Wajihuddin Ahmed was born into practising lawyer family in New Delhi, British India, on 1 December 1938.[5] His father, Waheeduddin Ahmed, was also a jurist and had held a prestigious in Delhi High Court; his family migrated to Pakistan after independence in 1947. His father, Waheeduddin Ahmed, rose up to become a respected judge, eventually securing appointments as Chief Justice of Sindh High Court and subsequently appointed as senior justice of Supreme Court of Pakistan.[6]
He avoided holding any judicial office, whether elected or appointed, during his father's tenure as a judge.[7] Therefore, he remained associated with the SM College as a professor of law, delivering lectures and teaching law for undergraduate and post-graduate level courses.[7]
Career
Son of highly reputed Chief Justice of West Pakistan High Court and Judge of the Supreme Court of Pakistan, Justice Waheeduddin Ahmed, Justice Wajih enrolled as an advocate of the Sindh High Court and remained Lecturer at the SM Law College for LL. B. and LL. M. classes. He was consecutively elected as president Sindh High Court Bar Association unopposed in 1977 and 1978 and elected President of Karachi Bar association in 1981. Advocate Wajih was appointed Standing Council for Federal Government in 1984 and Advocate GeneralSindh on 19 November 1986 and elevated to the Bench of the SHC as a Judge in 1988. He became the Chief Justice of the Sindh High Court from 5 November 1997 to 4 May 1998 and moved to the Supreme Court in 1998. During his tenure as SHC CJ, most sou moto actions were taken. He acted as Returning Officer during 1997 Presidential Elections and then appeared as presidential candidate against Musharraf in 2007.
Justice Wajih joined the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) on 10 January 2011.[8] He left Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf in 2016[9] and started his own party under the name Aam Loeg Ittehad.[10]
^ abSupreme Court of Pakistan (1994). The All Pakistan Legal Decisions. Vol. 46 (4 ed.). Islamabad, Pakistan: The Supreme Court of Pakistan Press Publications. p. 1090. vUg-AQAAIAAJ.