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Pak election commission challenges Lahore High Court order in SC to prevent delay in polls

The LHC on Wednesday suspended the decision of the ECP to appoint bureaucrats as Returning Officers (ROs) and district returning officers (DROs) for the February 8 elections prompting the poll body to pause a training session for ROs and DROs on Thursday.
Last Updated : 15 December 2023, 17:19 IST
Last Updated : 15 December 2023, 17:19 IST

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Islamabad: Pakistan's poll body on Friday approached the Supreme Court against a Lahore High Court verdict on the appointment of bureaucrats as Returning Officers, a ruling that led to uncertainty over the much-awaited February 8 general elections.

The development, aimed at preventing a potential delay in the upcoming general elections, came even as at least three main political parties announced to become parties in the case being heard by the Lahore High Court (LHC), media reports said.

The Secretary of the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) approached the Supreme Court to challenge the LHC ruling and late on Friday evening, a three-judge bench, led by Chief Justice of Pakistan Qazi Faez Isa, is hearing the petition, The Express Tribune newspaper reported.

The development followed a meeting between Chief Election Commissioner Sikandar Sultan Raja and CJP Isa, also attended by Justice Sardar Tariq, Justice Ijazul Ahsan, and the Attorney General for Pakistan that discussed the situation following the LHC verdict, it said.

The LHC on Wednesday suspended the decision of the ECP to appoint bureaucrats as Returning Officers (ROs) and district returning officers (DROs) for the February 8 elections prompting the poll body to pause a training session for ROs and DROs on Thursday.

The LHC reserved the verdict on Wednesday while hearing a plea by jailed former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party. On Friday, alleging that Khan’s party is trying to delay the polls, Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N), and Balochistan Awami Party (BAP) decided to jump in the fray.

Dawn.com described pausing the training session for ROs and DROs as “an exercise without which polls on February 8 could be in trouble.”

“The high court order seemingly brought the electoral process to a standstill, causing widespread concern among political parties — including the petitioner PTI — regarding general elections,” it added.

LHC’s Justice Ali Baqar Najafi had said that on factual grounds, “the apparent absence of a level playing field” for the political party of the petitioner (PTI) is visible to all and has also been seriously noted by many independent groups.

PML-N Central Information Secretary Marriyum Aurangzeb posted on social media platform X: “The PML-N will be a party against the LHC’s decision regarding ROs. The party’s legal team had begun preparing a petition in this regard.”

The PPP also announced that it would file a plea in the LHC seeking to become a party in the case while BAP’s Khalid Magsi, in a statement, said he had directed his party to prepare a petition seeking to become a party in the case, Dawn.com added.

Leaders from both PPP and PML-N blamed Khan and his PTI for delaying the polls.

“The PTI has once again tried to derail the electoral process,” Dawn.com quoted the PPP leader, who also claimed, “This reflects their undemocratic and apolitical mindset. It is clear that the PTI does not want elections to be held in the country.”

PML-N leader Ahsan Iqbal was quoted as accusing the PTI of “conspiring to sabotage elections” in the country and saying,

“This proves that they can see their future, they can see defeat in polls and to save themselves from this defeat, they are trying to delay the elections.” Meanwhile, an ECP official told Dawn that the announcement of the election schedule depended on the final verdict in the case related to the appointment of DROs and ROs.

“The ROs are the ones who issue public notices inviting nominations and also receive and scrutinise nomination papers. An election schedule cannot be issued in the absence of ROs, they are the ones to implement the schedule,” he had said.

The unnamed ECP official also drew attention to another hurdle, which Dawn said, was “the delimitation cases being remanded to the election watchdog by the high courts for reconsideration.”

“The official claimed that the judiciary, not the ECP, would be responsible in case elections were delayed,” the official said.

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Published 15 December 2023, 17:19 IST

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