Pakistan minister defends constitutional amendments, criticizes judges for ‘political resignations’

Pakistan's State Minister for Interior Tallal Chaudry is addressing media in Islamabad, Pakistan, on April 18, 2025. (PID/File)
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Updated 16 November 2025
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Pakistan minister defends constitutional amendments, criticizes judges for ‘political resignations’

  • Two Supreme Court judges resigned in protest this week against constitutional amendments clipping judiciary’s powers
  • Amendments grant expanded powers to army chief, form separate court to interpret constitutional matters

ISLAMABAD: State Minister for Interior Tallal Chaudry doubled down on the parliament’s right to amend Pakistan’s constitution on Sunday, criticizing a move by two senior judges of the Supreme Court to resign in protest against it. 

Pakistan’s Supreme Court judges Athar Minallah and Mansoor Ali Shah resigned in protest hours after the 27th Constitutional Amendment was signed into law by President Asif Ali Zardari on Thursday. 

The controversial amendment grants lifetime immunity to the president and army chief. It also elevates Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir to the post of Chief of Defense Forces (CDS) with a five-year tenure and establishes a Federal Constitutional Court (FCC), separate from the Supreme Court, to hear and interpret constitutional matters. 

Critics argue the amendment was passed to grant the military expanded powers and clip the judiciary’s autonomy. Justice Shah, in his resignation letter on Thursday, described the amendment as a “grave assault” on Pakistan’s constitution. 

“These are political resignations and their judgments have also remained political for a long time,” Chaudry told reporters at a press conference in Faisalabad. 

Pakistani governments have remained at loggerheads with the Supreme Court in recent years. In the past, verdicts issued by top courts have resulted in the ousters of former prime ministers and suo motu notices that have angered civilian governments and hindered their policies.

Chaudry said it remains the right of the parliament to amend the constitution, adding that “the parliament should look like a parliament.”

“Hence, the parliament should become a parliament and the 26th and 27th amendments have provided stability to Pakistan,” the minister said.

“And if we have to make further amendments with the help of other parties in future, we will.”

Pakistan’s opposition parties, led by former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) and lawyers’ bodies, have also criticized the amendments. 

Lawyers’ bodies say the reforms allow the government to shape constitutional adjudication through direct influence over the appointment and composition of the newly formed FCC. 

Under the new arrangement, the executive selects the FCC’s chief justice and initial bench, while the Supreme Court becomes primarily an appellate forum.

City courts in Pakistan’s largest city Karachi remained closed for three consecutive days on Saturday in protest against the amendments. 


Pakistan’s Mohammad Nawaz among nominees for ICC’s Player of the Month award

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Pakistan’s Mohammad Nawaz among nominees for ICC’s Player of the Month award

  • Nawaz scored 104 runs in ODIs and took four wickets and made 52 runs in T20Is and took 11 wickets
  • South Africa’s Simon Harmer and Bangladesh’s Taijul Islam are other two nominees for the award

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Mohammad Nawaz is among three of the International Cricket Council’s (ICC) nominees for the Player of the Month for November award for his impressive white-ball performances last month, the global cricket body announced on Friday. 

Nawaz has been in sublime form for Pakistan, instrumental in the Green Shirts’ tri-series win over Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe at home last month. 

He amassed 104 ODI runs at an average of 52 with a strike rate of 114.28, while also taking four wickets. In T20Is, the left-arm spinner added 52 runs and claimed an impressive 11 wickets at just 12.72 last month. 

“His match-winning 3-17 in the final against Sri Lanka capped a standout campaign and secured his Player of the Series honor,” the ICC said. 

South Africa’s Simon Harmer and Bangladesh’s Taijul Islam were the other nominees for the award. Harmer claimed a staggering 17 wickets at an average of 8.94 across the two tests against India in Kolkata and Guwahati.

Meanwhile, Islam picked up 13 wickets at 26.30 in the 2-0 series win over Ireland last month, finishing as the leading wicket-taker of the series.