Pakistan’s Senate passes 27th constitutional amendment amid opposition protest

Pakistan’s Senate passes 27th constitutional amendment amid opposition protest
An undated file photo of the Senate of Pakistan. (Senate of Pakistan / website)
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Updated 4 sec ago

Pakistan’s Senate passes 27th constitutional amendment amid opposition protest

Pakistan’s Senate passes 27th constitutional amendment amid opposition protest
  • Opposition members chanted slogans and tore apart copies of the bill presented in the House by Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar
  • Senate Chairman Yousuf Raza Gilani held voting on each clause, announcing the number of senators voting in favor and opposition

ISLAMABAD: The Senate, the upper house of Pakistan parliament, on Monday passed the 27th constitutional amendment with two-thirds majority, amid a protest by opposition members.

The draft amendment tabled last week introduces several far-reaching changes. It rewrites Article 243 of the Constitution to create the new post of Chief of Defense Forces, abolishing the long-standing role of Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of

Staff Committee (CJCSC). The army chief would be elevated to the constitutionally recognized top command of Pakistan’s armed services, while the president would formally appoint the army, navy and air chiefs on the prime minister’s advice.

The amendment also proposes establishing a constitutional court, revising procedures on the transfer of judges and altering the framework that governs how federal revenue is shared with provinces. The proposed changes to the National

Finance Commission (NFC) award, which governs how federal tax revenues are divided among provinces, are particularly sensitive because they underpin Pakistan’s federal structure and provincial fiscal autonomy.

Opposition members chanted slogans, tore apart and tossed copies of the amendment bill presented by Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar, before walking out of the House. Senate Chairman Yousuf Raza Gilani held voting on each clause of the bill, announcing the number of senators voting in favor and opposition in televised proceedings of the House.

“I now announce the result of voting, 64 members are in favor of the motion regarding passage of the bill and none against it,” Gilani said. “So, the motion is carried by the votes of not less than two-thirds of the total membership of the Senate and consequently the bill stands passed.”

The changes have stirred one of the most politically sensitive constitutional debates in years.

Several former senior judges and prominent lawyers have written to Chief Justice Yahya Afridi warning that Pakistan’s proposed 27th constitutional amendment would “permanently denude” the Supreme Court of its constitutional authority, according to a letter seen by Arab News on Monday.

“With deep sadness and with the deepest regret, this letter is being written by us not in normal times but in times that present the greatest threat to the Supreme Court of Pakistan since its establishment in 1956,” the signatories wrote in a letter to the chief justice, adding that the proposed amendment would be “the biggest and the most radical restructuring of the Federal Appellate Court structure since the enactment of the Government of India Act, 1935.”

“We say this without any fear of contradiction that no civilian or military government in Pakistan’s history has even tried, let alone succeeded, in relegating the Supreme Court of Pakistan as a sub-ordinate court and permanently denude it of its constitutional jurisdiction, as is being done through the proposed Constitution (Twenty-Seventh Amendment) Act, 2025,” the letter said.

The signatories requested Chief Justice Afridi to “call a Full Court Meeting immediately and without any delay” to deliberate on the amendment before parliament votes on it.

Constitutional amendments in Pakistan require a two-thirds majority in both houses of parliament. Since its adoption in 1973, the constitution has been amended more than two dozen times, often reflecting shifts in authority between civilian governments, the judiciary and the military.

The current proposal follows the 26th constitutional amendment passed in October 2024, which gave parliament a formal role in appointing the chief justice and established a senior judges’ panel to hear constitutional cases, measures critics said weakened judicial independence.

Opposition lawmakers have warned the 27th amendment would undermine civilian oversight and provincial rights. Ruling party members have rejected this, arguing the changes clarify institutional roles and strengthen the federation.


Security forces kill 20 Pakistani Taliban militants in restive northwest

Security forces kill 20 Pakistani Taliban militants in restive northwest
Updated 13 sec ago

Security forces kill 20 Pakistani Taliban militants in restive northwest

Security forces kill 20 Pakistani Taliban militants in restive northwest
  • The militants were killed in separate operations amid a ceasefire between Pakistan, Afghanistan, following their week-long clashes last month
  • Two rounds of talks between the neighbors have failed to yield results, with Pakistan seeking ‘verifiable’ action against militants on Afghan soil

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani security forces have killed 20 Pakistani Taliban militants in separate engagements in the country’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, the Pakistani military said on Monday.

The development comes amid a surge in militancy in Pakistan’s western regions that border Afghanistan, which last month triggered fierce, week-long clashes between the two neighbors.

Pakistani forces killed eight militants in an intelligence-based operation in North Waziristan district, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the Pakistani military’s media wing.

Another intelligence-based operation was conducted in the Dara Adam Khel town that led to an intense exchange of fire with militants, leaving 12 more Pakistani Taliban members dead.

“Sanitization operations are being conducted to eliminate any other Indian-sponsored kharji (militant) found in the area,” the ISPR said in a statement.

Islamabad frequently accuses the Afghan Taliban of sheltering the Pakistani Taliban, or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), and India of backing the group in launching cross-border attacks against Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi deny the allegation.

Tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan have surged in recent years following an uptick in militant attacks, mainly by the TTP. The latest operations against TTP militants come amid a ceasefire between Pakistan and Afghanistan, reached in Doha on Oct. 19. 

Clashes erupted between the neighbors on Oct. 11 after Pakistan conducted airstrikes in Afghanistan against what it said were TTP-linked targets. Two subsequent rounds of talks between the neighbors have failed to yield results, with Pakistan seeking “verifiable” action against militant groups operating on Afghan soil.