"Poetic Justice" Asif Khosa takes oath as new Chief Justice of Pakistan By Sajjad Hussain

Poetic Justice Asif Khosa takes oath as new Chief Justice of Pakistan By Sajjad Hussain
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Highlights

Justice Asif Saeed Khosa, known for adding lyrical flair in his judgments, Friday took oath as the 26th Chief Justice of Pakistan in a simple ceremony held here at the Presidents House which was also attended by foreign legal luminaries, including from India Justice Khosa, 64, who was administered oath by President Arif Alvi, will serve as top judge for nearly 337 days and is scheduled to retire

Islamabad: Justice Asif Saeed Khosa, known for adding lyrical flair in his judgments, Friday took oath as the 26th Chief Justice of Pakistan in a simple ceremony held here at the President's House which was also attended by foreign legal luminaries, including from India. Justice Khosa, 64, who was administered oath by President Arif Alvi, will serve as top judge for nearly 337 days and is scheduled to retire on December 21, 2019. Prime Minister Imran Khan, judges of higher courts, ministers, diplomats, civil and military officials, lawyers and foreign guests including from India were present at the oath taking ceremony, the Dawn reported.

Former judge of the Supreme Court of India and President Governing Committee of the Commonwealth Judicial Education Institute Justice Madan Bhimarao Lokur and Sandra E Oxner, former judge and founding president Commonwealth Judicial Education Institute, Canada took part in the ceremony, the report said. They arrived through the Wagah border in Lahore on Thursday to attend the ceremony, it said. Five senior judges from Turkey, South Africa and Nigeria also attended the oath taking ceremony.

Born in 1954 in Dera Ghazi Khan area of the Punjab province of Pakistan, justice Khosa studied at the University of the Punjab and Cambridge University. Known as the "poetic justice" for his knack for invoking works of literature in his observations and judgements, he is considered as Pakistan's top expert in criminal law. Justice Khosa in the landmark Panama papers verdict that disqualified Nawaz Sharif as the prime minister in 2017 cited the Honore de Balzac epigraph from Mario Puzo's 1969 novel "The Godfather", which reads: "Behind every great fortune there is a crime." "It is ironical and a sheer coincidence that the present case revolves around that very sentence attributed to Balzac," he had said.

He started his practice as a lawyer in 1977 and was elevated as high court judge in 1998. He was made judge of the Supreme Court in 2010. Justice Khosa has decided around 50,000 cases in his long career. He was also part of the benches which disqualified former premier Yusuf Raza Gilani. He was also part of the three-member bench which acquitted Christian woman Asia Bibi in blasphemy case. The judgment triggered countrywide protest and violence by extremist groups. Addressing the retiring ceremony of his predecessor Justice Saqib Nisar on Thursday, Justice Khosa said that he would like to decide the more than 1.9 million cases currently piled up in different courts by reforming the judicial system.

He also said that he would try to eliminate the practice of frivolous cases. Supreme Court lawyer Ali Zafar said Justice Khosa was expected to focus on judicial issues unlike his predecessor who often interfered in issues of governance. "The practice of suo motu will be rarely used by Justice Khosa as he believes that it should be only used when all other options have been exhausted to address an issues," Zafar said. Justice Khosa also called for open and free discussion on various issues and points of contention in order to "resolve such issues through a mutually agreed course of action" in his address.

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