The country’s law says that dual nationals cannot submit nomination papers for elections or be elected as lawmaker.
The report reveals that Vawda filed his nomination papers on June 11, 2018 when he still held a US nationality. His papers were approved on June 18, 2018. The federal minister had filed papers to give up his US citizenship on June 22 and he was issued a certificate on June 25. The process usually takes weeks or months even, according to sources.
The same judgment has previously led to the disqualification of various lawmakers, notable among whom Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) senators Saadia Abbasi and Haroon Akhtar.
In Vawda’s case, the last date to file the nomination papers for the July 2018 elections was June 11.
“For reasons to be recorded later, we hold and declare that both Haroon Akhtar and Saadia Abbasi were dual nationals on the date when they filed their nomination papers for the Senate elections,” Chief Justice Mian Saqib Nisar had observed while dictating the order.
Both the members were disqualified under Article 63(1)(c) of the Constitution, which says that a person will be disqualified from being elected or chosen member of parliament if he ceases to be a citizen of Pakistan or acquires the citizenship of a foreign state.
Pakistan is once again at the doorstep of the IMF with a promise of structural…
The Ministry of Federal Education and Professional Training has started the implementation of a free…
A three-member medical team from the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) advised Bushra Bibi,…
Upon arriving in Lahore, Iranian President Seyyed Ebrahim Raisi expressed his desire to address a…
The per tola price of 24 karat gold decreased by Rs.3,500 and was sold at…
The US dollar has decreased in value against the Pakistani rupee in the foreign exchange…
Leave a Comment