- Missile strike on Ukraine clinic kills at least four
- Celtic held to goalless stalemate at Dinamo Zagreb in Champions League
- Flick urges Barcelona to return to 'unstoppable' best against Dortmund
- Liverpool close on Champions League progress as Salah seals Girona win
- US offers $10 mn reward for wanted Chinese hacker
- Thousands told to flee as wildfire tears through Malibu
- Georgia protests enter 13th night as EU threatens 'measures'
- US disburses $20 bn Ukraine loan backed by profits from Russian assets
- Sink to source: Arctic is now emitting more carbon than it absorbs
- Israel assuming 'worst-case scenario' with Syria bombing: analysts
- Arteta grapples with defensive injury crisis ahead of Monaco clash
- French actor outraged as director denies child abuse in court
- NY gunman had manifesto railing against health insurance: police
- Wildfire quickly spreads in California's Malibu
- Airlines chief says jet manufacturers need to deliver
- Ancient marble statue found during Greek road works
- S.Korea ex-defence minister formally arrested for insurrection
- Boeing resumes production at Seattle plants after strike
- Germany's Scholz calls for Europe EV subsidy plan
- Romero points finger at Spurs chiefs for lack of investment
- Argentine court drops rape case against French rugby players
- World stock markets mixed as rate calls loom, geopolitics weighs
- Assad's feared dungeons give up their secrets
- US firms up $6.2 bn Micron funding to boost chipmaking
- Pogacar to defend Tour de France and world title as 2025 programme unveiled
- UK pledges to cut government spending waste
- Nobel Peace Prize winner Hidankyo calls for a world without nukes
- FIFA to confirm 2030 World Cup hosts and hand Saudi 2034 tournament
- Air passenger numbers to top five billion in 2025: IATA
- Fiorentina's Bove has defibrillator installed after collapse: media
- Dortmund coach Sahin warns of 'unbearable' fixture list
- Brazil's Lula undergoes surgery for brain hemorrhage
- Pentagon chief slams China's 'coercive behaviour'
- Stellantis, Chinese firm CATL plan $4bn battery plant in Spain
- Award-winning US poet Nikki Giovanni dies aged 81
- Fine particle pollution blamed for nearly 240,000 EU deaths in 2022
- Israel's PM Netanyahu in court to testify in corruption trial
- The Taiwan Strait: crucial waterway and military flashpoint
- France's Macron to host party leaders in quest for new govt
- Morocco sets stage for 2030 World Cup with Spain and Portugal
- Transylvania's last Saxons revive its stunning ghost villages
- DR Congo strives to reconcile young people with books
- Iceland wants immigrants to learn the language
- 'Huge demand': Portugal dreams of becoming medical cannabis hub
- PNG leader says bid to join Australian rugby league 'very strong'
- Anger at plan to turn Nazi tunnels into bunker for super-rich
- Ukraine struggles against Russian 'meat grinder' tactics
- Papua New Guinea PM vows to return to UN climate talks
- The trial of a king: ancient royal ritual in Cameroon promotes peace
- Taiwan says China carrying out huge maritime drills
RBGPF | -1.99% | 59.32 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.04% | 24.56 | $ | |
RELX | 0.35% | 47.145 | $ | |
AZN | -1.86% | 67.325 | $ | |
SCS | -1.89% | 13.21 | $ | |
RIO | 0.12% | 64.97 | $ | |
BTI | -0.15% | 37.805 | $ | |
NGG | -0.95% | 61 | $ | |
GSK | -1.37% | 35.505 | $ | |
BP | 0.38% | 30.205 | $ | |
RYCEF | -2.21% | 7.24 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.12% | 24.39 | $ | |
BCC | -1.28% | 143.48 | $ | |
JRI | -0.86% | 13.305 | $ | |
VOD | -0.61% | 8.866 | $ | |
BCE | -1.22% | 26.575 | $ |
Pakistan's top court adjourns as constitutional crisis rages
Pakistan's Supreme Court adjourned Monday without ruling on Prime Minister Imran Khan's shock decision to dissolve parliament and call a snap election, sidestepping a no-confidence vote that would have seen him booted from office.
The court, which will sit again Tuesday, received a slew of suits and petitions from the government and opposition after the deputy speaker of the national assembly refused Sunday to allow debate on a no-confidence motion against Khan's administration.
Simultaneously, Khan asked the presidency -- a largely ceremonial office held by a loyalist -- to dissolve the assembly, meaning an election must be held within 90 days.
According to the constitution, the prime minister cannot ask for the assembly to be dissolved while he is facing a no-confidence vote.
Farooq Naek, a lawyer representing petitioners seeking to overturn the assembly dissolution, told the supreme court it wasn't in the "power and ambit" of the deputy speaker to reject the no-confidence motion.
"It was a constitutional irregularity coupled with 'mala fide'," he said, a legal term meaning "bad faith".
The opposition had expected to take power on Sunday after mustering enough votes to oust Khan, but the deputy speaker -- a member of the cricketer-turned-politician's party -- refused to allow the motion to proceed because of alleged "foreign interference".
An alliance of usually feuding dynastic parties had plotted for weeks to unravel the tenuous coalition that made Khan premier in 2018, but he claimed they went too far by colluding with the United States for "regime change".
- Washington denial -
Khan insists he has evidence -- which he has declined to disclose publicly -- of Washington's involvement, although local media have reported it was merely a briefing letter from Pakistan's ambassador following a meeting with a senior US official.
Western powers want him removed because he won't stand with them on global issues against Russia and China, Khan said.
Washington has denied involvement.
On paper, and pending any court decision, Khan will remain in charge until an interim government is formed to oversee elections.
A notice Monday from President Arif Alvi to Khan and opposition leader Shehbaz Sharif said they should agree on a new interim prime minister, but Sharif declined to cooperate.
"How can we respond to a letter written by a person who has abrogated the constitution?" he told a press conference Monday.
Fawad Chaudhry, information minister in the outgoing cabinet, tweeted that Khan had proposed former chief justice Gulzar Ahmad for the role.
- 'Constitutional crisis' -
Khan appeared to have wrong-footed the opposition with his weekend manouvres.
"Khan's 'surprise' triggers constitutional crisis," thundered The Nation newspaper Monday, while its rival Dawn called it "A travesty of democracy" above a front-page editorial.
The supreme court is ostensibly independent, but rights activists say previous benches have been used by civilian and military administrations to do their bidding throughout Pakistan's history.
It is unclear when the court may rule on the issue -- or if Khan would even accept its decision -- but there is precedent.
In 1988 Muhammad Khan Junejo appealed to the Supreme Court after the assembly was dissolved by President General Zia-ul-Haq, who had taken power in a military coup years earlier.
The court agreed his government had been dissolved unconstitutionally, but ruled that since elections had been announced anyway it was best to move on.
Khan was elected after promising to sweep away decades of entrenched corruption and cronyism, but has struggled to maintain support with inflation skyrocketing, a feeble rupee and crippling debt.
Some analysts said Khan had also lost the crucial support of the military, but it is unlikely he would have pulled off Sunday's manoeuvres without its knowledge -- if not blessing.
There have been four military coups -- and at least as many unsuccessful ones -- since independence in 1947, and the country has spent more than three decades under army rule.
"The best option in this situation are fresh elections to enable the new government to handle economic, political and external problems faced by the country," said Talat Masood, a general-turned-political analyst.
As the opposition scrambled to react, Khan taunted them on Twitter.
"So why the fear of elections now?"
Nogueira--PC