'Justice is never the mob': Legal fraternity weighs in on shocking paragraph in Musharraf treason verdict.

Soon after the detailed verdict against former president retired Gen Pervez Musharraf in the high treason case came to the fore on Thursday, members of the legal fraternity began weighing in on the severity of paragraph 66 which calls for the former president's body to be "dragged to D-Chowk" in Islamabad and "hanged for three days".

The judgment has been authored by Peshawar High Court Chief Justice Waqar Ahmad Seth who has directed public hanging. Justice Shahid Karim of the Lahore High Court and Justice Nazar Akbar of the Sindh High Court have disagreed with such a method of execution prescribed by their fellow judge.

'Condemnable and unlawful'

Legal adviser for the International Commission of Jurists Reema Omer provided a breakdown of each of the three judges' contribution to the judgment in a series of tweets.

She termed Justice Seth's judgment as "condemnable and unlawful" and found Justice Karim's opinion "strong" overall. She called for a review of the judgment and said there were multiple grounds for appeal available.

'Justice is never the mob'

Barrister Asad Rahim Khan reminded everyone that the country had fought against the menace that had derived pleasure from exactly this kind of "corpse-dragging".

"No sentence in law provides for a three-day lynching and no crime in this country attracts it. Justice is never the mob," he wrote.

'Historic judgment robbed of legal sanctity'

Lawyer Salahuddin Ahmed regretted that an otherwise "well-reasoned and historic judgment' had been robbed of its moral and legal sanctity by "18 ill-considered words".

"Yes, the 'hanging corpse' bit may not be part of the majority's effective order but why why can't judges resist the urge to grandstand?" he wondered.

'Inappropriate and unusual'

International lawyer Taimur Malik said paragraph 66 is "inappropriate and unusual" and wondered what the special court's objectives were in suggesting such a punishment.

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