Pakistan's top court hears arguments on PM Khan's dissolving parliament
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[April 04, 2022]
By Asif Shahzad and Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) -Pakistan's top court
began hearing arguments on Monday on the legality of Prime Minister
Imran Khan calling a general election after his party blocked a
no-confidence vote and he dissolved parliament to prevent an opposition
attempt to oust him.
Khan, a former cricket star, lost his majority in parliament last week
as his opponents built support in advance of the vote of no-confidence
that had been due on Sunday.
But the deputy speaker of parliament, a member of Khan's party, threw
out the no-confidence motion that Khan had widely been expected to lose,
ruling it was part of a foreign conspiracy and unconstitutional.
The standoff has thrown the nuclear-armed nation, which the military has
ruled for almost half its history since independence in 1947, into a
full-blown constitutional crisis.
Whatever the Supreme Court decides, Pakistan looks to be heading for
fresh elections before the completion of the current term of the
parliament and the prime minister in 2023.
If Khan prevails, polls will happen within 90 days. The opposition also
wants early elections, albeit after delivering a political defeat to
Khan by ousting him through a parliamentary vote.
Opposition leader Shehbaz Sharif called the blocking of the vote
"nothing short of high treason".
"The nation is stunned," the English-language Dawn newspaper Dawn said
in an editorial.
"Even as political pundits and the media confidently predicted Mr Imran
Khan’s defeat in the vote of no-confidence, he seemed unperturbed.
"No one could have guessed that his last ploy would involve having the
democratic order burnt down."
Khan also dissolved the cabinet and wants a general election within 90
days, although that decision officially rests with the president and the
election commission, and depends on the outcome of the court hearing.
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Police officers stand guard on the road leading towards the Red
Zone, in Islamabad, Pakistan April 4, 2022. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro
The largely ceremonial head of
state, President Arif Alvi, said in a statement that Khan would stay
on as prime minister in an interim role until a caretaker prime
minister was appointed under whom a general election would be held.
Alvi wrote to both Khan and Sharif, asking them to put forward names
for a caretaker prime minister within three days, the president's
office said in a statement.
But whether elections will happen depends largely
on the outcome of the legal proceedings, which began with a
five-member Supreme Court bench hearing arguments in a packed
courtroom.
The Supreme Court could order that parliament be reconstituted, call
for a new election, or bar Khan from standing again if he is found
to have acted unconstitutionally.
The court could also decide that it cannot intervene in
parliamentary affairs.
Khan says he did not act unconstitutionally, calling the move to
oust him a plot orchestrated by the United States - a claim
Washington denies.
After coming to power in 2018, Khan moved Pakistan closer to China
and Russia and away from the United States. He has also blamed
Narendra Modi, prime minister of nuclear rival India, for failing to
protect the rights of minority Muslims there.
Political analysts say the military regarded Khan's conservative,
nationalist agenda favourably when he won election in 2018 but later
cooled towards him over various wrangles.
The military denies involvement in civilian politics but the
generals are unlikely to stand by if they believe political chaos
was damaging the country or if their core interests were threatened.
(Reporting by Asif Shahzad and Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam in Islamabad
and Syed Raza Hassan in Karachi;Writing by Alasdair PalEditing by
Robert Birsel and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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