Corruption pushed Pakistan to brink of collapse, says CJP
Says people should work to strengthen the system, not destroy it
LAHORE:
Mismanagement and corruption have pushed the country onto the verge of collapse, said Chief Justice of Pakistan Anwar Zaheer Jamali as he emphasised there was no right without a corresponding responsibility.
“We as individuals do not fulfil our responsibilities,” Justice Jamali said while addressing a dinner jointly hosted in his honour by the Pakistan Bar Council and the Lahore High Court Bar Association at the Lahore High Court on Wednesday evening.
Self-accountability needed in legal fraternity, says CJP
The chief justice lamented how common citizens fail to follow even basic civic rules such as stopping at traffic signals, paying their bills and taxes. He added that the people should not be afraid of accountability, instead they should try their best to maintain the supremacy of law.
He added that it was sad we could not build a Pakistan in accordance with the vision of Quaid-e-Azam and Allama Iqbal. Justice Jamali further said that today poverty, illiteracy, high population growth and lawlessness were among the most pressing issues facing the country.
The CJP warned that there would be no heaven-sent saviour that would rid them of their ills and that their best hope remains in tackling issues together.
Vote fraud charges: CJP to head three-judge judicial commission
In this regard, Justice Jamali said that the Constitution not only binds individuals to safeguard rights but to also discharge their duties to build us as a nation.
He added that they should work to strengthen the system, not destroy it.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 3rd, 2015.
Mismanagement and corruption have pushed the country onto the verge of collapse, said Chief Justice of Pakistan Anwar Zaheer Jamali as he emphasised there was no right without a corresponding responsibility.
“We as individuals do not fulfil our responsibilities,” Justice Jamali said while addressing a dinner jointly hosted in his honour by the Pakistan Bar Council and the Lahore High Court Bar Association at the Lahore High Court on Wednesday evening.
Self-accountability needed in legal fraternity, says CJP
The chief justice lamented how common citizens fail to follow even basic civic rules such as stopping at traffic signals, paying their bills and taxes. He added that the people should not be afraid of accountability, instead they should try their best to maintain the supremacy of law.
He added that it was sad we could not build a Pakistan in accordance with the vision of Quaid-e-Azam and Allama Iqbal. Justice Jamali further said that today poverty, illiteracy, high population growth and lawlessness were among the most pressing issues facing the country.
The CJP warned that there would be no heaven-sent saviour that would rid them of their ills and that their best hope remains in tackling issues together.
Vote fraud charges: CJP to head three-judge judicial commission
In this regard, Justice Jamali said that the Constitution not only binds individuals to safeguard rights but to also discharge their duties to build us as a nation.
He added that they should work to strengthen the system, not destroy it.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 3rd, 2015.