ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court of Pakistan Friday ended the contempt proceedings against judges who had taken oath under the Provisional Constitutional Order (PCO) in 2007.
Chief Justice Mian Saqib Nisar, heading a four-member larger bench, announced the verdict while hearing the contempt case against 14 judges who had taken oath under the PCO.
During the hearing, the chief justice remarked that the former Lahore High Court chief justice Iftikhar Hussain Chaudhry has passed away and the entire matter is now around 11 years old.
The chief justice explained that contempt matters are between the court and the respondents and since the judges are no longer serving, the contempt notices against them is being withdrawn.
The then-president Gen (retd) Pervez Musharraf, after imposing a state of emergency and suspending the Constitution on Nov 3, 2007, had issued a PCO under which judges swore a new oath of allegiance.
After Musharraf’s PCO, the Supreme Court had declared the move illegal in a landmark judgment in July 2009 and later initiated contempt proceedings against the judges, some of whom later resigned and/or submitted apologies in court and were thus exempted from the case.
Trending
- Cleaners are the most important people of our society: Rai Muhammad Akbar
- Javed Badhanvi presides over an important meeting regarding the resettlement of 1989 refugees
- Illegal encroachments will not be tolerated under any circumstances: CEO Syed Ali Irfan Razvi
- Annual Siraj Al-Manira Conference holds at Masjid Hayat-ul-Nabi, Oldham, 2024.
- EKKE Rahman left Manchester on April 21, to reach Nepal, and after he will leave for Pakistan
- LIIBS 7th Edition, Unites Stakeholders for Collaborating for Growth
- Gwadar under water
- Broken Wings by Kahlil Gibran