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Court delays key Pakistani poll | Court delays key Pakistani poll |
(41 minutes later) | |
Pakistan's supreme court has ordered the postponement of a parliamentary by-election that former PM Nawaz Sharif was banned from contesting. | |
It said that Thursday's vote should not be held until it had decided on a government appeal against Mr Sharif's disqualification from the Lahore poll. | |
A panel of three judges in Islamabad said that it would not deliberate on the issue until 30 June. | A panel of three judges in Islamabad said that it would not deliberate on the issue until 30 June. |
The government filed an urgent appeal challenging the ban on Wednesday. | The government filed an urgent appeal challenging the ban on Wednesday. |
It argued that election disputes should be heard by an election tribunal and not the courts, which it said had no jurisdiction in such matters. | |
'Ineligible' | |
Mr Sharif was barred from running in elections in February because of convictions relating to the 1999 coup in which he was toppled. | |
He wanted the ban lifted in time to run in Thursday's by-election, but on Monday the Lahore high court upheld the earlier ruling. | |
Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani told parliament the government was appealing because Mr Sharif was a key partner in the governing coalition. | |
Mr Sharif (l) and Mr Zardari have been at loggerheads over the judges issue | |
"We have filed a petition in the supreme court on behalf of the federation, challenging the Lahore high court decision to bar Nawaz Sharif from contesting the by-election," deputy Attorney General Raja Abdur Rehman told the AFP news agency on Wednesday. | |
"Our plea is that under... the Pakistani constitution, election disputes should be heard by election tribunal and not the high court. High courts have no jurisdiction to hear such cases." | |
Correspondents say Monday's ruling was a major political setback for Mr Sharif in his efforts to re-enter parliament. | |
His Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) dismissed the ruling as "politically motivated", saying the judges who made it had been appointed by his rival, President Pervez Musharraf. | |
Mr Sharif has been demanding the immediate reinstatement of judges sacked by President Musharraf during a state of emergency last November. | |
Strained alliance | |
Mr Sharif was deposed as prime minister by Gen Musharraf in a 1999 coup and later sent into exile, but has re-emerged as a major force in Pakistani politics. | |
His PML-N was the second largest party in the general elections in February that saw President Musharraf's allies routed. | |
Correspondents say the Lahore court's decision has exacerbated tensions between the PML-N and the main party in the governing coalition, the Pakistan People's Party (PPP). | |
The BBC's Barbara Plett says Mr Sharif's party joined the coalition government with the expectation that its leader was now clear to run for office. | |
Since then, though, the coalition has foundered, and the court's decision may further strain the fragile, anti-Musharraf alliance, our correspondent says. |
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