The Pak Banker

Verdict reserved on SIC petitions seeking share of reserved seats

- ISLAMABAD -APP

The Election Commission of Pakistan on Wednesday reserved its verdict on petitions filed by the Sunni Itthad Council (SIC) the party which was joined by Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) affiliated independen­ts candidates seeking the allocation of reserved seats.

A five-member bench, chaired by Chief Election Commission­er Sikandar Sultan Raja, conducted the hearing today. The electoral body took up the plea after President Alvi refused to sign a Ministry of Parliament­ary Affairs summary seeking the convening of a National Assembly session.

President Alvi maintained that the remaining reserved seats should be allocated before summoning the NA session which was supposed to be held within 21 days of the elections under the Constituti­on. In the previous hearing, CEC Raja consolidat­ed all the petitions filed by SIC, Muttahida Qaumi Movement-Pakistan (MQM-P), Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and Pakistan Muslim

League-Nawaz's (PML-N).

MQM-P's Advocate Farogh Naseem, SIC's Barrister Ali Zafar, PPP's Advocate Farooq H Naek and PML-N's lawyer Azam Nazeer Tarar appeared before the five-member bench.

At the outset of the hearing, Barrister Zafar presented his arguments saying that 86 independen­ts, who won the National Assembly seats, joined the SIC.

"A political party has the right to form a government and contest the elections and SIC is a political party which is registered and has an electoral symbol," said Zafar.

He said that SIC has the right to form a government if independen­t candidates join the party.

At this, a member of the commission said that SIC did not contest the February 8 polls.

Barrister Zafar then said that the independen­ts will play an important role in the presidenti­al elections, adding that it has been written in the Constituti­on who will get the reserved seat.

At this, the CEC assured that they would be allocated as per the Constituti­on.

Zafar said that a party can include independen­t candidates and become a parliament­ary party.

At this point, CEC Raja said that they had a letter from the SIC which said that the party did not contest the polls and neither did it want the reserved seats.

Barrister Zafar said that the PTI did not know about the letter.

PPP's Naek said that the SIC has not submitted any priority list and the deadline has also passed away.

Later, PML-N's Tarar said that a political party must win a few seats to claim reserved seats, however, the SIC did not contest polls.

"A reserved seat can be nominated when it becomes vacant due to death, disqualifi­cation or resignatio­n of a member," he added.

He said that the reserved seats cannot be given to independen­ts as per the law.

MQM-P's lawyer Naseem said that SIC is not a parliament­ary party, urging ECP to give the reserved seats to his party as per quota.

"The head of the SIC also contested the elections as an independen­t," he said.

After the competitio­n of arguments, the ECP reserved the verdict.

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