In a first, Pakistan’s chief justice nominates female judge for elevation to apex court

A Pakistani lawyer (R) uses his mobile phone in front of the Supreme Court building in Islamabad on November 28, 2019. (AFP)
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Updated 12 August 2021
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In a first, Pakistan’s chief justice nominates female judge for elevation to apex court

  • Justice Ayesha Malik went to Harvard Law School before joining her country’s judiciary in March 2012
  • Local media says Pakistan is the only South Asian country that has never appointed a female judge to its Supreme Court

ISLAMABAD: The Supreme Court of Pakistan may get the first female judge in the country’s history after Chief Justice Gulzar Ahmed nominated Lahore High Court’s Justice Ayesha Malik as the likely replacement of Justice Mushir Alam who is scheduled to retire next week.
According to the local media, a judicial commission will convene on September 9 to discuss her possible elevation to the top court of the country.
The Lahore High Court judge went to the Harvard Law School before joining her country’s judiciary in March 2012.




 Lahore High Court’s Justice Ayesha Malik. (Photo courtesy: Social Media)

Her nomination was welcomed by social media users who described her as Pakistan’s Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
“History has just been made in Pakistan’s Supreme Court,” Marvi Sirmed, a prominent activist, said in a Twitter post. “In country’s 74-year history, SC appoints it’s first woman judge.”

Pakistan’s Women’s Parliamentary Caucus also expressed its best wishes for the judge.

According to the website of Samaa TV, Malik is “mother of three children [who] used to fight pro bono cases for NGOs working on poverty alleviation, microfinance, and skills training programs.”
It added that Pakistan was the only South Asian country which had not elevated a woman judge to the apex court since its independence.
 

 


Pakistan says operation against Afghan forces to continue until objectives are achieved

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Pakistan says operation against Afghan forces to continue until objectives are achieved

  • Fighting started this week after Afghan forces attacked Pakistani military installations in retaliation for earlier strikes
  • Afghan government spokesperson says air defense attacks were carried out Pakistan aircraft in Kabul on Sunday morning

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan military’s operation against Afghanistan forces along the border is still underway and will continue until all objectives are achieved, state media reported on Sunday citing security sources. 

The latest round of clashes between the two sides began on Thursday night after Afghanistan’s forces attacked Pakistani military installations along their shared border. 

The worst fighting between the neighbors in several years began after Pakistani airstrikes targeted what Islamabad described as militant hideouts inside Afghanistan earlier this month, triggering retaliatory fire along the frontier and sharply escalating long-running tensions. Islamabad accuses Kabul of sheltering Pakistani Taliban militants responsible for attacks inside Pakistan, an allegation that Afghanistan denies.

Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said on Saturday that 352 Afghan Taliban fighters had been killed and more than 535 wounded since the latest phase of hostilities began.

“The security sources said Operation Ghazb Lil-Haq is still underway and will continue until objectives are achieved,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported.

The state media said Pakistan’s army has taken control of an Afghan Taliban military post at the border in northwestern Pakistan.

It shared a video of what it said were Pakistani soldiers crossing into Afghanistan from the northwestern North Waziristan area to capture the Afghan post on the other side of the border.

Arab News could not independently verify the claims. 

Earlier during the day, gunshots and explosions were reported in Kabul. Afghan government spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said the sounds were the result of Afghan forces targeting Pakistani aircraft over the capital.

“Air defense attacks were carried out in Kabul against Pakistani aircraft,” Mujahid wrote on X. “Kabul residents should not be concerned.”

Since the conflict began this week, diplomatic efforts have intensified with several countries, including global bodies such as the European Union and United Nations, urging restraint and calling for talks.