MEDIA EYE: COURTING THE MEDIA
Since the rise to power of former chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry and the birth of judicial activism, there has hardly been a day when court proceedings have not featured prominently in the media, often grabbing top headlines and dominating the discourse in TV talk shows for weeks on end.
In the past, it took a Justice Munir, Moulvi Mushtaq or Anwarul Haq for the courts to figure significantly in the news but, within days, the story would slide off the headlines and even from memory — even as we found ourselves reeling in the aftermath of their decisions long after they were made.
Through the mid-1980s to the 1990s, one saw a greater share of courts in headlines whenever the dismissal of a civilian government and the dissolution of an elected parliament by a president armed with Article 58-2(b) — an addition to the constitution by an autocratic head of state, Gen Ziaul Haq — was challenged. But once the decisions came, the story faded away.
It seems not a day now passes without court proceedings being a mainstay of the news. But increasingly, the media itself is becoming a part of judicial headlines
Interestingly enough, while Article 58-2(b) remained part of the constitution from 1985 to 1997 and then from 2003 to 2010 (reintroduced to the constitution by General Musharraf as he moved the country from his autocratic rule to a quasi-civilian set-up), a troika comprising the president, the army chief and the prime minister was said to rule the country.
In the case of Zia and Musharraf, the office of the president and army chief was held by the same individual so the power was concentrated in their own hands. However, in other periods, the situation reverted to the troika exercising power.
The scene today is utterly different as courts send home prime ministers, block civil service and police appointments and even throw out commercial contracts that carry sovereign guarantees at considerable cost to the country — as is being discovered in the Reko Diq and the Turkish floating power house cases.
But the military appears immune from ever being in the dock. Therefore, following the cleansing of Article 58-2(b) from the constitution, the elected civilian chief executive is still not all-powerful and governs in concert with the army chief and the chief justice as other members of the troika.
It appears equally true that at least two members of this troika at any point in time are not content with the limits on their authority and thus friction ensues between them. Matters take a graver term if the unhappy two decide to join hands, even if this is done tacitly.
While these issues seem enough to keep the courts in the news in perpetuity, now the media often makes headlines by being present in the courts itself. Ironically, the media’s presence in the dock on occasion has nothing to do with its content.