Constitution (Twenty-sixth Amendment) Act, 2024 | |
---|---|
Parliament of Pakistan | |
Passed by | Senate of Pakistan |
Passed | In Senate of Pakistan: 20 October 2024 |
Passed by | National Assembly of Pakistan |
Passed | In National Assembly of Pakistan: 21 October 2024[a] |
Assented to by | President Asif Zardari |
Assented to | Assented granted on 21 October 2024 |
Legislative history | |
First chamber: Senate of Pakistan | |
Bill title | The Constitution (Twenty-sixth Amendment) Bill, 2024 |
Introduced by | Azam Nazir Tarar (law minister) |
Committee responsible | Special Parliamentary Committee, NA |
Committee of the whole | 18 October 2024 |
Status: In force |
The Twenty-Sixth Amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan, known officially as the Constitution (Twenty-sixth Amendment) Act, 2024, is an amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan passed by Parliament in a 'marathon session' between 20–21 October, 2024.[1] Coming into force with Presidential assent the same day.[2] The amendment contains 27 clauses, which effect change in judicial, parliamentary and executive frameworks: modifying aspects of judicial appointments, judicial powers, and adjusting legal procedures.[3] These include the removal of the controversial[4] suo motu prerogative of the Supreme Court, the capping the Chief Justice of Pakistan's (CJP) tenure to three-years, the reconstitution the Judicial Commission of Pakistan (JCP) to sit on judicial appointments, the formation of a separate constitutional bench in the Supreme Court, the limiting of the ability of courts to question the recommendations from Cabinet to the President or Prime Minister, the increasing of Parliamentary oversight, and the establishment of a 12-member Special Committee in Parliament with proportional representation to nominate the CJP (with two-thirds majority in the committee) from the three most-senior judges in the court.[5][6][7]
The amendment introduces Article 9A, which declares "[e]very person shall be entitled to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment," as a fundamental right. The package also includes abolishment of Riba "as far as practicable, by the 1st of January, 2028". It also the modified procedures for suo motu actions previously held by Supreme and High courts are instead placed in the hands of a judicial committee under the Practice and Procedure Act.[3] Under the amendment, the Chief Election Commissioner of Pakistan remains in office until the appointment of a replacement is notified. In Article 111, provincial Advocate Generals and counsel are permitted to partake in legal discussions in their respective Provincial Assemblies. The Special Parliamentary Committee responsible for the nomination of the Chief Justice is to hold its meetings in an in-camera sitting. The JCP is given the authority to "review" the performance of Federal Shariat Court (FSC) and High Court judges, in addition to appointment prerogatives.[3][8]
The Constitutional package was presented by the Pakistan Muslim League (N) (PML-N) and attracted support from other parties; including the Pakistan People's Party, with its chairman Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, and the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf, with its chief Gohar Ali Khan, who expressed their agreement with the draft, citing previous consensus with Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (F) leader Maulana Fazlur Rehman.[3] During parliamentary proceedings, the amendment was supported by Istehkam-e-Pakistan Party (IPP), Awami National Party (ANP), and Muttahida Qaumi Movement – Pakistan (MQM-P) parties, together with various independents and "others".[9] During voting, members of PTI walked out,[10] party leadership had previously declared the party's intent to boycott voting.[11] On October 20, the amendment bill was approved by the Federal Cabinet and passed through the Senate by 65 to 4 votes.[12] During wee hours of 21 October, National Assembly of Pakistan passed the amendment by 225 to 12 votes.[13]
Akhtar Mengal, leader of the Balochistan National Party (BNP) alleged that two of his party's senators had been abducted together with their families.[14] Leaders from PTI and JUIF claimed the government was pursuing "coercive tactics" to pass the amendments, including the kidnapping of kidnapping of MNAs.[15] Asad Qaiser claimed that party members were being offered Rs. 1-3 billion in bribes, while Omar Ayub Khan claimed "several PTI members and their family members were being intimidated and implicated in fabricated cases" to support the package. Attaullah Tarar claimed it was a "false narrative" and that "PTI had 'kidnapped its members itself'", holding them in KPK. PPP's Ali Musa Gilani and Agha Rafiullah "called for investigations" into the allegations.[16] Prior to the parliamentary session, PTI "lost contact with 12 of its lawmakers", with party leaders concerned some would defect.[17] The International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) stated the package was a "blow to judicial independence, the rule of law, and human rights protection".[18] Members of the legal community interviewed by the Express Tribune and Dawn criticised it for an "assault on judicial independence" and the "biggest-reversal" of judicial independence in 3 decades.[19][20][21]
Following the passage of the 26th Amendment, the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX)'s benchmark KSE-100 rose 711 points,[22] Bloomberg stated the amendment was "seen as a major boost to the government faced with economic challenges and a barrage of protests." With Marva Khan stating it “essentially signifies a stronger coalition government going forward," with power over judicial appointments. Bilawal Bhutto claimed that prior the judiciary had "undermined democracy and strengthened military rulers."[23]
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