“Today must be a great disappointment to those who expected the country to be destabilised by a clash of institutions. That this did not happen must be of special disappointment to our external enemies and mafias within.”
The tweet by Prime Minister Imran Khan was in response to the Supreme Court order that allowed the government to bring necessary legislation to determine the tenure of the chief of army staff while granting incumbent army chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa six months’ extension.
There was a feeling of relief in the government camp, and when Attorney-General for Pakistan (AGP) Anwar Mansoor Khan, former law minister Mohamed Farogh Naseem, and the prime minister’s special assistants – Dr Firdous Ashiq Awan and Shahzad Akbar – appeared at a joint news conference, they tried to portray the three-member bench’s decision as the government’s success.
But their triumphalism aside, what happened in Courtroom No-1 during the last three days cannot gloss over the sheer incompetence of the government.
If the apex court did not show restraint, the country would have been grappling with a serious constitutional crisis.
It all began on November 26 when the Supreme Court bench, headed by Chief Justice of Pakistan Asif Saeed Khosa, took up a petition challenging the extension granted to the army chief’s tenure.
Initially, few had taken interest in the petition filed by a lawyer, who habitually moves the top court on different issues.
The news channels were not giving much importance when the proceedings kicked off.
But things began to change fast when the three-judge bench started asking serious questions of the attorney-general.
As proceedings moved further, it was evident that the issue was not a routine one as many might have thought at the beginning.
What alerted the judges was the failure of the attorney-general to come up with convincing arguments to justify the extension.
The chief law officer of the state could not give definitive answers when the bench pressed to cite specific laws that permitted extension or reappointment of the army chief.
It was during the proceedings that the Supreme Court found out that the government even did not follow the proper legal procedure to issue the notification of the army chief’s extension.
The detailed examination of the issue revealed that on August 19, Prime Minister Khan issued the notification only to be told later that under the Constitution only the president could issue the notification of the army chief’s extension.
In order to rectify the glaring error, the Prime Minister’s Office moved a fresh summary, which was quickly approved by President Dr Arif Alvi.
However, it emerged later that the prime minister could not send the summary to the president without his cabinet’s approval.
The summary was then circulated among the cabinet members but no fresh notification was issued.
Also, the court questioned how the army chief’s tenure be extended under Rule 255 of Army Regulations, which did not explicitly talk of an extension in the army chief’s tenure.
In an unprecedented move, the Supreme Court bench suspended the notification of army chief’s appointment.
The court adjourned the proceedings to November 27, with a direction to the attorney-general to come up with a fresh notification, the same day the prime minister was to chair a routine cabinet meeting.
By the time he reached his office to preside over the meeting, the court had already suspended the notification, throwing a serious challenge to the government.
The issue was discussed in detail.
The cabinet then took a break and reconvened in the evening.
The second session was primarily meant to discuss the controversy.
In view of the court’s observations and objections, the federal cabinet moved a fresh summary after amending Rule 255 of the Army Regulations by adding the new words “extension in service”.
Law Minister Naseem also decided to resign in order to represent the army chief before the Supreme Court.
With the latest changes, the attorney-general was confident that the issue would be settled and the court would dispose of the petition.
Time was running out as the current tenure of the army chief was to expire on the midnight of November 28.
Thus, the government effectively had only 24 hours to rectify the procedural error.
The situation, however, took a turn for the worst when the Supreme Court found out that the amendment in Rule 255 of the Army Regulations had nothing to do with the chief of the army staff.
Not just that, the second summary moved by the Prime Minister’s Office to the president mentioned “reappointment” of the army chief, but the notification issued with the approval of the president talked of “extension” instead.
This irked the Chief Justice Khosa, who remarked that educational degrees of the officials who were dealing with the matter needed to be verified.
What happened in the courtroom soon became a major embarrassment for the government, as many started questioning its competence.
A few days ago, no one could even imagine in their dreams that the issue of the army chief’s extension would dominate the national scene, with people openly debating the issue on the TV channels.
The most immediate challenge for the government was to avert a potential constitutional crisis in case the court passed any adverse order.
As the clock was ticking, the prime minister convened yet another huddle on November 27 to find a way out of the current impasse.
This time, apart from his legal team, army chief Bajwa joined in.
Another summary was prepared and then circulated among the cabinet members, who gave their approval after midnight.
On November 28, which would have been Bajwa’s last day as army chief had the notification remained suspended, the attorney-general presented a fresh summary.
The apex court bench again raised questions, particularly about the reference to the Supreme Court in the summary.
The bench also ordered the attorney-general to present before it the retirement notifications of former army chiefs – General (retired) Raheel Sharif and General (retired) Ashfaq Pervaiz Kayani.
Still, no one knew what would happen next since it was evident from the proceedings that the government’s legal team failed to cite any provision of the Constitution or in the Army Act that allowed extension or reappointment of the army chief.
The issue could not have gone that far had the government acknowledged mistakes the very first day of the hearing and sought court’s guidance.
But that was now irrelevant since the court now had to pass the order.
During the course of proceedings, the court then offered the attorney-general a conditional extension in the army chief’s tenure, subject to legislation within three months to address the loopholes in the laws.
The attorney-general, however, sought six months and the army chief’s lawyer Naseem agreed to give an undertaking to the court for necessary legislation.
After a three-hour break, a new summary was submitted by the government before the court, which then issued a short order extending the incumbent army chief’s tenure for six months to give the government time to bring changes to the Army Act keeping in view the scope of Article 243.
The verdict may have ended the potential constitutional impasse, but the entire controversy has triggered a debate on whether the government, which could not draft a proper summary, is capable of delivering on challenges that are far more daunting and complex.
In this hour of crisis, one has to give credit to the sense of humour of Pakistani public.
Someone aptly summed up the incompetence of the government by saying: “The PTI has promised to create 10mn new jobs, but instead it put the most secured job in Pakistan in real danger.”