Defiant coalition government says won't be 'bullied' as court orders politicians to hold election talks

Maulana Fazlur Rehman, the leader of the coalition government and parties of the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM), speaks during a press conference in Islamabad on July 25, 2022. (AFP/File)
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Updated 20 April 2023
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Defiant coalition government says won't be 'bullied' as court orders politicians to hold election talks

  • Telling us to hold talks with Khan is an insult to parliament, politics, says PDM chief Maulana Fazlur Rehman
  • Supreme Court directs political parties to hold talks, form consensus on date for holding elections

ISLAMABAD: The ongoing tussle between the Pakistani government and the judiciary intensified on Thursday after the chief of the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) which comprises parties in the coalition government, defied the apex court's orders to say that no one can be “bullied” into holding talks with the opposition.

The development came after a three-member bench of the apex court, led by Chief Justice Umar Ata Bandial, summoned representatives of Pakistan's major political parties to the court on Thursday. The bench asked the government and its allies to hold talks with ex-prime minister Imran Khan’s Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party to finalize a date for holding elections in the country's national and provincial assemblies.

A day earlier, the Supreme Court rejected a petition filed by the defense ministry to hold polls on the same date across the country in October.

In Thursday's short order, the court said that after having heard “positive statements” from representatives of all political parties in the country, it is optimistic that all parties would agree to an election date sooner rather than later. The bench adjourned the hearing till April 27 on account of the Eid Al-Fitr holidays.

Tensions between the government and the judiciary have escalated ever since a three-member bench, led by the chief justice, ordered voting to be held in Pakistan's Punjab province on May 14. The government, on the other hand, says it is not economically viable to hold elections for two provinces on one day and in the rest of the country on another. 

In response to the court’s order, Maulana Fazlur Rehman, president of the PDM, said the bench can not “bully” the ruling coalition into holding talks.

“The National Assembly has passed a law [to limit the powers of the CJP], but the way the court is trying to exercise its authority through bullying, I think the court has already lost that authority,” Rehman told reporters during a news conference. 

The PDM chief was referring to the Supreme Court (Practices and Procedure) Bill, 2023, passed by the parliament and the senate last month to curtail the powers of the country’s top judge. While the bill is yet to become law, the apex court issued an interim order on April 13 to stay its implementation until further notice.

“The parliament has lost its confidence in the bench, then why should we appear before it?” he said, adding that parliament was neither obliged to appear before the bench nor was it ready to negotiate with Khan.

“He [Khan] has only been trying to create difficulties in politics and make poor decisions. Yet, the court is telling us to rally behind him. We cannot accept this coercion from the court as we think that this whole process is illegal.”

The PDM chief pointed out that there is no point in holding talks with Khan because the ex-premier had already said he would not accept election results if he doesn't win by a two-thirds majority. 

“Telling us to talk to him is an insult to parliament and politics,” Rehman said. “I accept your justice, but not your gavel or your coercion”.

In a separate press conference, Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, who also heads the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), a key coalition partner of the government, said that while he had always tried to bring allied parties on the same page to hold dialogue with opponents, it would be “very difficult to convince the allies with a gun to our heads.”

“Holding dialogue is necessary, even if we have to talk with our opponents, to convey that we all want elections to be held across the country on the same day,” Bilawal said.

“[But] it will be very difficult, as objections have been raised in this regard and I am also in agreement with this point of view, that no one can negotiate with a gun to their head," he said. 

"You cannot expect that consensus would be reached in negotiations with a gun to our heads, or that the negotiations would be successful with a gun to our heads.”

He said that the 3-2 minority decision of the bench to hold elections in May, which was being “imposed on the government” under the pretext of a majority decision, was the “gun to our heads” he was referring to.

“We still believe that talks between political parties are necessary, and if we don’t find a solution [to this impasse] then democracy and the federation will be in danger,” he said.

“Unless the order to hold talks is not stayed or suspended, as long as you’ve got this gun to our heads, how will I convince my allies to negotiate?” he said.

Since his ouster last April, ex-premier Khan has refused to acknowledge the Sharif-led coalition government and has been protesting against it. His party and its allies dissolved the legislative assemblies in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa back in January in a bid to push early elections in the country.

According to Pakistan's constitution, elections must be held within 90 days of the dissolution of the assemblies. The government has ruled out elections before schedule, citing security threats and lack of funds, as the reasons. 
 


UAE president wraps first official Pakistan visit with talks on trade and regional issues

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UAE president wraps first official Pakistan visit with talks on trade and regional issues

  • Pakistan’s JF-17 fighter jets escort Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed’s aircraft as it enters the country’s airspace
  • The two countries discuss cooperation in energy, investment, technology and people-to-people exchanges

ISLAMABAD: Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, President of the United Arab Emirates, on Friday paid his first official visit to Pakistan since assuming office, holding talks with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif that focused on deepening economic cooperation and regional coordination, the Prime Minister’s Office said.

The visit, undertaken at Sharif’s invitation, comes as Pakistan seeks to strengthen ties with Gulf partners and attract foreign investment to support its economy.

The visiting leader arrived at Nur Khan Airbase in Rawalpindi, where he was received by Sharif, Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar, Chief of Army Staff Field Marshal Asim Munir and senior members of the federal cabinet. His aircraft was escorted by a formation of JF-17 fighter jets as it entered Pakistani airspace, and he was accorded a 21-gun salute.

“Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed held substantive talks with the Prime Minister,” the official statement circulated at the end of his visit said. “Both sides underscored the importance of expanding collaboration in economic cooperation, investment, energy, infrastructure development, IT, technology and people-to-people exchanges.”

“They also agreed on the need to enhance bilateral trade, which had great potential for mutually beneficial growth,” it added.

The statement said the two leaders also exchanged views on important regional and international developments and reaffirmed their shared commitment to continue close coordination on matters of mutual interest.

Islamabad was decorated with Pakistani and Emirati flags and large billboards ahead of the visit, while the capital observed a public holiday as authorities rolled out traffic restrictions.

State-run broadcasters and private television channels aired footage of the UAE president’s arrival and ceremonial reception.

Pakistan considers the UAE one of its closest regional and economic partners. The Gulf state is Islamabad’s third-largest trading partner after China and the United States and a major source of foreign investment, with Emirati investment in Pakistan exceeding $10 billion over the past two decades, according to the UAE’s foreign ministry.

Pakistani policymakers also view the UAE as an important export destination due to its geographical proximity, which reduces transportation and freight costs.