Justice Faez Isa urges CJP not to ‘bulldoze’ judges’ appointment process

Published July 27, 2022
Justice Qazi Faez ISa wrote a letter to the JCP on Tuesday. — SC website/File
Justice Qazi Faez ISa wrote a letter to the JCP on Tuesday. — SC website/File

ISLAMABAD: Senior puisne judge of the Supreme Court Justice Qazi Faez Isa advised Chief Justice of Pakistan (CJP) Umar Ata Bandial not to bulldoze the “due” process for appointment of more than one-third of the total number of judges in the apex court.

In a letter written to the Judicial Commission of Pakistan, headed by CJP Bandial, Justice Isa deplored the manner of summoning the JCP’s meeting to consider the elevation of high court judges to the Supreme Court.

Justice Isa said it was surprising that the JCP’s meeting had been convened to consider appointment of five SC judges during summer vacations.

Justice Isa stated in the letter that “while on my annual leave I received a Whatsapp message from the Additional Registrar of the Supreme Court informing me that the Hon’ble Chief Justice of Pakistan has convened a meeting of the JCP on 28 July 2022 to consider appointing five judges to the SC.

“When availing of annual leave no meeting of the JCP was scheduled but as soon as I left Pakistan the CJP decided to hold two meetings of the JCP to consider appointments to the Sindh and Lahore High Courts, and now a third unscheduled meeting of the JCP is to be held during the summer vacations of the SC.

“The summer vacations of the SC were notified by the CJP himself, and then these were gazetted in the Official Gazette. If the CJP renders his own notification utterly meaningless then let him first withdraw it, instead of violating it.”

He pointed out that in the JCP meeting held on June 28, everyone, except the CJP and Justice Ijaz-ul-Ahsan, voted to postpone the meeting as there was no justification to call it during the gazetted summer vacations and as the most senior judge was on sanctioned annual leave.

“I most respectfully submit that the CJP cannot reject decisions of the JCP. In calling another meeting during notified-gazetted vacations, when some members are on annual leave, and at a time when the Attorney-General is recovering from the second surgery he has recently undergone, is unjustified.

The democratically taken decision by the JCP not to meet in such circumstances must be abided by. Democracy is the bedrock of the Constitution and the basis on which Pakistan came into existence.”

Justice Isa suggested that the meeting might be deferred till August 13 when he will resume the office, adding that the JCP did not convene its meeting for months when he was present in Pakistan and then scheduled three such meetings when the senior puisne judge was on sanctioned annual leave.

The letter stated: “It suggests that the CJP does not want me to be physically present, which is illegal and unconstitutional.”

It went on to state that “the CJP did not schedule meetings when the vacancies in the SC occurred, but all of a sudden wants to make wholescale appointments to the SC hurriedly. To appoint five judges means more than a third of the SC, which the CJP wants to pack during notified-gazetted vacations, and by avoiding the participation of all members.”

The CJP wants to fill-in an ‘anticipated’ vacancy too. Article 175(8) of the Constitution does not permit this. Nor does the Constitution permit that the CJP alone propose names, which is the sole prerogative of the JCP, the letter said. It added that the anticipated vacancy will occur on the retirement of Justice Sajjad Ali Shah. He is being called upon to choose his own successor. “This is unconstitutional. Pakistan is not a kingdom of yore in which kings decided their successors. If this is permitted then the CJP may next call a meeting of the JCP to fill-in ‘anticipated vacancies’ that will occur in respect of all the judges of the SC, including those retiring after him.”

Justice Isa said that the matter of appointing judges to the superior courts requires utmost care and due deliberation as it is a delicate matter.

Addressing the CJP, the judge said: “Please do not ridicule the JCP and your nominees by contravening the Constitution. Restricting the JCP to consider only the CJ’s pre-selected nominees is inappropriate. The JCP deserves to be treated with respect and consideration by its chairman.”

The letter said that the CJP admits to having acted unfairly as he says that he decided to consider only a certain number of judges, and this he did arbitrarily. He informs that he considered three judges from Peshawar, six from Lahore till and 12 from Sindh. This does not stand to reason because the Lahore High Court is a much larger than the High Court of Sindh; neither the same number were considered nor of the same proportional ratio.

Justice Isa deplored that “CJP further discriminates by excluding for his kind consideration Chief Justice and Judges from the Balochistan High Court and the Chief Justice and Judges from the Islamabad High Court. The prevailing sense of deprivation of the peoples of these areas is being further aggravated. With utmost respect, it appears that CJP has resorted to reverse engineering by first deciding who all to nominate and then find some pretext to justify his nominations.”

He stressed that need that “all appointments must be made in accordance with the Constitution, on the basis of a predetermined and non-discriminatory criteria. And above all without any impression of favouritism. The Constitution does not grant the CJP any powers additional to those of the other members of the JCP; the CJP is only designated as the Chairman of the JCP.”

Published in Dawn, July 27th, 2022

Opinion

Editorial

Syria’s future
10 Dec, 2024

Syria’s future

AS Bashar al-Assad boarded a plane for exile in Moscow, the police state his family had ruled for over five decades...
Rights in peril
10 Dec, 2024

Rights in peril

IN Pakistan’s fraught landscape of human rights infringements, misery hangs in the air. What makes this year’s...
Learning from AJK
10 Dec, 2024

Learning from AJK

THE recent events in Azad Kashmir are a powerful example of how dialogue can play a constructive role in effectively...
CPEC slowdown
Updated 09 Dec, 2024

CPEC slowdown

Current CPEC slowdown doesn't mean China has lost interest in the connectivity project or in Pakistan.
Madressah bill
09 Dec, 2024

Madressah bill

A CONTROVERSY has been brewing over the Societies Registration (Amendment) Act, 2024, with the JUI-F slamming ...
Protecting varsities
09 Dec, 2024

Protecting varsities

THE recent proposal by the Sindh cabinet to shoehorn in non-PhD bureaucrats as vice chancellors has sparked concern...