Bar Associations’
Elections: Arousing from slumber
Each year the initial
days of January are fixed for the local Bar Associations’ elections. More or
less: slogans and banners, heated campaigns and fervor rallies, presentations
of motos and group meetings, a lot of expenses, usage, and wastage of money,
politics, and hypocrisy, and lastly the indispensable item ‘food’—a lot of food—are
essential elements of Bar’s elections. There are some positive and negative
aspects with regard to the Bar Associations’ elections.
Before to discuss
these aspects, it is pertinent to briefly introduce Bar Councils and Bar
Associations. The Legal Practitioner and Bar Council Act, 1973 deals with it.
The Bar Councils are autonomous elected institutions comprising of legal
practitioners of respective bars. Amongst them, the Pakistan Bar Council is the
supreme body; and then comes the provincial bar councils of each province that
are inferior to it.
Similarly, the
Supreme Court Bar Association of Pakistan is the supreme elected body of the
advocates of the Supreme Court. Next in number are the respective provincial
Bar Associations. The last in number—although inferior to all, but the most
influential body of legal practitioners are the local or district Bar
Associations.
The District Bar
Associations (DBA) are the governing bodies of legal practitioners at the
district level. The main powers and functions are, held and controlled, by the
president, vice president, and secretary—rest are although elected
simultaneously during main elections, yet devoid of any functions and powers,
e.g. finance secretary, library secretary, and executive members, etc. However,
ironically each is happy to be elected.
There are many
positive and constructive aspects of DBA’s elections. Foremost is the
protection of the rights and welfare of legal practitioners, through the
provision of essential facilities of life to them at district bars, such as
neat and clean environment, pure water, updated library, walkable roads and
streets for pedestrians in and around the courts’ premises. It also includes
registration of legal practitioners under the Legal Practitioner and Bar
Council rules, 1976. Moreover, the collection and disbursement of funds,
incomes from domestic business in bars—and above all the construction of
offices for upcoming lawyers are the chief functions of DBA. In other words,
each local bar has its own local issues and problems; and these associations
are being given the mandate to solve them.
Nonetheless, the
DBA’s elections also have some adverse aspects, that need to be highlighted.
The top of them is the misuse of money. At my DBA (City Sheikhupura), an
estimated more than two crore rupees, over merely fifteen to sixteen hundred
lawyers, is the normal expense of elections. Sometimes, the figure crossed
three crore rupees—an average of twenty thousand rupees per lawyer. Although
claimed as the most educated and intellectual class of society, the fifteen
hundred lawyers eat in the shape of food half of this figure at lunches and
dinners arranged for them. And the rest of half as a bribe to vote. (None of a
single penny is used on library and on books—everything is just on food and
bribery)
Here one must
raise his eyebrow on the question: how can one earn back this huge sum of money
in a short span of one year from cases? Behold, they earn it. The evil gives
birth to evil. And it is absurd to think, one is so generous onto lawyers to
spend three crores merely on their food and leisure. Obviously, one spends to
earn. And how they earn; it is a mystery. An unsolvable mystery.
Moreover, the
hypocrisy—that never suits to a highly qualified person—is another deplorable
aspect of DBA’s elections. One who promises to vote seldom he votes as per his
promise. This is a routine matter in elections. The groups (it mostly comprises
on one senior most lawyer as a head and juniors ones as a herd) often bargain
at elections’ night. The trade their votes in considerations of votes for their
respective candidates. This is known as the surprise factor, and the night is
called a Moon-night.
Furthermore, ‘the
true spirit of democracy’ and ‘continuance of democracy’ are practically alien
words for DBA’s elections. Each vote is influenced; the more appropriate word
is undue-influenced vote. A young lawyer has no right to discretion, to choose,
to think, to argue, to present his issues; in fact, he has no place in
choosing, thinking, arguing, except to put the stamp and make a pic of it in
his mobile phone as evidence of his loyalty to his senior. Otherwise, your
loyalty is at stake. It means your future. (one may disagree, yet it is true)
Another
illegality that is frequently being ignored at DBA’s elections by the
Provincial Bar Councils is the votes of non-practitioners. Legally only the
practicing advocate, who is not an employee of any other organization, is
entitled to vote. Yet what is being happened, it is adverse to this rule. Many
non-practitioners—almost half of the total of each local bar—are employees or
are having their own businesses, despite that they vote in each year’s
elections. This is where the bribe-money is used, to fetch the voter. Food and
expenses gifts through their known sources are sent to them. And on the
election day, pick and drop services from the candidates is provided to each
one of them. One must search ‘democracy’ here in this process; one will surely
fail to find it here.
In consequence,
one finds adverse to one’s expectations from a highly qualified class of
society. As recently, the world has already witnessed the despicable face of
lawyers at Punjab Cardiology’s unfortunate incident. The reason is simple and
clear. One who does not have three crores extra to spend with courage that if
one loses, one will not have any effect of it. Yet truth is that a normal legal
practitioner at local level Bar would scarcely have such huge extra sum to bet.
Thus, good practitioners left to think about being elected and work for the
welfare of lawyers. Their space is then filled by mafias; because there is
nothing difficult to pass an LL.B. degree and become a lawyer.
It is high time
that we lawyers let not the grass grow anymore under our feet, and take strict
action in order to safeguard our own future and rights. Let us not be a herd
anymore. Let impedes the entrance of mafia at our home. Let us not be used and
misused anymore. Because these elections and fairly elected bodies are the only
possible way to make things right; then let us first undo our own elections’
wrongs. Let us have a true, free, and democratic elections at our local Bars.
Arouse from slumber, fellow lawyers.
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