LHC disposes of pleas seeking cancellation of FIRs against lawyers
LAHORE: The Lahore High Court on Wednesday disposed of petitions seeking cancellation of FIRs registered against lawyers in the Punjab Institute of Cardiology attack case after the inspector general of police and the home secretary assured the court that the arrested lawyers would be dealt in accordance with the law.
The court directed Punjab's top police official that the faces of accused lawyers will not be covered when they are presented in court and directed both sides to nominate their representatives to find out an amicable solution to the dispute. Following the direction, lawyers appointed four representatives. Pursuant to the court order, the chief secretary, the home secretary and the IGP appeared before the bench comprising Justice Syed Mazahar Ali Akbar Naqvi and Justice Sardar Ahmad Naeem. The bench summoned the chief secretary, the home secretary and the IGP along with three senior lawyers in the chamber to resolve the issue.
Earlier, IGP Shoaib Dastagir told the bench that the police are acting in accordance with the law and that the case is being investigated as per the set standards. "To assume that the police targeted a specific group is incorrect," the IGP said.
"The PIC attack is unfortunate, there is no space for such misadventures in this country," the high court remarked. "Why were the faces of the lawyers covered when they were produced in court," the court asked to which the IGP replied: "The police acted against those persons who were arrested on the spot."
"The perpetrators should face the consequences, why were those bothered who were not involved?" the court questioned. "Why had the police not acted earlier when lawyers had covered a six miles distance to reach the hospital," the bench asked to which the IGP said the lawyers were peaceful until they reached the hospital. "Did the police allow them to protest at the PIC," the judge asked to which the police chief replied that the police had not granted any such permission.
"Why didn't police stop the lawyers from protesting at the hospital? The Police Department should accept its failure," the bench remarked.
"The Police used teargas to disperse the mob," the advocate general told the bench.
"Should teargas be used at such a place?" the high court questioned. The bench also inquired how many people died in the incident to which the home secretary replied that three people lost their lives.
-
Inside Dylan Efron's First 'awful' Date With Girlfriend Courtney King -
'Sugar' Season 2: Colin Farrell Explains What Lies Ahead After THAT Plot Twist -
‘Revolting’ Sarah Ferguson Crosses One Line That’s Sealed Her Fate As Well As Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s -
AI Rivalry Heats Up As Anthropic Targets OpenAI In Super Bowl Ad -
Kate Middleton, Prince William Share Message Ahead Of Major Clash -
Is Dark Matter Real? New Theory Proposes It Could Be Gravity Behaving Strangely -
Viral AI Caricature Trend: Is Your Personal Data Really Safe? -
Lil Jon’s Late Son, Nathan Smith Spoke Highly Of His Father Before His Tragic Death -
China Boosts Reusable Spacecraft Capabilities By Launching For The Fourth Time -
Bianca Censori On Achieving 'visibility Without Speech': 'I Don't Want To Brag' -
'Concerned' Prince Harry Future Plans For Lilibet, Archie Exposed -
Skipping Breakfast? Here Are Some Reasons Why You Shouldn't -
Billie Eilish Slammed For Making Political Speech At Grammys -
Beverley Callard Announces Her Cancer Diagnosis: 'Quite Nervous' -
WhatsApp May Add Instagram Style Close Friends For Status Updates -
Winter Olympics Officially Open In Milan, Cortina With Historic Dual Cauldron Lighting