Constitution of Pakistan

30 minutes Intermediate 50 Questions
Topic Overview

B. Constitution of Pakistan Key features of the 1973 Constitution, Fundamental Rights and Duties, National and Provincial Government Structure

Complete Topic Overview

Constitution of Pakistan

Supreme Law of the Land

The Constitution of Pakistan is the supreme law of the land. It lays down the framework for the country's political system, defining the structure, powers, and responsibilities of the government, as well as the fundamental rights of its citizens. Pakistan has had three constitutions in its history (1956, 1962, and 1973). The current Constitution of Pakistan was enacted on August 14, 1973.

 

1. Introduction to the 1973 Constitution

Overview

The 1973 Constitution is the current supreme law of Pakistan. It was drafted by the government led by Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and passed unanimously by the National Assembly on April 10, 1973. It came into effect on August 14, 1973 (the 26th anniversary of Pakistan's independence).

Important: This constitution established a parliamentary democratic system and is considered a landmark achievement as it was the first constitution in Pakistan's history to be agreed upon by all political parties and passed unanimously.

Brief History of Pakistan's Constitutions

 

ConstitutionEnactedKey Features / Fate
1956 ConstitutionMarch 23, 1956First constitution of Pakistan; established parliamentary system with Prime Minister as head of government. Abrogated in 1958 when General Ayub Khan imposed martial law.
1962 ConstitutionJune 8, 1962Introduced by General Ayub Khan; established presidential system with indirect elections (Basic Democracies). Abrogated in 1969 when General Yahya Khan imposed martial law.
1973 ConstitutionAugust 14, 1973Current constitution; restored parliamentary system; unanimously passed; has undergone amendments but remains in effect.

2. Key Features of the 1973 Constitution

The 1973 Constitution has several distinctive features that define Pakistan's governance system.

2.1 Written and Lengthy Constitution

The Constitution of Pakistan is a written document consisting of:

280 articles

12 parts

Several schedules

It is one of the lengthiest constitutions in the world, covering a wide range of topics in detail.

2.2 Parliamentary Form of Government

The constitution establishes a federal parliamentary democratic system where:

 

ComponentDescription
Prime MinisterChief Executive and head of government
PresidentHead of state; acts on advice of Prime Minister
CabinetCollectively responsible to National Assembly
ConfidencePrime Minister must command majority confidence in National Assembly

2.3 Federal System

Pakistan is a federation with a clear division of powers between central and provincial governments. Under the 18th Amendment, the Concurrent Legislative List was abolished.

 

ListDescription
Federal Legislative ListMatters only federal government can legislate (defense, foreign affairs, currency)
Provincial Legislative ListMatters only provincial governments can legislate (agriculture, local government, health)
Residual SubjectsMatters not mentioned in either list; fall under provincial jurisdiction

2.4 Bicameral Legislature

The Parliament consists of two houses:

 

HouseDescription
National Assembly (Lower House)Directly elected by the people
Senate (Upper House)Represents provinces; indirectly elected by provincial assemblies

2.5 Fundamental Rights

The constitution guarantees justiciable fundamental rights to all citizens, including:

Freedom of speech

Freedom of religion

Right to life

Right to education

Justiciable: Citizens can approach courts for enforcement of these rights.

2.6 Islamic Provisions

The constitution declares Islam as the state religion and contains several Islamic provisions:

 

Article / ProvisionDescription
Article 2Islam is the state religion of Pakistan
Article 227All laws shall conform to Quran and Sunnah
Council of Islamic IdeologyAdvisory body reviewing laws for Islamic compliance
Objectives ResolutionPreamble of constitution; embodies founding principles
President & PMMust be Muslims

2.7 Independence of Judiciary

The constitution provides for an independent judiciary with power of judicial review:

 

CourtRole
Supreme Court of PakistanHighest judicial body
High CourtsOne in each province + Islamabad
Lower CourtsDistrict and Sessions Courts

2.8 Provincial Autonomy (18th Amendment - 2010)

The 18th Amendment (2010) was a landmark constitutional amendment that:

 

ChangeDescription
Abolished Concurrent Legislative ListRemoved subjects where both federal and provincial governments could legislate
Transferred 47 subjectsPowers devolved to provinces
Renamed NWFPNow Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Depoliticized judicial appointmentsChanged appointment process for judges
Limited presidential powersRestored Prime Minister's authority as chief executive

2.9 Rigidity and Flexibility

 

AspectDetail
Amendment processTwo-thirds majority vote in both houses (National Assembly + Senate)
Provincial consentRequired for amendments affecting provincial boundaries
ClassificationNeither too rigid nor too flexible

2.10 Language Provisions

 

ArticleProvision
Article 251Urdu is the national language of Pakistan
Official useEnglish may be used for official purposes until replaced by Urdu

3. Fundamental Rights and Principles of Policy

3.1 Fundamental Rights (Part II, Articles 8–28)

These rights are justiciable (enforceable in court). Any law violating them is void.

 

ArticleRightDescription
8Laws inconsistent with FRAny law violating fundamental rights is void
9Right to Life and LibertyNo deprivation except in accordance with law
10Safeguards as to ArrestRight to be informed of grounds; right to lawyer
11Prohibition of SlaveryForced labor and child labor (below 14 in factories) prohibited
12Protection against Retrospective PunishmentNo ex post facto laws
13Protection against Double PunishmentNo double jeopardy
14Inviolability of DignityDignity and privacy of home shall not be violated
15Freedom of MovementRight to move freely and reside anywhere in Pakistan
16Freedom of AssemblyRight to assemble peacefully without arms
17Freedom of AssociationRight to form associations/unions
18Freedom of TradeRight to practice any profession or lawful business
19Freedom of SpeechSubject to reasonable restrictions (glory of Islam, integrity of Pakistan)
19-ARight to InformationAccess to public information (added by 18th Amendment)
20Freedom to Profess ReligionRight to profess, practice, and propagate any religion
21Safeguard against Religious TaxationNo compulsion to pay taxes for other religions
22Safeguards in EducationNo denial of admission on religious grounds
23Right to PropertyRight to acquire, hold, and dispose of property
24Protection of PropertyCompulsory acquisition only for public purpose with compensation
25Equality of CitizensEqual law and protection; discrimination on sex alone prohibited
25-ARight to EducationFree compulsory education for children aged 5–16 (added by 18th Amendment)
26Non-discrimination in Public PlacesNo discrimination on race, religion, caste, or birthplace
27Safeguard against Service DiscriminationNo employment discrimination
28Preservation of Language/Script/CultureRight of any community to preserve its distinct identity

3.2 Principles of Policy (Articles 29–40)

Unlike Fundamental Rights, these are not justiciable (cannot be enforced in court). They are directive principles for the state.

 

ArticlePrinciple
31Islamic Way of Life – enable Muslims to live according to Quran and Sunnah
32Promotion of Local Government – encourage local government institutions
34Parity of Women – ensure full participation of women in national life
36Protection of Minorities – safeguard rights and interests of minorities
37Social and Economic Well-being – promote social justice, eradicate illiteracy, free education, just working conditions
40Strengthen Bonds with Muslim World – strengthen fraternal relations among Muslim countries

4. National and Provincial Government Structure

The 1973 Constitution establishes a federal structure with clear distribution of powers.

4.1 Federal Government Structure

The federal government consists of three branches: Legislature, Executive, and Judiciary.

A. Legislature (Parliament / Majlis-e-Shoora) – Bicameral

National Assembly (Lower House)

 

DetailInformation
Total Seats336 (after 25th Amendment)
General Seats266
Reserved Women60
Reserved Non-Muslims10
Term5 years
ElectionDirect adult franchise (18+ years)
Presiding OfficerSpeaker and Deputy Speaker
FunctionsLegislation, budget approval, executive oversight, forming government

Senate (Upper House)

 

DetailInformation
Total Seats96
Composition23 from each province (14 general, 4 women, 4 technocrats, 1 non-Muslim); 4 from Islamabad (2 general, 1 woman, 1 technocrat)
Term6 years (half retire every 3 years)
ChairmanPresiding officer
FunctionsRepresents provinces, reviews legislation (except money bills), protects provincial interests

B. Executive

President

 

DetailInformation
ElectionElectoral College (MPs + Provincial Assembly members)
Term5 years
QualificationsMuslim, 45+ years, qualified for National Assembly
RoleHead of state (ceremonial); acts on PM's advice
PowersAppoints PM, governors, judges, CEC; Supreme Commander of Armed Forces; pardon power

Prime Minister

 

DetailInformation
AppointmentLeader of majority party in National Assembly; appointed by President
QualificationsMust be member of National Assembly
RoleChief Executive; head of government; chairs Cabinet
CabinetFederal Ministers, Ministers of State, Advisors; collectively responsible to National Assembly

C. Judiciary

 

CourtRole
Supreme Court of PakistanHighest judicial body; headed by Chief Justice; original, appellate, advisory jurisdiction
High CourtsEach province + Islamabad High Court
Federal Shariat CourtExamines laws for Islamic conformity
District & Sessions CourtsLower judiciary at district level

4.2 Provincial Government Structure

Each of Pakistan's four provinces (Punjab, Sindh, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Balochistan) has its own government structure similar to the federal system.

A. Provincial Legislature (Provincial Assembly)

 

ProvinceGeneral SeatsWomen (Reserved)Non-MuslimsTotal
Punjab297668371
Sindh130299168
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa115264145
Balochistan5111365

 

DetailInformation
Term5 years
FunctionsLegislation on provincial matters, budget approval, oversight

B. Provincial Executive

 

PositionDetail
GovernorAppointed by President on PM's advice; head of province (ceremonial); acts on CM's advice
Chief MinisterLeader of majority party in Provincial Assembly; chief executive of province
Provincial CabinetMinisters appointed by Governor on CM's advice; collectively responsible to Provincial Assembly

C. Provincial Judiciary

 

CourtRole
High CourtHighest judicial body in the province
District CourtsSubordinate judiciary at district level

4.3 Local Government

Under Articles 32 and 140-A, provinces must establish local government institutions.

 

AreaInstitutions
UrbanMetropolitan corporations, municipal corporations, municipal committees, town committees
RuralDistrict councils, tehsil councils, union councils

Functions: Sanitation, water supply, local roads, primary education (grassroots administration).

4.4 Distribution of Powers (Federal vs. Provincial) – After 18th Amendment

 

Federal SubjectsProvincial Subjects
DefenseAgriculture
Armed ForcesLocal Government
Foreign AffairsHealth
CurrencyEducation (except higher education coordination)
Interstate CoordinationEnvironment
National PlanningSports
CensusTourism
Nuclear Energy 

Council of Common Interests (CCI): Constitutional body (Article 153) comprising Prime Minister, Chief Ministers, and three federal ministers to resolve federal-provincial disputes.

5. Key Constitutional Amendments (Summary)

 

AmendmentYearKey Changes
8th Amendment1985Granted discretionary powers to President to dissolve National Assembly
13th Amendment1997Removed President's power to dissolve National Assembly
17th Amendment2003Restored some powers to President
18th Amendment2010Most significant: abolished Concurrent List, enhanced provincial autonomy, renamed NWFP to Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, reduced presidential powers
19th Amendment2011Further refined judicial appointment process
20th Amendment2012Addressed Election Commission composition and caretaker governments
25th Amendment2018Merged FATA with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

Quick Revision Summary Table

 

AspectSummary
Current Constitution1973 Constitution (enacted Aug 14, 1973)
Previous Constitutions1956 (abrogated 1958), 1962 (abrogated 1969)
System of GovernmentFederal Parliamentary Democracy
Head of StatePresident (ceremonial)
Head of GovernmentPrime Minister (chief executive)
LegislatureBicameral: National Assembly (336) + Senate (96)
State ReligionIslam (Article 2)
National LanguageUrdu (Article 251)
Most Important Amendment18th Amendment (2010) – provincial autonomy
Fundamental RightsArticles 8–28 (justiciable)
Principles of PolicyArticles 29–40 (non-justiciable)
21
Unlike Fundamental Rights, Principles of Policy are:
Easy 1 Mark
A Justiciable
B Non-justiciable (cannot be enforced in court)
C Legally binding
D Criminal offenses
22
Principles of Policy are contained in which articles of the 1973 Constitution?
Easy 1 Mark
A Articles 8–28
B Articles 29–40
C Articles 41–50
D Articles 51–60
23
Which article ensures that all citizens are equal before the law?
Easy 1 Mark
A Article 23
B Article 24
C Article 25
D Article 26
24
Article 25-A, which guarantees free and compulsory education for children aged 5–16, was added by which amendment?
Easy 1 Mark
A 8th Amendment
B 13th Amendment
C 17th Amendment
D 18th Amendment
25
Which article guarantees freedom to profess, practice, and propagate religion?
Medium 1 Mark
A Article 18
B Article 19
C Article 20
D Article 21
26
Which article guarantees freedom of speech and expression?
Easy 1 Mark
A Article 17
B Article 18
C Article 19
D Article 20
27
Which article prohibits slavery and forced labor?
Easy 1 Mark
A Article 9
B Article 10
C Article 11
D Article 12
28
Which article guarantees the right to life and liberty?
Medium 1 Mark
A Article 8
B Article 9
C Article 10
D Article 11
29
Fundamental Rights under the 1973 Constitution are:
Easy 1 Mark
A Non-justiciable
B Justiciable (enforceable in court)
C Optional for citizens
D Only for government officials
30
Fundamental Rights in the 1973 Constitution are contained in which articles?
Easy 1 Mark
A Articles 1–7
B Articles 8–28
C Articles 29–40
D Articles 50–100
31
The Objectives Resolution was passed in which year and later became the preamble of the 1973 Constitution?
Medium 1 Mark
A 1947
B 1948
C 1949
D 1950
32
According to Article 251, which is the national language of Pakistan?
Easy 1 Mark
A English
B Punjabi
C Urdu
D Arabic
33
Which article of the 1973 Constitution declares Islam as the state religion of Pakistan?
Medium 1 Mark
A Article 1
B Article 2
C Article 3
D Article 4
34
Which house of Parliament is directly elected by the people?
Easy 1 Mark
A Senate
B National Assembly
C Both a and b
D Neither
35
The Parliament of Pakistan consists of how many houses?
Medium 1 Mark
A One
B Two
C Three
D Four
36
Which amendment abolished the Concurrent Legislative List?
Medium 1 Mark
A 8th Amendment
B 13th Amendment
C 17th Amendment
D 18th Amendment
37
Under the 1973 Constitution, the President acts on the advice of:
Easy 1 Mark
A Chief Justice
B Prime Minister
C Army Chief
D Senate Chairman
38
In the parliamentary system under the 1973 Constitution, who is the Chief Executive?
Medium 1 Mark
A President
B Prime Minister
C Chief Justice
D Army Chief
39
The 1973 Constitution establishes which form of government?
Easy 1 Mark
A Presidential
B Parliamentary federal democratic
C Absolute monarchy
D Dictatorship
40
How many articles does the 1973 Constitution contain?
Easy 1 Mark
A 250 articles
B 280 articles
C 300 articles
D 320 articles
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