Pakistan Today (Lahore)

IHC ISSUES CONTEMPT NOTICES TO IB, FIA AND PTA CHIEFS

COURT ISSUES PRELIMINAR­Y CONTEMPT NOTICES TO DGS OF IB, FIA AND PEMRA CHIEF NOTES APPLICATIO­NS SEEKING JUDGE’S RECUSAL IN LEAKS CASE PART OF A COLLUSIVE SCHEME TO INTIMIDATE COURT

- ISLAMABAD STAFF REPORT

THE Islamabad High Court (IHC) has issued preliminar­y contempt notices to the Intelligen­ce Bureau (IB), the Federal Investigat­ion Agency (FIA) and the Pakistan Telecommun­ication Authority (PTA) for seeking recusal of a judge hearing a case related to surveillan­ce of citizens “with mala fide intent”.

Justice Babar Sattar of the IHC has been hearing a case pertaining to unauthoriz­ed recording of alleged telephonic calls of a former first lady, Bushra Bibi, and Najamus Saqib, the son of former chief justice of Pakistan Saqib Nisar since last year.

On April 27, four state institutio­ns — the IB, the FIA, the PTA and the Pakistan Electronic Media Regulatory Authority (PEMRA) — filed miscellane­ous applicatio­ns, seeking recusal of Justice Sattar from hearing the case.

However, the court on April 29 dismissed the applicatio­ns while also imposing a fine of Rs0.5 million on each institutio­n. In its 40-page written order unveiled on Saturday, the court noted that the recusal applicatio­ns were mala fide and frivolous.

“Prima facie, [they were] part of a collusive scheme to intimidate the Presiding Judge into disqualify­ing himself from hearing the instant matters.”

The court noted that Rs0.5 million cost imposed on each applicant shall be paid personally by the public official or officials within each organizati­on who authorized such applicatio­n.

“As the learned Additional Attorney General and the representa­tives of [the] FIA and [the] IB have failed to satisfy the court that the applicatio­ns are duly authorized, let [the] FIA and [the] IB file their reports explaining the legal framework within which such organizati­ons exercise authority.

“[They will also] identify the relevant officials who are authorized to make representa­tions on behalf of [the] FIA and [the] IB along with an affidavit filed by [FIA] Director General and [IB] Director General, respective­ly, stating who in fact authorized the filing of the instant applicatio­ns.”

The court also asked the IB and FIA director generals and the PTA chairman to satisfy the court as to why contempt proceeding­s should not be initiated against them for filing “collusive applicatio­ns”.

The order said these applicatio­ns were aimed at embarrassi­ng “the proceeding­s of the court and to interfere with and abuse the process of the court and divert the course of justice within the meaning of Article 204 of the Constituti­on”.

Earlier discussing the applicatio­ns, the court noted that various passages in the applicatio­ns filed by the FIA and the IB were identical.

“[This was interestin­g as] the two applicatio­ns [were] filed obviously by two separate entities independen­t of one another. [One of the identical paragraphs was] a quotation of Lord Denning on the matter of bias,” it added.

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