1947 Bannu jirga On June 21, 1947, in
Bannu, a
loya jirga was held consisting of
Bacha Khan, his brother
Chief Minister Dr Khan Sahib, the
Khudai Khidmatgars, members of the Provincial Assembly,
Mirzali Khan (Faqir of Ipi), and other tribal chiefs, just seven weeks before the
Partition of India. The
loya jirga declared the
Bannu Resolution, which demanded that the Pashtuns be given a choice to have an independent state of
Pashtunistan composing all Pashtun territories of British India, instead of being made to join either India or Pakistan. However, the
British Raj refused to comply with the demand of this resolution, in response to which the Khudai Khidmatgars boycotted the
1947 North-West Frontier Province referendum for merging the province into Pakistan.
2006 loya jirga for Balochistan In April 2006, former
Balochistan Chief Minister Taj Muhammad Jamali offered to arrange a meeting between
President Pervez Musharraf and a
loya jirga for peace in
Balochistan. A
loya jirga was held at
Kalat in September 2006 to announce that a case would be filed in the
International Court of Justice regarding the sovereignty and rights of the
Baloch people.
Quasi-legal function The jirga was also used as a
court in cases of criminal conduct, but this usage is being replaced by formal courts in some settled areas of Pakistan and Afghanistan, elsewhere it is still used as courts in tribal regions. The jirga holds the prestige of a court in the tribal areas of Pakistan. Although a political agent appointed by the national government maintains law and order through the
Frontier Crimes Regulation (FCR), the actual power lies in the jirga. The political agent maintains law and order in his tribal region with the help of jirgas. The jirga can award
capital punishment, such as
stoning to death in case of adultery, or expulsion from the community. In the recent military operations against
al Qaeda and the
Taliban in Pakistan's restive southern tribal agencies bordering Afghanistan, jirgas played a key role of moderator between the government and the militants. The tradition of jirga has also been adopted by Muslims in the
Kashmir Valley of
Indian-administered Kashmir.
Alternative Dispute Resolution Act 2017 As per 2017 political dispensation in Government, unofficial Jirga and Panchayats are very popular among masses, so formal recognition of the same will help make the system more transparent and responsible, while left leaning political dispensations in opposition expressed their apprehension that weaker sections will suffer while
feudalism will benefit. The Alternative Dispute Resolution Act, 2017 of Pakistan makes provision for selection of neutral observing arbitrator from Government approved panel agreed by parties. If a dispute is resolved amicably the court will formalize judgement, and if not parties can choose to opt-in further formal judicial administration for their grievances. ''Basit Mahmood also criticizes United Kingdom's donor agency Department for International Development for funding of misogyny protecting ADR tribunals. According to correspondent I.A. Rehman, In January 2019 Pakistani government law officials from provinces and federal confirmed governments-made commitments to Supreme Court of Pakistan not to allow Panchayat and Jirga platforms for illegal practices of violating fundamental constitutional rights of women by honour killings, wani, swara, karo kari, and that the governments are committed to
CEDAW To make the tribal jirga to submit to a financial compromise, the district administration had to call in elite security force, and make victim submit to demand of 1 million rupees plus four rams as reparation from victim and his clan. As per a June 2020
Tribune Pakistan report, a jirga (a type of quasi
kangaroo court) attempted ruling to give up a 13-year-old minor girl in marriage to a 41-year-old married man as
Swara (punishment) for her brother's alleged disliked relation with his cousin, the Jirga's attempt was foiled by a close relative of the boy with help of police. In another 2020 June incident in Sindh Pakistan, police struggled to clamp down on a jirga which declared two sisters to be ignoble 'Karis' fined father of the girls for one million rupees plus ordered killing of the sisters (an outlawed but prevalent practice of declaring 'Kari's-literal black spot on honour of the family or community – subjectable to severe punishments including
honour killing many times for alleged compromising on expectations of modesty and chastity out of suspicions).
Historic jirgas and women The Sindh High Court imposed a ban on the holding of jirgas in April 2004 because of the sometimes inhumane sentences which were imposed on people, especially on women and men who married of their own free will. The ban, however, has been ignored. An all-female jirga or a Khwaindo jirga (a "sister's council") was held in Pakistan, and it had a total of 25 members. It was headed by
Tabassum Adnan which helped 11 women get justice as of 2013.
2022 Pashtun National Jirga On 11–14 March 2022, the Pashtun National Jirga, or Bannu Jirga, was held at
Mirakhel in
Bannu,
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in order to defend the rights of the Pashtuns in the country. The critical issues which were faced by the Pashtuns were discussed during the jirga in a bid to suggest solutions to them. The Bannu Jirga endorsed the declarations of two earlier Pashtun Jirgas, one of which was organized on 10 March 2020 at Bacha Khan Markaz,
Peshawar by
Asfandyar Wali Khan of the
Awami National Party (ANP), while the other was hosted on 7 August 2021 in
Hashtnagar,
Charsadda by
Afzal Khamosh of the
Mazdoor Kisan Party (MKP).
Mahmood Khan Achakzai,
Nawab Ayaz Jogezai,
Abdul Rahim Ziaratwal,
Abdul Qahar Wadan,
Obaidullah Babat,
Nasrullah Zayrai and
Arfa Siddiq of the
Pashtunkhwa Milli Awami Party (PMAP),
Manzoor Pashteen,
Mir Kalam and
Wranga Loni of the
Pashtun Tahafuz Movement (PTM),
Mohsin Dawar,
Latif Afridi,
Afrasiab Khattak,
Bushra Gohar and
Jamila Gilani of the
National Democratic Movement (NDM),
Khadim Hussain and
Maulana Khanzeb of the
Awami National Party (ANP),
Afzal Khamosh of the
Mazdoor Kisan Party (MKP),
Farhatullah Babar and
Ahmad Kundi of the
Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP),
Sardar Yaqoob Nasar of the
Pakistan Muslim League (PMLN),
Muhammad Khan Sherani of
Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI), Chief of
Waziristan Gul Alam Wazir, historian
Parvesh Shaheen, and numerous other Pashtun,
Baloch and
Hazara leaders were part of the Bannu Jirga. The resolutions were also endorsed by several Afghan political leaders, including
Hamid Karzai,
Haneef Atmar and
Amrullah Saleh. == See also ==