Supreme Court declares NRO null and void
Pakistan court annuls amnesty deal
Senior Lawyers Dr Mubashir and Abdul Hafeez Pirzada congratulate each other after the judgment regarding the NRO case.
ISLAMABAD:
In what has been billed as a verdict that may change the course of
country’s political history, the Supreme Court on Wednesday declared
the controversial National Reconciliation Ordinance (NRO) as never
to have existed and against the Constitution by reviving all cases
and reversing acquittals of its beneficiaries, thus putting the PPP
parliamentarians and cabinet members and President Asif Zardari in a
quandary.
In a late-night short order that has no parallel in country’s
judicial history, the 17-judge bench, headed by Chief Justice
Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry, ordered the federal government to take
immediate steps to seek revival of the original requests or claims
for mutual legal assistance to pursue money laundering cases pending
in foreign countries, including Switzerland.
Historic as it is, the Supreme Court verdict has also raised as many
questions as it has answered regarding the fate of the cases.
Perhaps in coming days and weeks it may become clear if the cases in
Switzerland can at all be revived because, according to legal
experts, the Swiss legal system does not have any such provision.
Since the verdict has not directly touched the immunity issue of the
president, legal opinion remains divided on whether President
Zardari can be prosecuted on the basis of corruption cases as they
existed before the promulgation of NRO on Oct 5, 2007.
Similarly, fate of those who were convicted in absentia and are at
present members of parliament or even in the cabinet also hangs in
the balance and depends on the view and action of National Assembly
Speaker Fehmida Mirza and Senate Chairman Farooq Naek.
Equally important will be the reaction of the MQM as a number of its
leaders and members were direct beneficiaries of the NRO in
thousands of criminal cases that the party has always dismissed as
politically motivated, but now stand revived as a result of the
verdict.
Authored by the Chief Justice himself, the 18-page verdict was quite
clear on many points as it also revived all convictions or sentences
under section 31-A of the NAB Ordinance that deals with punishment
to an absconder after declaring him proclaimed offender. Since the
NRO has been declared void ab initio, any benefit derived by any
person in pursuance of Section 6 (amendment in section 31-A of the
NAB Ordinance) will also be deemed never to have legally accrued to
any such person, and consequently, of no legal effect. It held that
cases under investigation or pending inquiry and which had either
been withdrawn or where the inquiry had been terminated on account
of the NRO shall also stand revived and the authorities shall
proceed in the said matters in accordance with law.
As a consequence of the declaration, the judgment said, all cases in
which the accused persons were either discharged or acquitted under
Section 2 of NRO (amendment in Section 494 of the Criminal Procedure
Code) or where proceedings pending against the holders of public
office had been wound up in view of Section 7 shall revert to the
pre-Oct 5, 2007, position.
All courts, including the trial, the appellate and the revision
courts, were ordered to summon the persons accused in such cases and
then to proceed from the stage from where proceedings were closed
under the NRO.
The federal government, all provincial governments and all relevant
and competent authorities, including NAB Prosecutor General Dr
Danishwar, the special prosecutors in accountability courts, the
prosecutors general in the four provinces and other officers or
officials involved in the prosecution of criminal offenders, were
also directed to offer every possible assistance required by the
courts in this connection.
The court also ordered the federal government and other competent
authorities to proceed against former attorney general Malik
Mohammad Qayyum by declaring unauthorised, unconstitutional and
illegal his acts of writing to various authorities/courts in foreign
countries, including Switzerland.
The court noted that no order or any authority was established
authorising the former AG to address unauthorised communications and
thus the conduct of Malik Qayyum resulted in unlawful abandonment of
claims of the government to huge amounts of the allegedly laundered
money lying in foreign countries, including Switzerland.
The court also expressed its displeasure over the conduct and lack
of proper and honest assistance and cooperation to the court by NAB
Chairman Nawid Ahsan, the prosecutor general of the NAB and of
Additional Prosecutor General Abdul Baseer Qureshi. It suggested the
federal government to appoint competent, honest persons who fulfil
the criteria outlined in Section 6 of the NAB Ordinance. The court
asked the government to go through its observations in the Asfandyar
Wali case. The verdict regretted that the conduct of NAB’s bosses
made it impossible for the court to trust them.
However, till such fresh appointments the present incumbents may
continue to discharge their obligations strictly in accordance with
law, but obligated them to transmit periodical reports of the
actions taken by them to the monitoring cell of this Court, which is
being established through succeeding parts of this judgment.
The cell so established in the Supreme Court will comprise the chief
justice or any judge to be nominated by him to monitor the progress
and the proceedings in the cases under the NAB Ordinance.
Similar cells will also be set up in the high courts of all the
provinces.
The law secretary was directed to take steps to increase the number
of accountability courts to ensure expeditious disposal of cases.


