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Qamar Javed Bajwa's term: Pakistan Supreme Court questions rules on army chief tenure extension
In an unprecedented move, Pakistan's Chief
Justice Asif Saeed Khosa on Tuesday suspended a government order granting
General Qamar Javed Bajwa a tenure extension. He cited legal lacunas.
Pakistan’s Supreme
Court on Wednesday questioned the rules related to the extension of an army
chief's tenure as it heard a crucial case whose outcome may block the current
head of the Army, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, from serving another three-year
term.
Prime Minister Imran Khan, through an official notification of
August 19, granted a three-year extension to General Bajwa, citing "regional
security environment".
Bajwa's original tenure is set to expire on November 29.
UNPRECEDENTED
Chief Justice Asif Saeed Khosa in an unprecedented move on Tuesday
suspended the government's order citing legal lacunas.
The petition against Bajwa's extension was filed by a person named
Raiz Rahi.
After the top court's order on Tuesday, the Cabinet amended
Section 255 of the Army Rules and Regulations and included the words
"extension in tenure" to meet the legal lacuna in the rule.
The powerful Pakistan Army,
which has ruled the country for more than half of its 70 plus years of
existence, has wielded considerable power in deciding matters concerning
security and foreign policies.
According to reports, the Cabinet in its two sittings, prepared a
new summary for the extension and sent it to President Arif Alvi for approval,
Geo news reported.
Prime Minister Khan and President Dr Arif Alvi approved a fresh
notification, the report said.
HEARING RESUMES
A Supreme Court bench comprising Chief Justice Khosa, Justice Mian
Mazhar Alam Khan Miankhel and Justice Syed Mansoor Ali Shah resumed the hearing
in the case on Wednesday.
Bajwa is being represented by Farogh Naseem, who resigned from his
post as law minister yesterday to pursue the case.
At the hearing,
Attorney General (AG) Anwar Mansoor Khan took to the rostrum and said he wished
to "clarify something", Dawn newspaper reported.
"I referred to army rules yesterday. The court wrote 'law' in
its order," the AG said, to which the chief justice said: "The court
had given its order after looking at your documents."
"The matter of the period of army chief's tenure is very
important," the report quoted the chief justice as saying.
"In the past, five or six generals have granted themselves
extensions. We will look at this matter closely so that this does not happen in
the future. This is an extremely important matter [and] the Constitution is
quiet about this," he added. "According to the law, during a war, the
army chief can stop officers' retirements," Khosa said.
"However, the government wants to stop the army chief's
retirement," he added.
The powerful Pakistan Army, which has ruled the country for more
than half of its 70 plus years of existence, has wielded considerable power in
deciding matters concerning security and foreign policies.


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