Petitions face delays amid tribunal inactivity

FAFEN reports only 7 per cent of election petitions disposed of as legal deadlines approach


Our Correspondent August 20, 2024

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ISLAMABAD:

Out of the 377 petitions filed with 23 election tribunals, only 25—four concerning National Assembly seats and 21 related to provincial assemblies—have been resolved as of August 17, 2024, the Free and Fair Election Network (FAFEN) has said in its report.

This accounts for just 7 per cent of the total petitions.

Systematic tracking by FAFEN has revealed a sluggish pace in resolving election petitions.

The situation is particularly concerning in Punjab, where six of the notified tribunals remain inactive. The delay threatens to push multiple petitions beyond the 180-day legal deadline set by the Elections Act, 2017, which mandates that petitions must be resolved within this period from the filing date.

"Legally, the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) is bound to publish in the official gazette the names of the returned candidates (candidates with the highest number of votes) and all other contesting candidates along with the number of votes obtained by them (Section 98 of the Elections Act, 2017)," the report noted.

Any losing candidate can file a petition within 45 days of the gazette notification of the returned candidate (Section 142) and each petition shall be decided within 180 days of its filing (Section 148).

Through amendments to the Elections Act, 2017 enacted in August 2023, parliament had extended the time limit for the disposal of election petitions from 120 days to 180 days from the date of their filing.

The amendments also introduced measures to expedite the disposal of petitions by capping the maximum duration of stay orders issued by higher courts in such cases to six months.

However, the report pointed out, the ongoing operations of the tribunals, particularly in Punjab, do not reflect the spirit of the law due to multiple factors, including prolonged legal interpretational differences between the ECP and the Lahore High Court (LHC) regarding the notification of six tribunals in the province, which has rendered them dysfunctional.

The eight tribunals notified in Punjab thus far have a cumulative caseload of 157 election petitions.

FAFEN has determined that at least 377 petitions have been filed with the 23 election tribunals across the four provinces and the Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT).

Of these, FAFEN has identified the petitioners for 333 petitions through copies of the petitions and cause lists available on the high courts' websites. To date, the copies of only 226 petitions have been obtained.

Additionally, 44 petitions could not be tracked through the cause lists. The ECP has also not yet disclosed the exact number and ancillary details of the petitions filed before the tribunals.

FAFEN also observed the process of resolving result disputes following GE-2013, when the ECP established 14 tribunals to decide on 385 petitions, and after GE-2018, when the ECP established 20 tribunals to decide on 300 petitions.

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