Inquiry must be conducted against judges before outright dismissal: Shaukat Siddiqui’s counsel

Former Islamabad High Court judge Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui;s counsel told the Supreme Court on Tuesday that an inquiry must be conducted into the allegations levelled against a judge before out rightly dismissing them.

A five-member larger bench of the SC, headed by Justice Umar Ata Bandial had taken up an appeal by Siddiqui against the opinion of the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) and the October 11, 2018, notification under which he was dismissed as a superior court judge for a speech that he gave on July 21, 2018 at the District Bar Association, Rawalpindi.

It is pertinent to note that the former judge, in his speech made remarks about the involvement of certain officers of the executive organ of the state, specifically the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), in the affairs of the judiciary to allegedly manipulate the formation of benches of the high court.

Siddiqui’s counsel Hamid Khan said as per Article 209 of the Constitution, it was mandatory to investigate the allegations against a judge before deciding whether they should be removed or not.

“If an example is set of removing a judge without holding an inquiry [into the allegations against them] then any judge could be dismissed on any basis at any time [in the future],” Khan said.

Article 209 of the Constitution empowers the Supreme Judicial Council to carry out inquiries into the capacity and conduct of Supreme Court and high court judges.

Justice Ijazul Ahsan said that a judge’s speech in the bar or at a public forum was supposed to be within “constraints and limits”.

“It does not befit a judge to start humiliating institutions or the government,” he said, noting that an SC judge could not comment on the country’s foreign policy.

Justice Bandial told the counsel that Siddiqui had “transgressed the limits” in his speech at the Rawalpindi bar.

“He was issued a show-cause notice for the speech; if he hadn’t delivered the speech, the notice would not have been served,” Justice Mazhar Alam Miankhel commented.

Siddiqui’s counsel argued that former chief justice M.R. Kayani had done speeches against the martial law, and then-chief justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry had also delivered speeches in different bar councils during the lawyers’ movement of 2007.

“Justice M.R. Kayani had not ridiculed his own institution,” remarked Justice Sardar Tariq Masood.

Justice Bandial further observed that the IHC judgement of November 27, 2017, had been referenced in the Faizabad dharna case.

In that order, Justice Siddiqui had strongly criticised the role assigned to the army “as the mediator” in the agreement to end the sit-in at Islamabad’s Faizabad Interchange in November 2017.

“The agreement also had the signatures of [then-Maj] Gen Faiz Hameed,” lawyer Khan said today. Siddiqui has previously accused Lt Gen Hameed, the current Peshawar Corps commander, of visiting him at his home and pressuring him to withdraw a judgement.

“Did the high court have the authority to take a suo motu notice?” Justice Masood asked, to which Khan responded that the court could take a notice if “something unlawful” emerged.

Justice Masood asked whether the former IHC judge had taken a suo motu notice because no complaint against the army or its serving officers had been filed in the court.

Siddiqui wrote in his order that the manner in which the agreement was reached with the TLP was illegal, Justice Masood noted.

“The serving army officer who Siddiqui said had carried out the illegal act was later sitting at your (Siddiqui’s) home. Why?” the judge asked. “You say that officer came to your residence and tried to influence you.”

Justice Bandial recalled that the SJC issued two show-cause notices to Siddiqui for the Nov 27, 2017, order but that no action was taken on those notices.

“This action [of issuing notices] itself shows how much the Supreme Judicial Council that gave the verdict against Shaukat Aziz Siddiqui was under the influence of the ISI,” counsel Khan remarked, at which he was admonished by the head of the bench.

“We respect you but now you have started hitting the boundary,” Justice Bandial told Khan, asking him not to hurl accusations against judges without proof.

“Judges cannot speak [for themselves] … they don’t have a PRO,” the judge said, reminding Khan that he (Bandial) too was a member of the SJC.

As a responde, Khan clarified that he was referring to the SJC of the time when Justice Bandial wasn’t its member, and Siddiqui was an IHC judge.

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