Peshawar High Court gets first ever woman chief justice

The image shared by the Associated Press of Pakistan on March 29, 2023, shows first ever woman chief justice of Peshawar High Court, Justice Musarrat Hilali. (Photo courtesy: APP)
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Updated 30 March 2023
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Peshawar High Court gets first ever woman chief justice

  • Justice Musarrat Hilali will become the acting CJ of the Peshawar High Court starting April 1
  • In January, Pakistan appointed Justice Ayesha Malik as its first female Supreme Court judge

PESHAWAR: Justice Musarrat Hilali will become the acting chief justice of the Peshawar High Court starting April 1, making history as the first woman to be appointed to the position.

This year, Pakistani women have achieved many firsts in the legal fraternity. In January, Pakistan appointed Justice Ayesha Malik as its first female Supreme Court judge. Last month, Pakistani lawyers Sabahat Rizvi and Rabbiya Bajwa made history by getting elected to the positions of secretary and vice president of the Lahore High Court Bar Association respectively.

“The President … is pleased to appoint Ms Justice Musarrat Hilali, being the most senior judge of the Peshawar High Court Peshawar, to act as Chief Justice of the said court with effect from April 1 2023 till the appointment of a regular chief justice by the Judicial Commission of Pakistan,” a notification from the law ministry said.

The Judicial Commission is a nine-member body that decides on the promotion of judges in Pakistan.

Justice Hilali was born in Peshawar on August 8, 1961, at the home of Mir Hilali, an activist with the Khudai Khedmatgar, a predominantly Pashtun nonviolent resistance movement known for its activism against the British Raj in colonial India. She studied law from Khyber Law College at Peshawar University and enrolled as an advocate at the district courts in 1983, going on to become a high court advocate in 1988 and an advocate of the Supreme Court in 2006.

Justice Hilali was the first elected female secretary of the Peshawar Bar Association from 1988-1989, vice president twice from 1992 to 1994, and the first female General Secretary from 1997-1998. She was also the first woman twice elected as executive member of the Supreme Court Bar Association from 2007-2008 and 2008-2009 respectively.

Justice Hilali was appointed the first female Additional Advocate General of Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province from November 2001 till March 2004, the first woman Chairperson of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Environmental Protection Tribunal and the first female Ombudsperson for ‘Protection against the Harassment of Women in the Workplace.’

Justice Hilali is set to retire on August 7, 2023.

Senior Supreme Court advocate and member of the Pakistan Bar Association, Advocate Noor Alam Khan, said Justice Hilali had proved herself a “competent advocate” and her appointment was a “good sign for the people, especially for the women of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.”
 
He hailed her for her role as a women and human rights advocate in the conservative province where there were few women in her field.

“Justice Musarrat Hilali has always played her role in the support of democracy,” Khan said.

Activist and Peshawar High Court advocate Masooma Kulsoom Mir said women in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa were reluctant to become lawyers “due to social constraints” and the appointment of Justice Hilali would “play its role in breaking the cultural, economic and societal barriers women face when they join the field.”

“The appointment is a milestone achieved and Justice Musarrat Hilali will be an icon for aspiring female lawyers,” Mir said. “She is a source of inspiration and motivation for all of us practicing women lawyers.”


Pakistan proposes mining cooperation pact with Australia

Updated 4 sec ago
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Pakistan proposes mining cooperation pact with Australia

  • Islamabad wants intergovernmental agreement to attract long-term Australian investment
  • Government seeks to formalize gemstones sector to boost exports, jobs and value addition

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan proposed an intergovernmental agreement with Australia to support structured, long-term cooperation in the mining sector, as Islamabad looks to attract investment and develop its mineral resources, according to an official statement on Tuesday.

The issue came up for discussion during a meeting between Pakistan’s Petroleum Minister Ali Pervaiz Malik and the new Australian High Commissioner Timothy Kane. The meeting focused on exploring avenues for enhanced bilateral cooperation, particularly in the mining and gemstones sectors.

Pakistan has positioned mining as a potential engine of long-term growth, following years of underinvestment and stalled projects, and as resource-rich Asian economies increasingly look overseas to secure supplies of critical minerals and diversify investment portfolios.

“The Federal Minister welcomed the strong interest of Australian companies in Pakistan’s mining sector and highlighted the country’s immense untapped mineral potential, particularly in the Tethyan Belt,” the statement said.

“He proposed the possibility of an Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) between Pakistan and Australia to promote structured and long term cooperation in the mining sector,” it added.

The minister also highlighted the government’s efforts to develop and formalize the gemstones sector, emphasizing its potential for value addition, exports, and employment generation.

The Australian high commissioner said companies from his country were already involved in Pakistan’s Reko Diq copper and gold project while pointing out that additional firms had expressed interest in investing in Pakistan’s mining sector.

He also informed that Australia was open to cooperation in the gemstones sector through technical assistance, training and knowledge-sharing, noting the growing strategic importance of minerals for the global energy transition.