The Pak Banker

SC seeks 8-year record of police transfers, postings

- ISLAMABAD

The Supreme Court sought a record from the federal government and the provinces of transfers and postings in police department­s over the past eight years, while noting that the frequent shuffling of officers affects their command and performanc­e.

A three-member bench headed by Chief Justice Umar Ata Bandial issued the directives while hearing a petition of political interferen­ce in the transfers and postings of the Punjab police.

The other members of the bench are Justice Ayesha Malik and Justice Athar Minallah.

The petitioner, Rana Tahir Saleem, a resident of Faisalabad, is seeking appropriat­e orders to stop illegal political interferen­ce in police matters. He also raised the issue of blatant violation of the Police Order 2002 regarding the security of tenure and in transfer-postings of police personnel from station house officers to inspector general of police.

With the commenceme­nt of the hearing, the petitioner's counsel argued that police officials were posted and transferre­d in the province as a result of political interventi­on. "The recent transfer of DPO Layyah was also on similar grounds," he claimed.

CJP Bandial, while sharing the statistics furnished by the lawyer, said the record showed an average term of a DPO in office was five months.

"As many as 268 DPOs have been transferre­d in Punjab in the last four years," the chief justice observed.

Justice Ayesha Malik asked the counsel about the source of the data. He responded that the data was obtained from the Capital City Police Office. Justice Athar Minallah remarked that political postings in the police department affect the criminal justice system.

The court observed that such circumstan­ces prompted officers to get desirable postings using political clout. The CJP said the counsel had pointed out that the matter was not limited to Punjab. At the request of the petitioner, the court broadened the scope of the plea to other provinces instead of just Punjab.

Following the arguments, the CJP asked the government and the provinces to submit their replies in two weeks.

The petition

The plea was primarily against politicall­ytriggered postings and transfers of police officers in Punjab.

The petitioner presented in the SC record of the average posting tenure in the province. He said he was in pain to point out that the autonomy of the police was being subverted by the political rulers through de facto use of illegal powers of police administra­tion (ranging from the DPO to the IG police) in matters relating to the appointmen­ts/transfers.

"This has led to the serious deteriorat­ion of chain of command, resulting in politicisa­tion of the police force which is the root cause of biased police investigat­ions and unnecessar­y use of power by politicall­y appointed officers," reads the petition.

The petition further stated that the situation had also demoralise­d the police force resulting in the poor writ of the state.

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