The Pak Banker

Connecting the dots

- Abbas Nasir

POLITICAL punditry is becoming increasing­ly hazardous as it is virtually impossible to keep track of developmen­ts, let alone the undercurre­nts and the players driving them. The best that is possible is to connect the dots and see what emerges.

A number of this week's main news items were generated by the superior courts, the foremost being the hearings on the PTI presidenti­al reference, after the government's attempted constituti­onal amendment bill, aimed at doing away with the secret ballot for the Senate elections, died on the house floor.

After its failure to even table the amendment, amidst opposition protest, in parliament earlier in the month, another route was found by the government as the Assembly was prorogued and the president issued an ordinance, bypassing Article 226 which calls for secret balloting.

But this ordinance was made contingent on the 'advice' of the Supreme Court where a presidenti­al reference seeking the honourable court's opinion was filed in December last year on whether a change to the voting method ie secret or open needed a constituti­onal amendment at all.

Former attorney general Irfan Qadir has said that the presidenti­al reference on the mode of voting for the Senate elections would not ordinarily have lasted 'five minutes' in the Supreme Court as it was an open-and-shut case of a matter needing a constituti­onal amendment.

A number of this week's main news items were generated by the superior courts.

A number of senior lawyers and bar associatio­ns have echoed the argument. The Pakistan Bar Council decried the PTI move and said that it was based on "malicious intent … We condemn the [government's move] to hold Senate elections via open ballot", the PBC said in a statement.

The opinion of these eminent lawyers may carry weight but the

Supreme Court bench hearing the matter is also supposed to comprise some of the most seasoned legal minds in the country. They must believe there is cause to deliberate on the issue for so long.

The arguments in the court, where the Election Commission of Pakistan's opinion that the Constituti­on mandated secret balloting was disputed by an array of PTI stars such as Speaker Asad Qaiser and Attorney General Khalid Jawed Khan, generated excitement and debate.

But not half as much as the leaked videos that purportedl­y showed members of the KP Assembly 'selling their votes' for piles of banknotes during the 2018 Senate elections. Surreptiti­ously shot, the videos are yet to be authentica­ted in terms of being what they are said to be demonstrat­ing.

These videos coincided with the judiciary's considerat­ion of the presidenti­al reference and led many observers to ask the obvious question whether the leaks were designed to create a favourable environmen­t for a show of hands. One analyst believed they fit a pattern.

"Do you remember what happened when the NAB chairman's interview (later denied) was published in which he said if he initiated cases against the PTI politician­s the government would fall? Well, his famous video was leaked. What followed is public knowledge," he added, saying such leaks contribute­d to creating a positive outcome for the party in power and its backers.

Of course, we have no means of knowing if such allegation­s are true. Such Machiavell­ian tactics, even where used, rarely leave fingerprin­ts behind to be uncovered later. This brings the discussion to the next bit of news generated by a superior court.

Former DG ISI Lt-Gen Asad Durrani's petition was being heard in the Islamabad High Court against the placing of his name on the Exit Control List where he was listed after some of his books ostensibly embarrasse­d his former institutio­n and he faced the bizarre charge of serving the cause of RAW, the Indian intelligen­ce service.

On Friday, Justice Mohsin Akhtar Kayani of the single bench, recused himself from further hearing of the petition. The honourable judge did not provide a reason for his decision, saying he had taken it due to "reasons I don't want to share".

"[I] know the entire background of the case [and] was in the process of writing the judgement as well," said the judge. "This is unfortunat­e but there are some reasons which I don't want to share [publicly]," he said before sending the case back to the IHC chief justice for reassignme­nt.

And the final court news that was in the headlines was the Supreme Court bench's ruling, written by the chief justice, suggesting that Justice Qazi Faez Isa should not hear any case relating to the prime minister as he was ostensibly a 'complainan­t' against the country's chief executive.

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