“The amendments, if passed, shall hit at the very core of judicial independence, and may render any semblance of an impartial judiciary a thing of the past,” says lawyer Basil Nabi Malik.

The proposed ‘constitutional package’ — a series of constitutional amendments that, among other things, aim to fix the Chief Justice of Pakistan’s tenure for three years — has become contentious even before being tabled in Parliament for debate. While the treasury benches appeared fixated on having the bill passed through both houses of Parliament on Sunday, it failed to achieve the magic number and the sessions ultimately had to be adjourned to allow the government and its allies to regroup and come up with an alternative strategy.

The opposition, which primarily comprises the PTI, has termed the proposed bill illegal, with PTI Chairman Barrister Gohar Ali Khan saying that since there was no cabinet meeting to approve the bill, it could not legally be presented in the National Assembly. Other opposition parties have also alleged the use of ‘strong-arm tactics’ against its lawmakers to pressure them into voting for the proposed amendments.

More recently, the legal fraternity seems to have jumped into the fray too, with senior lawyers calling upon CJP Qazi Faez Isa to stay away from the controversy.

But while these statements were making the rounds on mainstream and social media, there wasn’t much clarity on the topic, given that the government had not shared the proposed bill, even with the lawmakers it was trying to woo. A copy of the draft only came into the public domain on Monday, which seems to have elicited a strong response from the legal fraternity, almost 200 of whom have signed off on an open letter warning against any such move.

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