Showing posts with label Pakistani Lawyers' Movement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pakistani Lawyers' Movement. Show all posts

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Lessons from the Lawyers' Movement: Ali Wyne

By Ali Wyne

Although the battle in Swat has understandably captured international attention, it is more a commentary on Asif Zardari's unusual incompetence than it is a reflection of Pakistan's systemic challenges. One can better understand those challenges by considering the outcome of the lawyers' movement.

There was widespread agreement within and outside of Pakistan that Iftikhar Chaudhry's reinstatement as chief justice marked the beginning - albeit fragile and uncertain - of the country's democratization. In reality, however, it reaffirmed the need for (at least) three basic principles to inform Pakistan's political development. First, the rule of law is little more than a rhetorical construct if leaders violate it to maintain power and opponents support it to achieve power. Second, tactics matter. The lawyers' movement helped to bring Zardari to power by opposing Pervez Musharraf; now it is boosting Nawaz Sharif's clout by opposing Zardari. If it does not recalibrate, it may well continue to elevate the very opposition figures who will undermine the rule of law once they acquire power. Third, the divides that must exist for representative institutions to emerge - whether between leaders and opponents, or bureaucrats and activists - lose their meaning if those on either side are rewarded for subordinating principle to ambition.

It is useful to go back ten years in Pakistani history.

Recent events notwithstanding, Musharraf and Chaudhry were once close allies. On January 26, 2000, Chaudhry swore a new oath of office affirming Musharraf's decision to suspend Pakistan's constitution; he was subsequently appointed to the Supreme Court. Four months later, he joined the court's 11 other justices in declaring that the general's takeover through force was legal. On April 13, 2005, Chaudhry was one of only five justices to oppose petitions that challenged Musharraf's constitutional amendments and validate Musharraf's right to serve concurrently as army chief and president; less than a month later, he was appointed chief justice.

The relationship between the two soured when Chaudhry ruled against the government's privatization of Pakistan Steel Mills Corporation. Musharraf's subsequent actions - firing Chaudhry on March 9, 2007, declaring a state of emergency on November 3rd when his presidential eligibility was challenged, and sacking Chaudhry again after the Supreme Court had reinstated him - turned Pakistanis against him, thereby emboldening Zardari and Sharif. The two formed a coalition government shortly after Musharraf resigned, only to have it collapse a week later. Sharif claimed that Zardari had reneged on their agreement to restore the judges whom Musharraf had deposed during emergency rule.

Zardari did not vocally support the lawyers' movement while pressing for Musharraf's ouster, because he recognized that an independent judiciary could examine the October 5, 2007 National Reconciliation Ordinance that immunized all government officials who served between 1986 and October 12, 1999, when Musharraf took office. Nonetheless, Zardari supported the movement to the extent that it weakened the general and improved his own political prospects.

Pakistanis began pressuring him to reinstate Chaudhry shortly after he took office. Zardari heeded those calls not to advance democracy, but to maintain power (indeed, many suspect that he preconditioned his decision on receiving protection from Chaudhry's "judicial activism"): only a month into his presidency, after all, his approval rating had fallen to 19%.

For more on this article, please click on the following link: Lessons from the Lawyers' Movement: Ali Wyne

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Reinstated, Chief Justice Bears Hopes of Pakistan: New York Times

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — At a Supreme Court hearing on Thursday in a property dispute, the defendant, Gul Zameen, insisted that Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry personally take his case rather than assign it to other justices, as his opponent requested.

“Please, I want you to hear the case,” said Mr. Zameen, 55, who has been fighting over a house in North-West Frontier Province since 1991.

Much to his relief, Mr. Chaudhry agreed.

“We hope he will do justice,” Mr. Zameen’s son, Shahid Rafiq, said later. “Not only with us but with everybody.”

Since returning to the bench last week for the first time since he was ousted two years ago by Pervez Musharraf, then Pakistan’s president, Mr. Chaudhry has faced a groundswell of expectations from people like Mr. Zameen and from the politicians and lawyers who struggled to get him reinstated. Just as his ouster became a national symbol of political interference in the judiciary, millions of Pakistanis have invested his return with hopes that he will set every injustice right.

“Many people saw him as a savior, and he is a savior for them, even though the lawyers’ movement was essentially aimed at upholding the rule of law,” said Babar Sattar, a constitutional lawyer, who warned that such unrealistic hopes were bound to produce disappointments. “Some expectations will be frustrated, as a lot of different people have different expectations.”

For more on this article, please click on the following link: Reinstated, Chief Justice Bears Hopes of Pakistan: New York Times

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Army chief tries to defuse Pakistan crisis: FT

By Farhan Bokhari in Islamabad

General Ashfaq Kiyani, Pakistan’s army chief, on Friday stepped up his efforts to avert a deepening political crisis as opposition parties and anti-government lawyers planned mass protests next week.

Amid a government crackdown on protesters, Gen Kiyani met Asif Ali Zardari, the president, and Yusuf Raza Gilani, the prime minister, yesterday to discuss steps to restore stability and maintain the country’s parliamentary democracy. The general’s growing personal involvement has raised concerns that the military is poised to return to a more political role, in a country that it has ruled for more than half Pakistan’s 62 years as an independent state.

Senior government officials said, the general’s discussions included the restoration of Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry, former chief justice of the Supreme Court who was dismissed by Pervez Musharraf, when he was president, in 2007.

Mr Chaudhry’s dismissal prompted a nationwide protest by lawyers. Other contentious issues at the heart of the growing political dispute include last month’s verdict by the Supreme Court to disqualify Nawaz Sharif, the former prime minister and main opposition leader, from standing for political office. His younger brother, Shehbaz Sharif, was also disqualified the same day.

For more on this article, please click on the following link: Army chief tries to defuse Pakistan crisis: FT

Friday, June 13, 2008

Canadian lawyers support Pakistan lawyers on the Long March: MWC News

Pakistan: Lawyers Rights Watch Canada (LRWC) applauds the courageous integrity of Pakistan lawyers on the Long March. LRWC supports Pakistan lawyers' advocacy to restore the judiciary and the Constitution and their opposition to state lawlessness.

June 12, 2008: LRWC joins lawyers and others taking part in the Long March of Lawyers in calling for:

1. The reinstatement of all judges removed from office by the Provisional Constitution Order No. 1 of 2007, November 3 2007 in accordance with the Murree Declaration; and

2. The rescission of all laws, including amendments to the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan (Constitution), purporting to come into force under authority of the Proclamation of Emergency Declaration of November 3, 2007, the Provisional Constitutional Order No. 1 of 2007 and the Oath of Offices (Judges) Order, 2007

3. Withdrawal of charges laid after November 3/07 against lawyers and others for protesting the imposition of martial law including charges of high treason, sabotage, destroying public property and maintenance of public order.

4. Strict adherence by Pakistan officials to laws validly in force prior to November 3, 2007 and to applicable international standards protecting the independence of lawyers and judges including those embodied in the UN Basic Principles on the Role of Lawyers[1]and the Basic Principles on the Independence of the Judiciary.[2]

The government of Pakistan government must take all measures necessary to protect the safety of all people participating in the March and to protect the rights and duties of the lawyers to engage in public advocacy.

For more on this article, please click on the following link: Canadian lawyers support Pakistan lawyers on the Long March: MWC News

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Pakistan: roars and whimpers: Oxford Analytica

Lawyers take to the streets again this week, as pressure builds on the government to restore deposed judges. A 'long march' will start on Tuesday in Multan; ex-servicemen and the Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz) -- which recently withdrew from the Pakistan Peoples' Party-led coalition government -- will join the suits on the road.

Protesters will be united in opposition to President Pervez Musharraf, whose dismissal of former Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry in March 2007 triggered a crisis of legitimacy that has yet to be resolved. A judiciary that had showed signs of independence, and had threatened to jeopardise Musharraf re-election plans, was removed, with the imposition of emergency rule in November.

For more on this article, please click on the following link: Pakistan: roars and whimpers: Oxford Analytica

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

The Lawyers’ Crusade: NYT

By JAMES TRAUB

Published: June 1, 2008

In April, on the highway outside the little Punjabi town of Renala Khurd, Aitzaz Ahsan was waylaid by a crowd of seemingly deranged lawyers. The advocates, who wore black suits, white shirts and black ties, were not actually insane; they just seemed that way because they were so overcome with excitement at greeting the mastermind of Pakistan’s lawyers’ movement, perhaps the most consequential outpouring of liberal, democratic energy in the Islamic world in recent years. The 62-year-old Ahsan was on his way to address the bar association of Okara, 10 miles away, but the lawyers, and the farmers and shopkeepers gathered with them, were not about to let him leave. They boiled around the car, shouting slogans. “Who should our leaders be like?” they cried. “Like Aitzaz!” And, “How many are prepared to die for you?” “Countless! Countless!”

Pakistan’s lawyers were not, in fact, courting martyrdom, but their willingness to stand up for their convictions, and to suffer for them, has transformed their country’s legal and political landscape. After Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan’s president, demanded the resignation of Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, the chief justice of the Supreme Court, in March of last year, the lawyers boycotted the courts and held massive rallies across the country. The movement was managed by a small group led by Ahsan, a prominent legislator and one of Pakistan’s leading constitutional lawyers. Ahsan also took Chaudhry on as a client, and last July persuaded the Supreme Court to restore Chaudhry to the bench — an astonishing rebuke to Musharraf.

For more on this article, please click on the following link: The Lawyers’ Crusade: NYT