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Pak ex-CJ rejects military courts as 'unconstitutional'

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Press Trust of India Islamabad
Pakistan's former chief justice today branded as "unconstitutional" the setting up of military courts to try terror suspects in the wake of the Peshawar school attack.

Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry said, "Military courts are illegal and unconstitutional. The basic structure of the constitution guarantees an independent judiciary, and military courts cannot be established in the presence of an independent judiciary".

The former chief justice, reinstated in 2008 after then military ruler General Pervez Musharraf had deposed him, had taken up cases of missing persons involving the ISI.

He was labelled as an 'anti-military judge'.

The Supreme Court had declared the setting up of military courts as unconstitutional and illegal in 1999.
 

Chaudhry further said, "No amendment or law can be made which challenges the fundamental basis of the constitution of the country".

After the Pakistani Taliban's deadly attack on an army school in Peshawar that killed 150 people, including 134 children, on December 16, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had agreed to a proposal to set up military courts to try terror suspects.

Sharif has announced amending the Constitution to provide constitutional cover to the proposed special courts. He had also lifted a moratorium on the death penalty after six years.

So far six convicted terrorists have been executed during the last two weeks.

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First Published: Dec 30 2014 | 7:15 PM IST

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