Khaleej Times

SC refuses to entertain petition for imposition of Shariah law

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islamabad — The Supreme Court on Monday refused to entertain a petition filed by a radical cleric to impose Shariah law in the country.

Maulana Abdul Aziz of Red Mosque, better known as Lal Masjid, had filed the petition in December 2015 under Article 184(3) of the constituti­on through his counsel Tariq Asad.

The Registrar office of the Supreme Court had turned down the plea in February 2016 by declaring it as non-maintainab­le. The cleric had challenged the rejection.

An official of the court said that Chief Justice of Pakistan Mian Saqib Nisar heard the appeal in his chamber against the decision of Registrar.

“The chief justice sustained the objections by the Registrar office and rejected the appeal,” the official said.

The petitioner maintained that Shariah provides solution for all ills confronted by Pakistan and asked the court to order the respondent­s to amend the constituti­on to implement Islamic laws.

Aziz made president, the prime minister, the speaker of the national assembly, secretarie­s of law, justice and parliament­ary affairs, governors and chief ministers of all four provinces and Council of Islamic Ideology (CII) as respondent­s. The petitioner also said that the country was being “Indianised and westernise­d” through television channels and the “younger generation has been inspired into adopting modelling and acting, singing and dancing as careers.”

Aziz made headlines when he tried to escape from the Red Mosque clad in a woman’s burqa during 2007 military operation but was arrested. Several cases were filed against him but he was

The petitioner said the country was being Indianised and westernise­d through TV channels and the “younger generation has been inspired into adopting modelling and acting as careers

An official

released on bail and also allowed to return to the mosque to continue preaching.

More than 100 people, including Aziz’s younger brother Abdul Rashid Ghazi, were killed when commandos stormed the mosque after a week-long standoff in July 2007.

The Red Mosque had been a militant hub in the heart of Islamabad with links to Pakistani Taleban.

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