Court seeks Centre’s reply on Shehbaz’s contempt plea

Published May 20, 2021
Shehbaz’s legal team has moved a civil miscellaneous application, urging the court to get its May 7 order of allowing him to visit the United Kingdom once for his medical treatment implemented. — DawnNewsTV/File
Shehbaz’s legal team has moved a civil miscellaneous application, urging the court to get its May 7 order of allowing him to visit the United Kingdom once for his medical treatment implemented. — DawnNewsTV/File

LAHORE: The Lahore High Court on Wednesday directed a federal government law officer to submit a written reply to a civil miscellaneous application of Leader of Opposition in National Assembly Shehbaz Sharif seeking implementation of a court order that gave him a one-time permission to go abroad for medical treatment.

Earlier, Deputy Attorney General Rana Abdul Shakoor Khan questioned the maintainability of the application, saying no contempt of the court’s order was committed by barring Mr Shehbaz from traveling abroad. He said the petitioner had not followed the procedure for the implementation of the order and straightaway reached Lahore airport.

Advocate Azam Nazir Tarar, on behalf of Mr Shehbaz, argued the application was maintainable as it pertained to the enforcement of the court’s order.

Justice Ali Baqar Najafi asked the counsel whether the application was still maintainable since the federal government challenged the order before the Supreme Court and also placed the petitioner on the Exit Control List (ECL).

Shehbaz’s counsel relied that the court would have a clear picture of the case after a reply from the government was filed.

The judge instructed the law officer to submit a written reply to the application by May 26.

The judge had on May 7 permitted Shehbaz to visit the United Kingdom one-time for his medical treatment and observed that he would not be stopped from going abroad for being placed on a blacklist.

However, the immigration officials at the Lahore airport stopped Mr Shehbaz from boarding a reserved flight on the pretext that his name was also included in the Provincial National Identification List (PNIL), another category of no-fly list, which was not updated yet.

Shehbaz initially filed a contempt of court petition against the officials of the interior ministry and immigration staff. However, the LHC registrar office did not entertain the plea, saying the contempt petitions did not fall in the categories of the cases permitted to be instituted during the enforcement of Covid-19 related SOPs.

Therefore, Shehbaz’s legal team moved the civil miscellaneous application, urging the court to get its May 7 order implemented.

The application pleads that the excuse for not permitting the petitioner to proceed abroad was lame and false because a mechanism to update Integrated Border Management System (IBMS), placing or removing names in the stop lists functions round the clock. It argues that the respondents with mala fide intention deliberately disobeyed and defied the court’s order.

Published in Dawn, May 20th, 2021

Opinion

Editorial

Maulana’s message
Updated 11 Mar, 2025

Maulana’s message

The problem now is that most jihadi fighters, ideologues refuse to end their "struggle" on advice of state or mainstream clerics.
President’s speech
11 Mar, 2025

President’s speech

PRESIDENT Asif Zardari, addressing Monday’s joint session of parliament to mark the start of a new parliamentary...
Indian takeover
11 Mar, 2025

Indian takeover

BY the time the Champions Trophy final ended, the only indicators that the tournament had been hosted by Pakistan...
Mosquito season
10 Mar, 2025

Mosquito season

AS temperatures rise, the threat of dengue looms large over Pakistan. Its warning signs have already arrived. Dengue...
Reckless rhetoric
10 Mar, 2025

Reckless rhetoric

ONCE again, the Indian leadership gave in to their worst impulses, with External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar...
Water scarcity
Updated 10 Mar, 2025

Water scarcity

The need to meet climate challenge is even greater when Pakistan is prone to multiple disastrous events at the same time.