- Relevant constitutional provisions
- Kinds of emergency
- Emergency due to war or internal disturbance (Article 232)
- Emergency due to failure of constitutional machinery (Article 234)
- Financial emergency (Article 235)
- Suspension of fundamental rights
- Power to suspend the right to move court
- Revocation of proclamation
- Parliament’s power to pass laws of indemnity
- Past exam questions and answers
1. Relevant constitutional provisions
The emergency provisions of Pakistan’s 1973 Constitution are contained in Part X, covering Articles 232 to 237. Article 232 deals with proclamation of emergency due to war, external aggression, or internal disturbance. Article 233 covers the effect of such a proclamation on fundamental rights. Article 234 addresses the failure of constitutional machinery in a province. Article 235 provides for a financial emergency. Article 236 deals with the power to suspend the right to move court. Article 237 allows Parliament to pass laws of indemnity.
2. Kinds of emergency
The Constitution recognises three distinct kinds of emergency. The first arises from war, external aggression, or internal disturbance under Article 232. The second is the breakdown of constitutional machinery in a province under Article 234. The third is a financial emergency under Article 235 when the economic life or financial stability of Pakistan is threatened. Each has its own grounds, its own procedure, and its own legal effects. Treating them as a single concept is a common exam mistake.
3. Emergency due to war or internal disturbance (Article 232)
If the President is satisfied that a grave emergency exists in which the security of Pakistan, or any part of it, is threatened by war, external aggression, or internal disturbance beyond the power of a provincial government to control, he may issue a proclamation of emergency.
“If the President is satisfied that a grave emergency exists in which the security of Pakistan, or any part thereof, is threatened by war, or external aggression, or internal disturbance beyond the power of a Provincial Government to control, he may issue a Proclamation of Emergency.”
There is an important procedural distinction between the two situations. Where the threat comes from external war or external aggression, the President may act independently. Where the threat is internal disturbance, a resolution from the Provincial Assembly of the affected province is required before the President can act. This condition protects provincial autonomy and prevents the federal government from exploiting internal crises for political purposes.
If the President acts on his own initiative, the proclamation must be placed before both Houses of Parliament for approval within ten days. Each House approves it separately. Without this approval, the proclamation cannot be sustained.
4. Emergency due to failure of constitutional machinery (Article 234)
When the constitutional and governmental machinery in a province breaks down, the President, or a joint sitting of Parliament, may proclaim an emergency under Article 234. The legal effect is that the federal executive takes over the functions of the provincial executive and the federal legislature assumes the legislative powers of the provincial assembly.
One institution is specifically protected throughout this process. High Courts are expressly excluded from the federal takeover. Their jurisdiction and functioning continue without interruption, which preserves judicial independence even during a constitutional crisis.
The initial period of emergency under this Article is two months. It may be extended by two months at a time through a resolution of a joint sitting of Parliament. The maximum permissible period is six months. Any laws made by the federal executive or legislature under this proclamation automatically lapse six months after the proclamation is issued.
5. Financial emergency (Article 235)
A financial emergency may be proclaimed when the President is satisfied that the economic life, financial stability, or credit of Pakistan, or any part of it, is under threat. Before issuing such a proclamation, the President must consult the Governor of the affected province. This consultation requirement is unique to financial emergencies and reflects the federal dimension of the country’s financial arrangements.
While the proclamation is in force, the executive authority of the Federation extends to directing any province to observe such principles of financial propriety as may be specified. The central government can impose fiscal discipline on provinces and direct how public funds are managed. The power is real but is framed as direction and oversight rather than a complete takeover of provincial functions.
6. Suspension of fundamental rights
During a proclamation of emergency under Article 232, certain fundamental rights are automatically suspended. These are Articles 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, and 24, covering freedom of movement, freedom of assembly, freedom of association, freedom of trade and profession, freedom of speech, and the right to property.
“While a Proclamation of Emergency is in force, Articles 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 and 24 shall be suspended.”
Other fundamental rights may also be suspended, but a separate presidential order is required and that order must be approved by a joint sitting of Parliament. Suspension is temporary, not permanent. The rights are fully restored the moment the proclamation ends. Rights that are not listed in Article 233 cannot be suspended through this mechanism at all. The right to life under Article 9, protection against torture under Article 14, and protection against double jeopardy under Article 13 remain enforceable even during the most serious emergency.
7. Power to suspend the right to move court
Article 236 gives the President a further specific power. During a proclamation of emergency, the President may by order declare that the right to move any court for enforcement of specified fundamental rights shall remain suspended for the period during which the proclamation is in force. This order may apply to the whole of Pakistan or any specified part of it.
The distinction here is precise. The President is not abolishing the fundamental rights themselves. He is suspending the remedy, that is, the citizen’s ability to approach a court to enforce those rights. Every such order must be placed before both Houses of Parliament separately for approval as soon as possible after it is made.
8. Revocation of proclamation
A proclamation of emergency may be varied or revoked by a subsequent proclamation whenever the President is satisfied that the conditions that necessitated it no longer exist. The Constitution also provides that the validity of a proclamation of emergency cannot be challenged in any court of law. This ouster of judicial review has historically been a point of tension between constitutional theory and the rule of law. The superior courts have, in various judgments, attempted to distinguish between challenges to the merits of the presidential decision and challenges to procedural validity.
9. Parliament’s power to pass laws of indemnity
Article 237 empowers Parliament to pass a law indemnifying any person in the service of the federal or provincial government for acts done in connection with the maintenance or restoration of order in any part of Pakistan. During an emergency, officials may take actions that would otherwise expose them to civil or criminal liability. An indemnity law provides legal cover for acts done in good faith. The power is vested in Parliament, not the executive, ensuring that indemnity is granted through a legislative process rather than by executive decree.