IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SINDH
BENCH AT SUKKUR
Constitutional
Petition No. D-634 of 2020
Before:
Adnan-ul-Karim
Memon and
Yousuf Ali
Sayeed, JJ
Applicants : Abdul
Wahid and another through Mr. Achar Khan Gabole, Advocate
The
State : Through Mr. Aftab Ahmed Shar, APG
Complainant : Nemo
Date
of hearing : 28.07.2020.
ORDER
YOUSUF
ALI SAYEED, J - Being aggrieved by the Order made on 23.04.2020
in Special
Case No.11/2019, Re: The State v. Abdul Wahid and others (the “Subject Case”) by
the Anti-Terrorism Court, Ghotki at Mirpur Mathelo, dismissing their Application under S. 23 of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997
(the “ATA”) for transfer of the matter to the regular Court of
Sessions, the Applicant have impuged such dismissal vide this Petition under Article 199 of the Constitution.
2. The Subject Case arises out of FIR
No.70/2019 registered under Section 376 PPC read with Section 7 of the ATA at
P.S. Adilpur, District Ghotki on 11.11.2019 by one Asadullah
Mahar (the “Complainant”),
alleging that the accused Applicants, Abdul Wahid and Khair Muhammad, entered his house on
26.10.2019 at about 3:00 PM and the former raped his daughter, Ayesha, aged
about 10 years, whilst the latter held the Complainant and his two
brothers-in-law at bay, at gunpoint.
3. Notice of the
Petition was duly issued to the Complainant, who nonetheless did not come
forward to contest the matter.
4. Proceeding with his submission, learned
counsel for the Applicant contended that even if all of the allegations contained
in the FIR were accepted as being correct for the sake of argument, the matter
still did not constitute an act of “terrorism” for purposes of Section 6 of the
ATA, as clarified vide
the judgment of the Honourable Supreme Court dated 30.10.2019 in the case
reported as Ghulam Hussain and others v. The
State PLD 2020 Supreme Court 61.
He specifically drew particular attention to Paragraph 16 of that judgment,
which reads as follows:
“16. For
what has been discussed above it is concluded and declared that for an action
or threat of action to be accepted as terrorism within the meanings of Section
6 of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 the
action must fall in subsection(2) of section 6 of the said Act and the use or
threat of such action must be designed to achieve any of the objectives
specified in clause(b) of subsection(1) of section 6 of that Act or the use or
threat of such action must be to achieve any of the purposes mentioned in
clause (c) of subsection (1) of section 6 of that Act. It is clarified that any
action constituting an offence, howsoever grave, shocking, brutal, gruesome or
horrifying, does not qualify to the termed as terrorism if it is not committed
with the design or purpose specified or mentioned in clauses (b) or (c) of
subsection (1) of section 6 of the said Act. It is further clarified that the
actions specified in subsection (2) of section 6 of that Act do not qualify to
be labeled or characterized as terrorism if such actions are taken in
furtherance of personal enmity or private vendetta.
5. He
submitted that the matter at hand did not meet the test of clauses (b) or (c) of S.6(1)
of the ATA, and had wrongly been determined to constitute “terrorism”.
He prayed that in light of the ratio
of Ghulam Hussain’s case (Supra), the Application ought to be allowed, with the
impugned Order being set aside and the Subject Case consequently being
transferred to the Court of Sessions.
6. Resisting such a plea, the learned APG made a
token endeavour to support the impugned Order, but on query posed could not
offer any input as to how the offence of rape under S.376 PPC of itself
qualified as terrorism.
7. A
reading of the impugned Order reflects that while considering the judgment on
Ghulam Hussain’s case (Supra), the learned ATC Judge sought to distinguish the matter
on the basis that albeit it being stated in Paragraph 16 of the Apex Court’s
judgment, as reproduced herein above, that the action specified in S.6(2) of
the ATA would not qualify to be labeled or characterized as terrorism if taken
in furtherance of personal enmity or private vendetta, in the present case no
personal enmity or private vendetta had been shown in the FIR, hence that
precedent was not applicable to the case, whereas the offence was considered by
the learned Judge as being covered under the 3rd Schedule to the
ATA, and the showing of a pistol to the Complainant party was held to have
caused terror and panic in the locality. In recording such a finding, the
learned Judge considered his view to be fortified by the earlier judgment of
the Honourable Supreme Court in the case reported as Imran Ali v. The State
2018 SCMR 1372, often referred to as “Zainab’s case”, which pertained to the
abduction, rape and murder of a minor girl.
8. Having
considered the matter, we find ourselves in disagreement with the reasoning of
the learned ATC Judge, which is completely unsustainable in as much as it
predicated on a gross misreading of the judgment in Ghulam Hussain’s case (Supra)
and also overlooks the fact that the judgment in Zainab’s case was rendered
earlier in time and did not entail any determination of what qualifies as
“terrorism” under S. 6 of the ATA. Furthermore, as to the finding made with
reference to the 3rd Schedule, whilst the same indeed includes
‘kidnapping for ransom’ as a Scheduled Offence, which is also covered under S.6(2)(e),
the instant case does not entail any abduction as such. Furthermore, as is
apparent from the judgment in Ghulam Hussain’s case (Supra), whilst it was
clarified that the actions
specified in S.6(2) would not qualify to be labeled or characterized as
terrorism if such actions are taken in furtherance of personal enmity or a private
vendetta, the essence thereof is that an
action falling under S. 6(2)
would not constitute terrorism per se,
unless there was a coincidence of any of the objectives specified in clause(b)
of S. 6(1) or the use or threat of such action was intended to achieve any of
the purposes mentioned in clause (c) thereof. Failing such a test, the action,
albeit otherwise constituting an offence, would not qualify as “terrorism”,
irrespective of how grave, shocking, brutal, gruesome or horrifying such action
may be. In this regard, it would be appropriate to consider Section (6(1) of
the ATA, which read as follows:
“6. Terrorism.---(1) In this Act, “terrorism” means the use or threat
of action where:
(a) the action falls within the meaning of
sub-section (2), and
(b)
the use or threat is designed to coerce
and intimidate or overawe the Government or the public or a section of the
public or community or sect or a foreign government or population or an
international organization or create a sense of fear or insecurity in society;
or
(c)
the use or threat is made for the
purpose of advancing a religious, sectarian or ethnic cause or intimidating and
terrorizing the public, social sectors, media persons, business community or
attacking the civilians, including damaging property by ransacking, looting,
arson or by any other means, government officials, installations, security
forces or law enforcement agencies.
Provided
that nothing contained herein shall apply to a democratic and religious rally
or a peaceful demonstration in accordance with law.
9. In the matter at
hand, where the alleged offence is shown to have been
committed within the four walls of the Complainant’s home without there being
any abduction and the use of a firearm by one of the Applicants to subdue the
male relatives of the rape victim is also said to have taken within such
confines, the ingredients of Section 6(1)(b) and (c) are conspicuously absent,
and that
being so, we are unable to concur with the determination of the jurisdictional
point by the learned Judge of the Anti-Terrorism Court.
10. As such, the impugned Order clearly warrants
correction, and the Petition is allowed accordingly, with the impugned Order
being set aside and the Subject Case being transferred from the Anti-Terrorism Court, Ghotki at Mirpur
Mathelo,
to the ordinary Court of competent jurisdiction, for trial thereof in
accordance with law.
Judge
Judge