs to be accepted by the apex court or any court. "The Supreme Court cannot advise or order the Parliament", he stated.
The top court last month had taken up a petition challenging the extension of the Chief of Army Staff General Qamar Javed Bajwa.
In it’s verdict, the apex court had allowed the federal government to grant a six-month extension to the army chief and directed it to bring necessary legislation within six months' time. -- Agencies
-
Zoe Saldana Overtakes Scarlett Johansson To Become Highest Grossing Actor Of All Time -
Former Congressional Employee Sold Stolen Government Phones For $150k -
Joe Keery Credits Friends For Rare Experience -
Jackson White Teases Darker Turn For Stephen In 'Tell Me Lies' Season 3 -
Chris Hemsworth Leans On Matt Damon Amid His Shaky Marriage To Elsa Pataky? -
Friends Of Prince William 'aghast' As King Charles Offers Olive Branch To Harry, Meghan Markle -
What Cancer Does Colleen Hoover Have? -
Zayn Malik Drops Special Surprise For Fans On His 33rd Birthday -
Nicola Peltz Sends Harsh Message To Beckhams With Brooklyn Comments -
Apple Martin 'lashes' Out At Mom Gwyneth Paltrow For Pushing Her 'too Hard' -
Meghan Markle Going To 'humiliate' Prince Harry With UK Trip -
Pastor Jailed After Secretly Filming Woman In Store -
Julio Iglesias Faces Serious Abuse Accusation -
Buckingham Palace’s ‘liability’ Prince Harry Comes Under Fire: ‘Can Really Harm King Charles’ -
Emily Bader Reveals Inspiration Behind Choosing Latest Project -
Anthropic Rolls Out Claude Cowork For Non-coders