Consciences only awakened after their monopoly was curtailed: Khawaja Asif on SC judges' resignations
Islamabad [Pakistan], November 14 (ANI): Pakistan's Defence Minister Khawaja Asif on Friday criticised two Supreme Court judges for resigning after the passage of the 27th Constitutional Amendment, saying their "consciences only awakened after their monopoly was curtailed."
According to Dawn, Justices Mansoor Ali Shah and Athar Minallah stepped down hours after President Asif Ali Zardari signed the amendment into law.
Amid the opposition's chants of "kon bachayega Pakistan; Imran Khan, Imran Khan", echoed through the House, Asif recounted what he described as the judiciary's historical role in decisions against former prime minister Nawaz Sharif.
He added that another bench was later formed to determine the duration of the disqualification, followed by a separate bench that ruled an ineligible person could not head a political party.
Dawn reported Asif as saying the same group of judges presided over "almost every political lawsuit" and that during the period when "kangaroo courts were being formed", no one expressed shame over Nawaz's treatment.
He argued their "conscience awakened because their monopoly in SC was curtailed," asserting that the amendment sought to uphold the supremacy of the Constitution.
As reported by Dawn, Asif further alleged that the opposition had become "protectors of terrorists" for not "condemning" recent attacks in Wana and Islamabad.
He wrote that the amendment had "crippled judicial independence and integrity", adding that its impact would leave "deep institutional scars".
He said that before the amendment was passed, he had written to the chief justice outlining his concerns, but that "against a canvas of selective silence and inaction, those fears have now come to be".
He stated the Constitution he swore to uphold was "no more", adding that what remained was "a mere shadow". (ANI)
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