The new Contempt of Court law is going to be struck down as being unconstitutional. I think one can say this with a degree of certainty that the only significant question is “when” and not “if”. I can understand and might even go so far as to empathise with the desire of the Federal Government to amend the Contempt of Court law, yet the manner in which it is done is neither desirable nor sustainable. We live in a society where far too much deference is showed to far too many people and judges being the primary beneficiary. One of the most amusing yet egregious examples of a recent contempt of court is when an Honourable Judge sentenced a senior government official for looking at him inappropriately or aggressively. The use of temperate language to criticise the judiciary (or anyone for that matter) is a welcome move. However, the grant of extended immunity to everyone covered under Article 248(1) of the Constitution is not a solution and without a constitutional amendment is very likely to be held as being unconstitutional, and perhaps rightly so.
The ostensible self-righteous and muscular posturing and infringement into Parliament’s domain by the Court has to be resisted, but here is exactly how not to fight it. My primary objection is to the manner in which the law was passed in a matter of minutes without meaningful debate. To many neutral observers it does seem that the Supreme Court has crossed multiple red lines multiple times in the past four years and a free and frank debate inside and outside of the Parliament would have strengthened the moral case of the Federal Government. The problem of viewing this contest as being a formal legal one is that one of the parties to the conflict, namely the judiciary, also has the power to not only interpret the rules but determine the winner. To restate the problem, making laws to make the judiciary less powerful or active in the absence of major constitutional overhaul overlooks the fact that the judiciary will eventually interpret and apply those laws. The debate on precisely what constitutes ‘contempt of court’ and equally ‘contempt of parliament’ would have had value in itself and may even have generated consensus. Our democracy is end-driven, losing sight of the fact that public debate and the process is a virtue in itself.
For the time being, we rely on My Lords to be temperate even if they don’t like this government (which they clearly don’t) to show composure. I say this especially after the chief justice recently made what may come across as being purely political tough-minded speeches asserting his right to strike down laws and even talking of martyrdom. Temperate language and restrain cannot and should not be a one-way street.
Coming back to the trope of public debate, recently a private member bill was drafted by Senator Farahtullah Babar to be tabled in the Senate. The primary objective of the bill was to bring the ISI under direct civilian control and make it directly accountable to the Prime Minister and the Parliament. It seems that the bill is not going to be tabled now and if that is true, it most certainly is a shame. The bill should be tabled, debated and voted upon, if only to determine where everyone stands on the issue. The question of why the ISI chief cannot or should not be a civilian does not have an answer as obvious as some people believe. Glibly resorting to the fact that the acronym ISI stands for Inter-Services Intelligence and it has to be a service man (which brings to mind the even more unfathomable question of whether it ever could be a woman, I know we are light years away from that) is hardly a serious answer, when one considers that the name has hardly restrained the service men from manipulating elections and creating political parties. In any event, if that is your best argument then by all means change the name of the agency.
I am not naïve to the extent of believing that this bill would become a law and bring the spooks under the direct control of the democratic government, yet it was/is an ideal opportunity to have that debate. One would be curious to know how television anchors proclaiming apocalypse every evening would react, how Difa-e-Pakistan Council would respond, would the Supreme Court declare it unconstitutional, etc. Worst case scenario is that such an attempt will infuriate the armed forces so much that they will attempt a military take over. Well, firstly that is a natural hazard of employment for an elected government in Pakistan. Secondly, and more significantly, that will be a considerably more honourable and valiant departure than for some manufactured excuse over the holdup created over the likes of the Contempt of Court Bill.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 15th, 2012.
COMMENTS (16)
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@Anonymous: Thanks for clarifying. If you could also elaborate for my benefit why parliamentarians ,senators would love to be sacrificed and not write the letter? And a related rhetorical question :Sacrifice is not in the spirit of democracy ;it's something ,Despots/Monarchs exact and demand from their obedient followres.Why is PPP woven around a principle which is essentially antidemocratic??
@Abid P Khan: Abid Saheb he obeyed and vacated the highest pwerful and lucrative job after army and judiciary? What else u want. You may not agree with sentiment but all PPP parliamentarian, senators and President will love to be disqualified but will not write the letter. SC has stayed cases for many years for sharifs and ISI so this can wait for 13 months to be and Next elected PM can write it
I have couple of points to make.
1- The contempt of court Law: As you rightly said, it will and should be struck down as it is a self-serving law not based on some ideological principle of equality and fairness, but to give dictatorial powers to the 'ruling democratic dignitaries'. This law enables the President, PM. Governors, Chief Ministers and Federal and Provincial Ministers to ignore any court order of not their liking at will with impunity, the power dictators yearn for. It has strong basis for the collapse of the justice system and exponential rise in corruption as the persons in governing positions are beyond the reach of law.
2- Legislation regarding ISI: The inept and corrupt civil government do not have moral authority and public support to pass and implement such legislation that take the most powerful institution (liked by majority) into their submission. First they have to earn the respect and support of the public by showing performance and limiting corruption; only then this would be possible. See the example of Turkey.
3- Limiting Suo Moto powers: As suggested by one commenter, Suo Moto powers of the courts should be limited by law. Again, if the the government is doing its duties diligently, then there would be no need to for the courts to take the suo moto notices. However, it would be unfortunate for the hapless victims if their last resort is taken out by law.
4- Mirza has intensely unique views about issues regarding PPP government and judiciary. No matter what, he is bound to criticize the apex court judges and their decisions while totally ignoring facts. He would prefer to call the apex court judges 'PCO judges' (wouldn't say a word about PCO Dogar courts) regardless of the fact that many out 17 judges never took PCO oath and quite a number of them were appointed by the PPP's current government.
"@Plarkin Defang the courts at your own peril." . Whatever the semblance of legal authority means, I can not act like Multaan ka Baadshah, by refusing to obey the legal system. I just can't drive on the left in the US claiming that the US traffic rules are not of my liking. Beside, there are some policemen in Baltimore on the take, why should I follow any right-hand-drive rules.
@Plarkin
Defang the courts at your own peril.
The kind of things the 'fanged' courts have done- Meta/Supra Constitutional Arguments, Doctrines of Necessity, Hanging of a deposed PM,Trying another for Hijacking , Unseating yet another, etc.etc.etc.
I can't think of any worse scenarios even if it is 'defanged'.
Mirza n Azra Shahnaz views do have merital ground BUT it's unfair to compare apples with oranges. US SC, Senate or Congress a. At least has over 200yrs of history; b. Its SC Judges in most case's work independently; c. It's Senators/Congressman n Women do come with educated background, armed services experience, business, political, law etc - whereas, Pakistan......well we leave this on readers to figure out?
@azra shahnaz: I agree with you 100%. Great Op Ed once again and an eye opener. In the recent past the US SC has given most historic decisions by 5:4 or 6:3. An example is the recent Obama healthcare law that has been approved by 5:4 and so was Bush's election against Gore. However, in Pakistan an army of 17 judges bench sits and gives a unaimous verditct! In fact all recent cases have been decided against the govt are unanimous. What debate and what independence are we talking about in Pakistan whether in Parliament or SC?
The real problem will be that it will be considered male fide.
Are you competing with Mirza for the President's brown-nosing trophy?
This Tom & Jerry Show has gone on for too long. Getting a bit boring.
Very logical article. What concerns me is how can our elected representatives be so congruent in their views that they didn't debate the pros and cons of the bill for even few hours before passing the bill. While on the other hand, many of them are so ego-centric that they would hardly sit together with others of their ilk on the same dinner table. That certainly shows that the law was passed in self-interest, for their own protection against the law of the country without any foresight on its repercussions.
Enjoyed the read. Quite unlike you to tread carefully on these subjects. In the first case the present political set up, if humiliated or punished by any quarter capable of doing so, deserves to be so punished due to their own willful wrong doings. On the second issue we simply have a long way to go before things change and Mamogate is still fresh.
Contempt of court is the only measure that the courts have to enforce orders. Removing this would allow litigants to ignore the courts with (pun intended) contempt. Judges must not be intimidated by threats whether they be physical or verbal. In the United States, misbehavior in a court will earn a rebuke from the judge, if the behavior persists the bailiffs drag you off to jail, where you can cool your heels for as long as the judge desires.
There have been instance where journalists have been jailed for contempt for months because they refused to divulge a source when a judge ordered it. Defang the courts at your own peril. The legal system in Pakistan does need to be improved: remove the power of suo moto from the court. Cases should come up to the court via an appeal system, i.e., litigate in a lower court, appeal to the next higher court, and eventually to the apex court. The court should not be allowed to start cases on its own volition.
This Bill is a Machiavillian power tactic to cling on to power for as long as is possible and has got nothing to do with furtherance of democracy or it's principles vis-a-vis harmony and balance amongst various state organs;to think of it as anything else would be naive at best.