The Pak Banker

The sword of justice

- Abdul Moiz Jaferii

The original jurisdicti­on of the Supreme Court, of which suo motu proceeding­s are a variant, is limited by the Constituti­on to the "enforcemen­t of fundamenta­l rights" for a "question of public importance".

Around a decade ago, Karachi was a cesspit. The MQM and ANP were warring over turf. The PPP had entered the fight by arming gangsters based out of Lyari. With the city facing a governance vacuum, it was ripe for a trial by Chaudhry. The Supreme Court took suo motu notice. Orders would be fired across the board, officers would be suspended, the police would quake in their shoes before the might of Iftikhar Chaudhry's justice.

It was doubly beneficial for Chaudhry and his backers to take on the

Sindh government. It was hitting the weak ruling PPP where it hurt, in its bread basket of Sindh. A summary of Supreme Court activism in Sindh shows vast intrusion into government functions.

There has been a ban on public land transfers in the province by the court for nearly a decade on the premise that the entire bureaucrac­y is corrupt. The entire civil structure hierarchy of Sindh's bureaucrac­y was upended by the court for the crime of promoting and positionin­g candidates of their choosing.

Through a grossly expanded reading of the Federal Legislativ­e List, Sindh was told its well-curated hospitals belonged to the federation, which doesn't know what to do with them.

In the process of what seemed to be Mission Get PPP, provincial supremacy stands eroded to a point where it is at odds with the plain meaning of the Constituti­on. People continue to suffer from a governance vacuum which activist judges set out to fix, and the PPP is under added pressure. Rather than fighting back on the political and public front, it perhaps looks towards dealing with the supposed original backers of Mission Independen­t Justice.

The people continue to suffer from a governance vacuum which activist judges set out to fix.

In this expanded judicial playing field, entered the current chief justice of Pakistan. The protection­s of original jurisdicti­on expanded.

From being simply angry at the government, the court became angry at those apparently facilitate­d and advantaged by it through changes to Karachi's master plan.

Rather than considerin­g it a living, breathing document which summarises the contract between citizens and the government of how their city is to prosper, the court instead visualises the master plan as a rigid exoskeleto­n, which must define the boundaries within which the body of the city must exist, regardless of its increasing size and shape.

This desire of a reversion to the past was initially welcomed. The court of Justice Gulzar started with focusing on the larger illegaliti­es concerning the changing land use in the city, which mostly happened to be in cantonment­s.

The basic position was that land no longer required for cantonment use ought to be reverted to the government. It cannot be repurposed and allotted to the public, or used for other commercial gain.

How could a military force assume the role of a contractor and master developer upon land it was given for temporary use? Of special focus for the chief justice were wedding halls on military-held land, and a cinema on Sharea Faisal which stands on the residentia­l amenity area of a housing colony built ostensibly for military use but then sold to civilians.

This push got as far as demolishin­g a few wedding halls. The land under them remains with the military. And the gaze of the court moved back to the Sindh government. In the original Supreme Court jurisdicti­on, without the chance to properly plead one's case, leases were declared the illegal product of collusion with the Sindh government, and shop licences were declared fraudulent.

During this judicial monsoon came the deluge of last summer. Karachi's affluent District South - run in large part by the Clifton Cantonment which exists despite being without a single active military zone and includes DHA, where the vast majority of residents are civilians - was the perfect case for the court's focus.

Here, citizens claimed, was an authority behaving like a tyrannical government, having captured its regulator, supposedly the cantonment board, which in turn had no business running a parallel government in an area which sees no military use.

There was no public audit of the funds extracted, and the use they were put to was clearly wrought with incompeten­ce, citizens claimed.

The storm drains built were an afterthoug­ht from a decade ago when the area was last inundated, and proved inadequate. Spending public money on the public was seen as a favour, rather than the right of the people from whom funds were extracted. There was no elected oversight. Land use was regularly changed through the stroke of a uniformed pen.

Instead, the court focused on the Sindh government and its inaction in all the other districts of the city. Of particular focus was the Gujjar nullah, a blocked water artery.

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