A serious constitutional standoff has erupted in Islamabad between the Auditor General of Pakistan (AGP) — the country’s top audit authority — and the Ministry of Finance, raising a provocative question: who has the authority to audit the “super auditor”?
At the heart of this dispute is Section 19A of the Auditor General’s Ordinance, inserted through the Finance Act 2015, which allows the President of Pakistan to appoint an independent officer to audit the expenditures sanctioned by the AGP. Acting on this clause, the Finance Ministry appointed an Additional Secretary in 2020 to conduct the audit. However, the AGP refused to cooperate, leading to a legal battle.
Court Rulings & Legal Battle
In February 2025, the Islamabad High Court (IHC) ruled in favor of the AGP, declaring the amendment unconstitutional and asserting that the AGP is answerable only to the President of Pakistan, not to the executive or any other branch of government. The Finance Division challenged the verdict, filing an intra-court appeal (ICA) which is still pending.
AGP’s Stance
The AGP office argues that:
- It is a constitutional body and not subject to executive audit.
- Its internal audits are already conducted by its sub-offices.
- For external review, it follows international peer review standards, like the one conducted by Saudi Arabia’s audit body in 2023.
- These reviews focus on professional practices, not financial scrutiny.
The AGP maintains that no executive authority, including the Finance Ministry, can audit its operations, as it would compromise its constitutional independence.
Finance Ministry’s Position
The Finance Ministry insists that:
- Section 19A provides clear legal grounds for auditing AGP’s financial sanctions.
- The President’s appointment of an audit officer was within the law.
- The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) also directed that the audit be carried out.
- The AGP cannot be exempt from accountability on public funds it uses.
Officials argue that the audit is limited to reviewing financial sanctions — not AGP’s performance — and is essential for transparency.
The Bigger Picture
This conflict raises deeper questions about checks and balances in Pakistan’s governance system. While the AGP claims constitutional autonomy, the Finance Ministry stresses the need for oversight of public fund usage, even within independent institutions.
As the appeal remains unresolved in the IHC, the outcome will set a precedent for how Pakistan balances independence of constitutional offices with fiscal accountability.




