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Lavish lifestyle of VIPs political matter, says SC

salarsikander

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ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court has held that the massive expenses incurred on the palatial President House, Prime Minister’s House or the various Governor’s houses, as well as the extravagant lifestyles of their occupants and the perks enjoyed by government functionaries at public expense were a matter of government policy, involving political questions.

This is a domain where the Supreme Court does not ordinarily rush into, said a judgement authored by Justice Sheikh Azmat Saeed. Dismissing an appeal moved by the Pakistan Lawyers Forum, challenging the rejection of a similar plea by the Lahore High Court on Nov 27, 2002, the verdict held that no matter how appealing the arguments of the petitioner appeared to be, the court could not allow itself to be seduced by them and must exercise judicial restraint.

Dawn news.jpg


The short order, which was passed by a three-judge bench also consisting of Justice Mian Saqib Nisar and Justice Mushir Alam on March 31, 2015, had dismissed the plea on the grounds that the petition had no merit.

Appearing on behalf of the petitioner, A.K. Dogar had sought a declaration from the Supreme Court that the provision of luxury vehicles, spacious accommodation and other prerequisites provided to public functionaries to maintain a lavish lifestyle at the public expense was not only un-Islamic and un-constitutional, but also a violation of the fundamental rights of the citizens of Pakistan.

Court rules it cannot ‘rush into’ something which is a govt domain

Mr Dogar had contended that all the assets, funds and properties of the state of Pakistan were vested with the people of Pakistan and not public functionaries, who are only entrusted with them so they could be used for the benefit of the people.

In a country burdened by foreign debt, where a substantial percentage of the populous lived under the poverty line with a lack of access to basic healthcare and education, such extravagant expenditure was not only against the traditions of simplicity of the Holy Prophet (peace be upon him), but also violates the fundamental rights of the citizens and, particularly, is in violation of Articles 2A, 3, 4, 9, 14, 25, 37 and 38 of the Constitution.

During the proceedings, the counsel proposed that the funds spent catering to public functionaries, and the accommodations provided to them, should be used for the benefit of the public at large.

The acute dissimilarities between the lifestyles of the common people and the extravagant lifestyles of public functionaries maintained at public expense were not only discriminatory, but also denuded the ordinary citizens of their basic dignity.

Now, in a six-page detailed judgement, the Supreme Court admitted that there is no escaping the fact that public property is a public trust in the hands of public functionaries.

But the counsel, the court held, had cast his net much too wide since the question of emoluments, accommodation and other perks to be provided to public functionaries was essentially a matter of government policy, involving political questions, a domain in which the court ordinarily does not intervene.

Published in Dawn, June 28th, 2015

Lavish lifestyle of VIPs political matter, says SC - Pakistan - DAWN.COM

 
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ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court has held that the massive expenses incurred on the palatial President House, Prime Minister’s House or the various Governor’s houses, as well as the extravagant lifestyles of their occupants and the perks enjoyed by government functionaries at public expense were a matter of government policy, involving political questions.

This is a domain where the Supreme Court does not ordinarily rush into, said a judgement authored by Justice Sheikh Azmat Saeed. Dismissing an appeal moved by the Pakistan Lawyers Forum, challenging the rejection of a similar plea by the Lahore High Court on Nov 27, 2002, the verdict held that no matter how appealing the arguments of the petitioner appeared to be, the court could not allow itself to be seduced by them and must exercise judicial restraint.

View attachment 233519

The short order, which was passed by a three-judge bench also consisting of Justice Mian Saqib Nisar and Justice Mushir Alam on March 31, 2015, had dismissed the plea on the grounds that the petition had no merit.

Appearing on behalf of the petitioner, A.K. Dogar had sought a declaration from the Supreme Court that the provision of luxury vehicles, spacious accommodation and other prerequisites provided to public functionaries to maintain a lavish lifestyle at the public expense was not only un-Islamic and un-constitutional, but also a violation of the fundamental rights of the citizens of Pakistan.

Court rules it cannot ‘rush into’ something which is a govt domain

Mr Dogar had contended that all the assets, funds and properties of the state of Pakistan were vested with the people of Pakistan and not public functionaries, who are only entrusted with them so they could be used for the benefit of the people.

In a country burdened by foreign debt, where a substantial percentage of the populous lived under the poverty line with a lack of access to basic healthcare and education, such extravagant expenditure was not only against the traditions of simplicity of the Holy Prophet (peace be upon him), but also violates the fundamental rights of the citizens and, particularly, is in violation of Articles 2A, 3, 4, 9, 14, 25, 37 and 38 of the Constitution.

During the proceedings, the counsel proposed that the funds spent catering to public functionaries, and the accommodations provided to them, should be used for the benefit of the public at large.

The acute dissimilarities between the lifestyles of the common people and the extravagant lifestyles of public functionaries maintained at public expense were not only discriminatory, but also denuded the ordinary citizens of their basic dignity.

Now, in a six-page detailed judgement, the Supreme Court admitted that there is no escaping the fact that public property is a public trust in the hands of public functionaries.

But the counsel, the court held, had cast his net much too wide since the question of emoluments, accommodation and other perks to be provided to public functionaries was essentially a matter of government policy, involving political questions, a domain in which the court ordinarily does not intervene.

Published in Dawn, June 28th, 2015

Lavish lifestyle of VIPs political matter, says SC - Pakistan - DAWN.COM
Shameless monkeys leading the courthouse
 
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Actually, the court had previously rejected the case, stating that it was under the purview of the executive, and not a matter for the court. Now this is the appeal to have the case heard. This is called due process.

In all of this process, the dignity of the court must be respected, whether we personally agree with it or not.

Edit: Could it be any clearer?



Reining in VIP expenses - Newspaper - DAWN.COM

"The Supreme Court on Saturday rightly ruled that a petition seeking to slash the allegedly extravagant sums of public money spent on the President House, Prime Minister House and the various governor houses across the country is a matter of policy and a political question in which the court should not intervene."
 
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Hi,
all while people are dying in Karachi due to ineptness of govt, and SC is silent.

Since it has more pressing matter, lets look, no progress on Swiss case of mr 10%
No cases on economic terrorism, No cases of dealing with terrorists.
The men-in-black-coat have failed SC as an institution and, hence lost all the respect in the eyes of local pakistani
 
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Hi,
all while people are dying in Karachi due to ineptness of govt, and SC is silent.

Since it has more pressing matter, lets look no progress on Swiss case of mr 10%
No cases on economic terrorism, No cases of dealing with terrorists.
The men-in-court have failed SC as an institution and hence all the respect in the eyes of local pakistani

What do you propose the SC do about the deaths in Karachi, and on what basis?
 
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Hi,
Lets not act naive here shall we?
You know what i mean by that

My point is also equally valid. There has to be a basis for taking suo moto notice. Did the SC take such action over 70,000 deaths in the earthquake when poor enforcement of building codes contributed to the deaths? Same story here.
 
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Of all the corrupt Branches of our Country, that includes Politicians, Media, & Judiciary, these judges are to be hanged first. If they wanted all work that our Forces n it's institutions are doing i.e exposing terrorists n economic chains in Media n Political parties, they could have done it n help a lot across the board including some of those corrupt generals BUT no , they least care about people n constitution of Pakistan,
Infact don't dare to hang Terrorists n when some 1 showed balls to hear n sentence these dogs of hell, these corrupt mafia of our courts stand by to protect them by giving a stay on Mil Courts. Hang these judges first. Pathetic.
A Quote of Hazrat Ali
"Kufr ki hakomat Chal sakti ha , Zulm ki nahi"
 
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My point is also equally valid. There has to be a basis for taking suo moto notice. Did the SC take such action over 70,000 deaths in the earthquake when poor enforcement of building codes contributed to the deaths? Same story here.
Hi,
one was natural calamity at colossal level, whereas the other one is due to sheer neglect at administration , Shortage of power, No medical services provided by local government, in fact they are running away to Uk and US
 
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Hi,
one was natural calamity at colossal level, whereas the other one is due to sheer neglect at administration , Shortage of power, No medical services provided by local government, in fact they are running away to Uk and US

That would be your opinion, others may disagree. The SC has to decide for itself.
 
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Court rules it cannot ‘rush into’ something which is a govt domain

An institution that enjoys the same perks, how can it decide a case against itself.


Mr Dogar had contended that all the assets, funds and properties of the state of Pakistan were vested with the people of Pakistan

Ramzan may jhoot boltay huay bhi sharam nahi ati :partay:
 
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