A Pakistan court on Friday gave a last chance to the government to respond to a petition seeking contempt proceedings against President Asif Ali Zardari for not acting on a suggestion that he should give up the political office of head of the ruling PPP.
A five-judge bench of the Lahore High Court Chief Justice Umer Ata Bandial asked the government to submit its response by 18 March.
‘We have enough material to give a verdict on whether the writ petition about indicting the President for contempt is maintainable or not,’ Bandial observed while hearing the case.
‘We have to conclude this case as it has been lingering on for the past eight months. The federation is given a last chance to submit a reply,’ he said.
At the last hearing, the High Court had asked the government to state whether ‘President Zardari can dissociate from political activities or not’.
The Chief Justice asked whether the President was supporting the agenda of any political party.
‘Is the President non-partisan?’ he asked, seeking a written reply from the government.
Additional Advocate General Abdul Hai Gilani requested the court to allow advocate Wasim Sajjad, the counsel for the federal government, to further argue the case.
‘Mr Sajjad is busy with another case in the Supreme Court in Islamabad and he will appear in the next hearing,’ he said.
The Lahore High Court had last year suggested that Zardari should give up the post of the head of the Pakistan People's Party as the President is expected to be impartial and apolitical.
A five-judge bench of the Lahore High Court Chief Justice Umer Ata Bandial asked the government to submit its response by 18 March.
‘We have enough material to give a verdict on whether the writ petition about indicting the President for contempt is maintainable or not,’ Bandial observed while hearing the case.
‘We have to conclude this case as it has been lingering on for the past eight months. The federation is given a last chance to submit a reply,’ he said.
At the last hearing, the High Court had asked the government to state whether ‘President Zardari can dissociate from political activities or not’.
The Chief Justice asked whether the President was supporting the agenda of any political party.
‘Is the President non-partisan?’ he asked, seeking a written reply from the government.
Additional Advocate General Abdul Hai Gilani requested the court to allow advocate Wasim Sajjad, the counsel for the federal government, to further argue the case.
‘Mr Sajjad is busy with another case in the Supreme Court in Islamabad and he will appear in the next hearing,’ he said.
The Lahore High Court had last year suggested that Zardari should give up the post of the head of the Pakistan People's Party as the President is expected to be impartial and apolitical.