Alvi’s returned bill again passed by Parliament
TRIMMING CJP’S POWERS
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ISLAMABAD: A joint session of the parliament on Monday once again passed the Supreme Court (Practice and Procedure) Bill 2023 amid the opposition’s uproar. The bill, tabled by federal law minister Azam Nazir Tarar, would be sent to President Dr Arif Alvi again for assent as he had, earlier, returned the bill unsigned to the parliament.
The minister said the opposition showed ignorance over the matter adding that the president left a negative comment on the parliament’s prerogative to legislate. “Mr Alvi should have avoided this,” he added. Mr Tarar went on to say that the law was enacted to neutralise the effect of the “one man show” adding that all powers were vested in two judges of the SC. “If an amendment has been proposed, it must be taken into consideration,” he added. We wanted transparency, he said, in the judicial system.
Earlier, President Alvi had returned the bill for reconsideration to parliament, stating that the legislation “prima-facie travels beyond the competence of the Parliament and can be assailed as a colourable legislation”. The president returned the bill unsigned as per the provisions of the Article 75 of the Constitution days after it was sent to him for approval after it had sailed through the National Assembly and Senate amid standoff between the government and the SC over snap elections in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
Published in The Daily National Courier, April, 11 2023
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