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Zardari's powers set to be clipped as Pak Govt tables 18th Amendment Bill in Parliament | In a historic move that would clip the key powers of President Asif Ali Zardari, the Pakistan government on Friday tabled the 18th Constitutional Amendment
Bill in Parliament. The bill, which reverses constitutional changes adopted by
former military ruler General Pervez Musharraf, is likely to be passed in the
house by a two-third majority, which is required to convert it into law. Some
of the major proposals mentioned under the constitutional reforms package includes
the transfer of power from the Presidency to the Prime Minister's House, which
means that the President would no longer have the power to dismiss the prime minister,
dissolve parliament or appoint the head of the country's armed forces. The 18th
amendment would remove the bar on prime ministers standing for only two terms
in office, which allows opposition leader Nawaz Sharif, who was dethroned by Musharraf
in 1999, to contest for premiership for the third time. Addressing Parliament
after presenting the bill, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said the constitutional
amendments would actually strengthen institutions, rather than just making the
Prime Minister more powerful. "I congratulate the entire nation on this 18th amendment.It
is historic. Some people think that the prime minister will be stronger now. But
in fact these constitutional amendments will strengthen institutions. This is
unprecedented in the history of Pakistan," The Dawn quoted Gilani, as saying.
"This is a bill which will ensure parliamentary supremacy," said Senator Raza
Rabbani, the head of the parliamentary committee on constitutional reforms. |
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