SHAHZAD IQBAL, RESEARCH OFFICER, DEFENCE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY ORGANISATION versus FEDERAL PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION
Pakistan Citizenship Act 1951 Section 17 Pakistan Citizenship Rules, 1952, R23 Constitution Pakistan (1973), Article 199 Constitution Civil Service Appointment Domicile Certification Applicant was born in Rawalpindi (Punjab), educated there and appointed as an experimental officer. has been. Based on the Domicile Certificate, the father of Rawalpindi's father, who was formally an Army officer and was stationed in Quetta (Balochistan), had installed the Quetta Domicile when the applicant was appointed as the Senior Research Officer. Had applied for, he was denied it. Applying for the same petition on the basis that his father is a resident of Quetta, he could not apply for this post against Punjab quota, not in the legality of Section 17 of the Pakistan Citizenship Act 1951. It was held that the father's residential domicile would be governed. In the absence of any allegation, the child domicile certificate was not improperly issued by the authority in Rawalpindi It will be considered that the applicants were provided in Section 17 of the Pakistan Citizenship Rules 1952, R23 of the Pakistan Citizenship Act 1951 The certificate was issued following the terms and conditions provided that any person with whom the Federal Government was satisfied that he or she had generally taken up residence. In Pakistan for less than a year, immediately before applying and having obtained a domicile in it, he could be granted a domicile petitioner's certification, in such cases, only to apply for a position against the Punjab quota. Could not be forbidden. Because he was born in Balochistan
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