Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

I agree, but I doubt it. CJ thinks he is de-facto chief executive.

Liaquat Ali Khan: Pakistan Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

The Pakistan Supreme Court, under Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry’s feisty leadership, is setting new precedents in challenging presidential immunity granted under the Pakistan Constitution and laws. The case involving presidential immunity has dramatic consequences for Pakistan’s seedy political culture that thrives on family legacies, arbitrary pardons, unresolved corruption cases, and lack of accountability. The case is also instructive for the larger Muslim world where rulers are brutal, have the Messiah complex, and assert willful powers to seek immunity from crimes they commit to perpetuate their hold on power.

As a general principle, modern states grant immunity so that the president can discharge state duties without threats of civil litigation and criminal prosecution. However, presidential immunity is far from absolute. Absolute immunity is no longer the law in most legal systems, including international law. No president ordering genocide, for example, can claim immunity. President Asif Ali Zardari is not accused of committing grave crimes. Yet, in light of his personal history and reputation for money laundering, Zardari makes a poor case to deserve immunity in what is known as the Swiss case.

Swiss Case

The Swiss case is a money laundering case pending in Swiss courts against President Zardari and his wife, slain Benazir Bhutto. The case involves two Swiss companies that paid kickbacks and commissions to Zardari for procuring government contracts while Bhutto was the Prime Minister of Pakistan. In 1997, Pakistan requested the Swiss authorities that Pakistan be made a party in the civil suit against the Bhutto-Zardari couple since Pakistan is a lawful claimant to receive the laundered money. The request was granted. The Swiss court ruled against the Bhutto-Zardari couple and ordered them to return the laundered money to Pakistan. The couple appealed against the verdict.

While the appeal was pending, General Musharraf, under pressure from the United States, entered into an agreement with Bhutto to pave the way for general elections in Pakistan. Under the agreement, known as the National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO), the Swiss case against the Bhutto-Zardari couple was withdrawn. After the general elections, Zardari replaced Musharraf as the President of Pakistan.

In 2009, the Pakistan Supreme Court, in an en banc decision of 17 Justices, declared the NRO unconstitutional. Consequently, the Swiss case halted under the NRO was revived. The Court ordered the Prime Minister, as head of the government, to send a letter to the Swiss authorities to reopen the case for final resolution. The Prime Minister, a staunch Zardari supporter, refused to write the so-called “Swiss letter”, arguing that the President enjoys immunity under the Constitution.

The Supreme Court convicted the Prime Minster for refusing to obey the Court order and detained him for less than a minute while the Prime Minister was present in the Court. The Court later ruled that the Prime Minster, after conviction, was no longer qualified under the Constitution to remain a member of the Parliament and to hold the office of the Prime Minister. Zardari’s political party that holds a coalition majority in the parliament elected a new Prime Minister. The new Prime Minister, another Zardari protégé, is unlikely to comply with the Court order, thus extending the immunity controversy.

Immunity Controversy

Two distinct questions are related to presidential immunity. First, whether the president is entitled to immunity in the Swiss case. Second, whether presidential immunity bars the Prime Minister from writing the Swiss letter. The Supreme Court has not ruled on the first question because the government decided not to litigate presidential immunity. Therefore, the second question has become the eye of the storm.

In order to understand the second question, however, an understanding of the first question is illuminating. Article 248 of the Constitution spells out presidential immunity. Under the Article, the president is not answerable to any court for any act performed in the exercise of presidential powers. The president is immune from criminal proceedings, arrest warrants, and imprisonment. The president also enjoys limited immunity in civil lawsuits. A civil lawsuit, however, may be instituted against the president 60 days after a notice in writing, containing the particulars of the case, has been delivered to the president. Since the Swiss case is “civil proceedings in which relief is claimed against the president,” presidential immunity is constitutionally unavailable six months after serving the required notice.

Legal experts may have told Zardari that he is not entitled to constitutional immunity in the Swiss case. Therefore, the Zardari government has constructed the national debate in terms of who decides the question of immunity. The government claims that the Executive and the Parliament, the institutions of elected representatives of the people, decide the question of presidential immunity. The Supreme Court, however, has ruled that the government must write the Swiss letter, assuming without deciding that Zardari is not entitled to immunity in the Swiss case. This institutional battle deepens the immunity controversy.

The Zardari government argues a losing case. Surely, all state institutions are guardians of the Constitution. No other institution but the Court, however, has the power of judicial review to strike down executive orders and statutes that the parliament passes. Under constitutional systems, neither parliament and nor government is above the law. The political slogan that “parliament is sovereign” is an artifact of the historical battle between the Crown and Parliament in England. The slogan has no value in modern states committed to constitutionalism and fundamental human rights.

Since the Pakistan Supreme Court is the final authority in interpreting the Constitution, its decisions are binding on the government. (In the United States, even a federal distinct judge, let alone the Supreme Court, may strike down a statute that Congress has passed.) If the president or his ruling political party were to exercise the final authority to determine presidential immunity, the executive abuse of power would be unchecked.

Judicial Restraint

Though the Zardari government is relying on frivolous constitutional arguments to make its case, the Pakistan Supreme Court must nonetheless exercise judicial restraint. High courts armed with the power to challenge the government conduct themselves with utmost judicial restraint. They weigh every aspect of the case including its legal, social, economic, and political implications. For high courts, whether in the United States or Pakistan, law cannot be separated from morality, politics, economics, and other social conditions. High courts commission unified awareness in deciding cases. Their decisions are not simply legally sound, but also intelligent and wise.

The Pakistan Supreme Court has established a legal precedent that the Court may summon the Prime Minister to appear in person. To his great credit, the Prime Minister quietly left the office after receiving the notice of disqualification. This executive submission to the rule of law is exceptional in the Muslim world where rulers (Syria, Libya, Egypt) use tanks and guns to protect their regimes. The Pakistan Supreme Court has done well. However, it needs to pause before disqualifying another Prime Minister. The general elections are only months away. The people may vote against the ruling party and bring down President Zardari. That will be the end of his immunity. Wise courts develop a sharp sense of temporality. They can wait in patience to settle potentially anarchic controversies.

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

He has yet to challenge presidential immunity. He has asked the PM to follow up on the letter to the Swiss Authorities. The issue is not presidential immunity. The issue is that in 6 months Zardari will no longer be President. Then the courts can kick start the process right away.

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

The president and company should exercise restraint on haram khori.

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

LMAO!!!

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

The presidential term is longer than this parliament's term. There is strong reason to believe if this system continues, he can be elected again as president for another term, since PPP has a good majority in Senate.

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

Wait what? His term is longer than 5 years? How is that possible? I don't recall reading that anywhere.

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

Parliament was formed in February and Zardari elected in September 2008. Both have 5 years term.

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

Ah right. That I get. But frankly with elections sometime in Feb or March 2013 and by the time Parliament comes into play it could be a completely different ball game. I doubt he will stay on as President.

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

Do you know how president is elected in Pakistan? Each member of Sindh assembly has more than double weight and each member Baluchistan assembly and each member of senate (all where PPP and allies have substantial majority after elections) has more than 5 times the weight of each member of Punjab Assembly.

The senate would remain the same after elections and PPP and allies have good strength there. Unless something radical happens, I can reasonably assume that the office of president would remain under PPP control.

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

You want to cut off their lifeline? :bummer:

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

See that I did not know. I thought it was a good old fashioned Senate vote. I guess there is more reading for me to do.

So each provincial assembly votes as well as the senate?

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

Yes, Provincial + Centre + Senate. Provincial votes are prorated.

Pakistani presidential election, 2008 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

if you have majority in Sindh + Baluchistan + Senate, you are pretty much there.

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

You're missing the point. The concept of judicial restraint is that court must not act as a partisan tool & it must maintain impartiality & credibility. Clearly, this CJ is a narcissistic clown who wants to be in the news everyday & damn be the country, court or courts credibility.

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

^yea right......... lets let zardari and co get away with each and every thing.............. since its ''democracy''..........

jiyalay are fun..

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

Why do you single out Zardari every time? Others are not angles either. This CJ is only after Zardari. That is a great problem which you guys either ignorant or purposely targeting Zardari only showing your bias for one person only.

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

:omg:

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

^^^^^^^^^

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Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

What you said is true, But there is something which is called Impeachment of President, the Parliament can do that!!! and since PPP may not get sizeable majority in the NA, the Impeachment may come along and that would be a real bad day for Zardari...

Getting re-elected is somewhat possible but not that easy, the Balochistan is the Key to the presidency and senate, if some how Anti-PPP forces manage to win Majority in Balochistan and KPK, then the votes from Sindh alone won't be helpful for Zardari for re-election..

About the allies, i.e. MQM, PML-Q weren't they allied with President Mushy??? but then they were no where to be seen when Mushy wanted the most!!! so i don't think so these allies will be of any help to Zardari if he looses majority in NA

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

The judiciary has become party to politics. The opposition is targetting the government through the judiciary. Every week there is some petition filed against the government.

Re: Supreme Court Should Exercise Judicial Restraint on Presidential Immunity

Do you really not understand what the game is all about? PPP desperately needs something for sloganeering as it has everything but performance. Military is not willing to send them packing. Now it's all on judiciary to give them their election card. PPP is doing everything in its power to annoy the judiciary so that Zardari gets something to show in poll campaign.

PPP and all of its supporters need to understand that democracy is not all about completing term, it also means performance.