ORDER SHEET

THE HIGH COURT OF SINDH, CIRCUIT COURT LARKANA

Cr. Misc. Appln. No. S- 288 of 2024

 

Date

               Order with signature of Judge

 

1. For orders on office objection-A.

2. For hearing of main case.

3. For hearing of MA No.4781/2024. S/A

 

ORDER

10-03-2025

Mr. Sajid Hussain Mahessar, advocate for applicant.

Mr. Waqar Ahmed Chandio, Advocate for the Respondents.

          Mr. Nazir Ahmed Bhangwar, Dy. Prosecutor General for the State

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Khalid Hussain Shahani, J: Applicant Javed Ahmed has impugned an order dated 16.08.2024, passed by the learned IV-Additional Sessions Judge, Kambar in capacity as Ex-Officio Justice of Peace. In terms of the said order, an application filed by respondent No.3 under section 22-A and 22-B of the Cr.P.C. seeking directions for the registration of an F.I.R, was allowed.

2.            Learned Counsel for the applicant has argued that infact no offence has occurred and that the application filed by respondent No.3 Mst. Najmu Nisa was purely based on malafide.

3.            Learned Deputy Prosecutor General, Sindh assisted by learned Counsel for the private respondents have supported the impugned order.

4.            I have heard the counsel for the applicant as well as learned Counsel for the respondents and learned Deputy Prosecutor General, Sindh. My observations and findings are as follows.

5.            It is a given position that if any person has an information about an offence having been committed, he is entitled under Section 154, Cr.P.C to approach the police station of competent jurisdiction with the information he has. It is then up to the police officer to determine whether the information reveals an offence having been committed and if yes, whether it would be categorized as a cognizable or a non-cognizable offence. The Cr.P.C. and the Police Rules have ample guidance for S.H.O.s to proceed in all these scenarios. At this juncture, learned Counsel for the applicant argues that while the impugned order appears to say that an FIR should be registered only if a cognizable offence has been committed, such orders are usually misinterpreted by the police to mean that the Ex-Officio Justice of Peace has ordered a compulsory registration of an FIR. Learned Counsel is correct to this extent that experience has shown that police officers too indeed interpret such orders to mean directions passed by the Ex-Officio Justice of Peace for mandatory registration of an FIR. It is clarified that the order of 16.08.2024 apart from the fact that in itself it does not order a compulsory registration of F.I.R should not be interpreted to mean the same by the police.

6.            Given the above, the Respondent No.3 may approach the competent police station with the information that he has. The police shall act in accordance with law and ensure that they remain neutral as an allegation of the police being influenced has been made by learned counsel. It is clarified that this order should not be interpreted to mean that a mandatory direction to register an F.I.R, is being made.

7.            Application is disposed of in the above terms.

 

                                                                               Judge

S.Ashfaq/- *