
By Syed Shamim Akhtar
Pakistan stands on the edge of a constitutional turning point — one that could either strengthen the state’s institutional balance or plunge it into a new phase of uncertainty. The federal cabinet’s approval of the 27th Constitutional Amendment and its referral to the Senate has ignited intense political and legal debate across the country. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, presiding via video link from Azerbaijan, hailed the move as a step toward “stability and continuity,” yet for many, it marks the start of an anxious reckoning with the shape of Pakistan’s governance itself. This proposed amendment, now under scrutiny by the Senate Standing Committee on Law and Justice chaired by Senator Farooq H. Naek and the National Assembly’s corresponding committee led by Mehmood Bashir Virk, promises to redefine both Pakistan’s judicial hierarchy and its defence command.
The deliberations ahead will be watched closely — not only because they could reshape the Constitution but because they will test whether Pakistan’s political class can reform without repeating the missteps of the past. During the Senate session chaired by Yousuf Raza Gillani, Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar presented the bill with an air of solemn caution. “These amendments are not for individuals but for the stability and continuity of the state,” he said. Yet his appeal for calm was drowned out by shouts from opposition benches, where lawmakers complained they had been handed the bill only minutes before debate. Senator Ali Zafar, a prominent opposition voice, questioned the validity of deliberating such a consequential reform without a formally recognized leader of the opposition.
“We cannot deliberate on a constitutional bill without procedural fairness,” he warned, urging the formation of a full-house committee to ensure transparency. At the heart of the 27th Amendment are two domains that have long defined Pakistan’s power struggles — the military and the judiciary. The draft bill proposes the abolition of the Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee and the creation of a new position, Chief of Defence Forces, to be held by the serving Chief of Army Staff. It also seeks to give constitutional protection to the rank of Field Marshal, a title that Parliament — not the prime minister — would have the power to grant or withdraw. Parallel honorary designations of Marshal of the Air Force and Marshal of the Naval Force are also suggested, formalizing what the government describes as “ceremonial distinctions” under constitutional oversight.
Supporters of the amendment argue that these changes would bring clarity to Pakistan’s defence command and anchor it more firmly within the parliamentary framework. Critics, however, view them as subtle attempts to formalize military prominence within a civilian-led Constitution — an uncomfortable reminder of how delicate the balance between elected authority and armed command remains in Pakistan’s political imagination. Symbolism, in this country, has never been merely symbolic. The judicial side of the amendment is no less transformative. It proposes stripping the Supreme Court of its suo motu powers under Article 184 and transferring constitutional interpretation to a newly created Federal Constitutional Court. This court, composed of judges drawn equally from all four provinces, would decide constitutional questions and interpret the law, while the Supreme Court would revert to its traditional role as an appellate body for civil and criminal cases.
The new Chief Justice of the Constitutional Court would serve a three-year term, rotating in a manner designed to ensure provincial parity and administrative neutrality. The implications of this are enormous. For decades, Pakistan’s Supreme Court has played a decisive role not only in interpreting the Constitution but in shaping political outcomes — from disqualifying prime ministers to intervening in matters of governance. Its suo motu authority, though often controversial, has been both a check on executive power and a tool for populist judicial activism. Removing or diluting that authority could, depending on one’s perspective, either depoliticize the judiciary or weaken its ability to defend fundamental rights.
Law Minister Tarar insists the reform is pragmatic. He argues that nearly 40 per cent of the Supreme Court’s workload involves constitutional petitions, leading to chronic delays and inconsistent verdicts. “The purpose is not to curtail judicial independence but to ensure efficiency and balance,” he said, pointing to the 26th Amendment, which had already prepared the ground for specialized benches. Yet scepticism runs deep. The memory of past constitutional experiments — from Zia-ul-Haq’s 8th Amendment to Musharraf’s 17th and even the consensus-driven 18th — looms large. Each promised equilibrium; each left a complicated legacy.
The proposed restructuring of defence and judiciary under one reform has therefore unsettled observers. Abolishing the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee could concentrate operational command more tightly within a single office, even if formally under parliamentary control. Meanwhile, the creation of a Federal Constitutional Court might fragment the judiciary’s coherence, creating new turf battles rather than resolving old ones. The result, critics warn, could be a more centralized military role and a more constrained judiciary — a reversal of the democratic balance Pakistan has long struggled to establish.
(The writer has diverse in knowledge and has a good omen in politics, can be reached at news@metro-morning.com)

