Bar condemns BHC judges’ selection process

One of the leading candidates served as an instructor in the Government’s Manpower and Training Department for 18 years

QUETTA:

The Balochistan Bar Council (BBC) on Saturday strongly condemned the ongoing selection process for appointments to the Balochistan High Court (BHC), describing the nomination of a long-serving official for elevation as an insult to the legal profession.

Addressing a press conference in Quetta, BBC Vice Chairman Jadin Baloch, accompanied by senior leaders Munir Ahmed Kakar and Ayaz Khan Mandokhail, expressed strong displeasure at what they said was the complete exclusion of the bar from the consultation process.

They revealed that one of the leading candidates recommended for the Chief Justice had served as an instructor in the government’s Manpower and Training Department for 18 years.

They argued that elevating a government employee directly to the Supreme Court undermines the merit, status and mandate of independent, practicing lawyers across the province. The BBC also expressed concern about the wider implications of the appointment process for judicial independence.

It argued that the introduction of what it termed “compromised individuals” was an attempt to fill the 15-seat BHC with permissive judges who would prioritize external directives over impartial justice.

According to the council, such appointments would erode public confidence in the judiciary and weaken the independence of the judicial system. In protest, the bar on Monday announced a province-wide boycott of trials.

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