The Supreme Court on Monday directed the Sindh government to make rules and regulations with regard to the appointments of police personnel under the martyrs’ quota.Hearing an application of Mohammad Ali Kamal against his demotion in the police department, a two member bench of the SC, headed by Justice Gulzar Ahmed, inquired the advocate general Sindh as why the rules and regulations for the appointments of police personnel under the martyrs’ quota had not been framed.The applicant submitted that he was appointed as a DSP under the martyrs’ quota after the martyrdom of his father Kamal Hussain in a bomb blast in March 2013. He submitted that he was later demoted by the authorities which justified their decision citing the SC judgment in an out-of-turn promotions case.The apex court observed that the appointments of police personnel without the rules and regulations was itself the murder of merit as every person could be appointed in the police department at the discretion of the government. The SC directed the Sindh government to make rules and regulations with regard to the appointments of police personnel under the martyrs’ quota. The court also directed the petitioner to approach an appropriate forum to redress his grievance.FBR pleaThe SC also directed a counsel for the Federal Bureau of Revenue (FBR) to come prepared to argue on the bureau’s appeal against an order of a federal service tribunal which reinstated a customs officer.The FBR had appealed against the reinstatement of appraiser collector Javed Raza Naqvi alleging that he was removed from service for his involvement in the imports of 196 luxury vehicles under an amnesty scheme. The court inquired the FBR’s counsel as whether any disciplinary action had been initiated against any superior officials in this regard as luxury vehicles could not be imported without their connivance. The court directed the counsel to come prepared and adjourned the hearing.
from The News International - Karachi https://ift.tt/2Oqu7zs
Tuesday, March 26, 2019
SC wants rules framed for appointments of police personnel under martyrs’ quota
Related Posts:
What survivors and affected families wantThe Ali Enterprises Factory Fire Affectees Association and the National Trade Union Federation jointly organised an event outside the burnt factory to mark the seventh anniversary of the incident.The following demands were ma… Read More
Seven years on, Baldia factory fire victims still fighting for justiceVery hot and humid conditions on Wednesday and the sight of the window of the factory from where he escaped death along with nine of his co-workers in the Ali Enterprises fire seven years ago forced Muhammad Hanif to go back … Read More
Federal govt’s committees won’t solve Karachi’s issues: mayorThe issues of Karachi need immediate solutions and the committees formed by the federal government for the city are not likely to yield fruitful results.Karachi Mayor Wasim Akhtar said this while talking to media persons on W… Read More
KMC allegedly uproots vegetable patch in Clifton urban forestThe Karachi Metropolitan Corporation’s (KMC) Parks & Horticulture Department on Thursday morning allegedly stormed the amenity plot ST-13 in the Park Lane area of the Clifton neighbourhood, known as an urban forest, and u… Read More
Seven years after Baldia fire, garment workers still without safety programmeA report launched on the seventh anniversary of the deadly fire in Baldia Town’s garment factory that killed over 250 labourers says that although multiple initiatives aimed at addressing workplace safety have been initiated … Read More
0 comments:
Post a Comment