Federal cabinet declines ratification of 799 illegal appointments

ISLAMABAD: Federal cabinet has so far refused to ratify 799 illegal appointments of officials in different ministries and divisions since August 2016, Profit has learnt.

Earlier, 500 people had been appointed in the Airport Security Force and in the Civil Aviation Division while the remaining 299 people were appointed in different ministries, divisions etc. without the prior approval of the federal government.

All the ministries and divisions were asked to submit a complete report signed by secretaries or additional secretaries as the premier wanted to take strict action against such appointments. 

A three-member committee headed by Establishment Division Secretary Dr Ijaz Munir was also constituted to examine and finalise the list of appointments, including regular, additional charges, current charges, look-after charges, board positions, etc, made without the approval of the federal cabinet. 

This committee had submitted an inquiry report to the federal cabinet and recommended the federal government to ratify such appointments to save those responsible for such appointments from disciplinary action.

According to sources, Federal Minister for Law & Justice Farogh Naseem has opposed the recommendation to regularize the illegal appointments with back dates (ex-post facto approval) and said it is against the judgment of the Supreme Court in Mustafa Ampex case. 

The law minister opined that these positions should be filled once again after publishing advertisements if required.

Ostensibly, due to law minister’s opposition, the federal cabinet has so far declined to grant ex-post facto approval to the illegal appointments.

However, the cabinet has also directed establishment division to refer the matter to Advisor to Prime Minister on Institutional Reforms and Austerity Dr Ishrat Hussain, for recommending legally viable solutions to clear this matter.

PM’s Principal Secretary Azam Khan, in a letter to all federal secretaries and heads of divisions, had earlier directed them to send the lists of appointments without prior approval since 2016 by April 30, so that they could be declared illegal.

The decision was previously validated by the Islamabad High Court (IHC), which had declared such appointments as “without jurisdiction and void”.

 

Ahmad Ahmadani
Ahmad Ahmadani
The author is a an investigative journalist at Profit. He can be reached at [email protected].

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