Pakistan's parliament has passed a new law to curtail the powers of the Supreme Court's chief justice, Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar said on Friday.
The move comes amid a row between the higher judiciary and the government.
Tarar had introduced the bill in the lower house of the parliament on Wednesday and it was passed by the senate, or upper house, on Thursday.
"The parliament has passed the bill," Tarar told reporters on Friday.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif's government is currently involved in a row with the Supreme Court over the holding of snap polls in two provinces where former leader Imran Khan had dissolved the local governments earlier this year in a bid to force early elections.
The government says it is economically not viable to hold the snap elections first and then have another general election this year.
The Supreme Court earlier this month ordered the snap polls to be held in the two provinces within 90 days of the dissolution of the two local government, which falls by April 30.
The new draft law, which has been sent to Pakistan's president for assent, has cut down the chief justice's powers to constitute panels, hear appeals or assign cases to judges in his team, according to a copy of the bill.
These tasks will now be done by a three-member committee headed by the chief justice with his two most senior judges as members.


Israeli strikes on Gaza kill five, including nine-year-old boy, medics say
Indonesia commuter train crash toll rises to 15 as rescuers complete evacuation
Sweden issues 'early warning' of potential jet fuel shortage
Austrian pleads guilty to foiled attack on Taylor Swift's Vienna concert
Gunman, 89, arrested after five wounded in Athens shootings
