In March 1981, the court ruled in an adultery appeal that
stoning people to death was "repugnant to the injunctions of Islam," a decision that upset the ruling General Zia ul-Haq and Islamic revivalists. Zia ul-Haq then replaced several members of the court, and the above-mentioned decision was reversed. In 1982, the Federal Shariat Court ruled that there is no prohibition in the
Qur'an or
Hadith about the judgeship of a woman nor any restriction limiting the function of deciding disputes to men only. In 2013
Ashraf Jehan became the first female justice of the Federal Shariat Court. In 2016,
Provincial Assembly of the Punjab passed a legislature, the Punjab Protection of Women against Violence Act 2016. Soon after its passing, it was challenged in Federal Shariat Court. In February 2017, the court issued its ruling on
test-tube babies and validated its use conditionally.
The Nation reported, "The Federal Shariat Court yesterday declared the option of using 'test tube baby' method for conceiving babies for the married couples having some medical complications as lawful." The fact that lawyers make up a permanent majority of judges of the court, outnumbering Islamic ulama, has been credited with the court finding "technical flaws in every stoning and amputation appeal that it has ever heard", preventing the carrying out of sentences amputating limbs and killing by stoning. File:Emblem of the Federal Shariat Court of Pakistan.svg|Coat of arms of the Federal Shariat Court File:Pakistan Federal Shariat Court Flag.svg|Flag of the Federal Shariat Court ==Chief Justice and judges==