A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, April 20, 2013
Much Ado About Nothing
Much Ado About Nothing: The Northern
Provincial Councils, 13thAmendment and the rationale for demanding a
Transitional Administration
The
country and particularly the Tamils are obsessed with the prospects of aNorthern
Provincial Council election. The key question that is debated, though
some what laid to rest by the reference to it in the UNHRC
Resolutionof 2013, was as to whether the elections will be held or
not. The debate now in Tamil circles is about who should be the Chief
Ministerial candidate. That an election for a constitutional body is something
that has to be struggled and fought for only indicates the sorry state of
affairs of post-war politics in this country. So much for the argument
that LTTE was
the only obstacle for the Sinhala polity to positively consider ‘state
transformation’.
The
Government has made the holding of the Northern Provincial Council elections a
‘high value commodity’ for the Tamils. By promising and breaching the promise
and re-promising to hold it, the Government has made the Tamil community yearn
for it. The strategy seems to be to get the Tamils to ask, demand, struggle,
fight for something so minimalistic; to get them to feel and identify with the
Provincial Council as an institution that will solve their problems. The
political leadership of the Tamils – particularly the Tamil National Alliance
has fallen for this trap. It has become very difficult to get the Tamil polity
to debate and discuss about what contesting in these elections might mean for
the Tamil struggle for self determination and meaningful self-government. Most
Tamils want to vote, purely to show their displeasure with the Government. No
one wants to risk the possibility of a Government backed party winning the
Northern Provincial Council election. Many Tamils actually think, quite
mistakenly, that an elected TNA Chief Minister will be able to reign in the
unruly Governor of the Northern Province. The defeatist mentality stemming from
Mullivaaykkal reigns supreme and many actors are making convenient use of this
collective despair of the Tamil people.
What
does the 13th amendment have to offer to the Tamils?
A
dispassionate but critical analysis of the content and form of the 13th amendment is
generally lacking in our deliberations about the importance of the Northern
Province Elections. The 13th amendment was drafted in a hurry and
some suggest that it was drafted deliberately with internal contradictions
leading to any ‘inconsistencies’ and ‘contradictions’ being interpreted in
favour of the central government.
Here
is a short list of what I think are the main flaws of the
13th amendment:
a)
The 13th amendment sits within a unitary state framework which
provides the background for interpretations regarding the working of the
13th amendment being tilted in favour of the Centre.
b)
The Governor, an appointee of the President, has to provide consent for any bill
that has financial consequences, before it can be tabled before the Provincial
Council. He also can delay any legislation brought before the Provincial Council
in the name of purported unconstitutionality. This can only mean that the
Governor has ultimate control over the whole of the legislative agenda of a
Provincial Council.
c)
The Governor of the Province has plenary powers (appointment, dismissal and
transfer powers) over the Provincial Public Service and exercises un-curtailed
discretion over the Provincial Executive. (The Constitution in fact says that
the Governor has the discretion to decide what is in his discretion). The
Transfer of Powers Act of 1992 brought in by President Premadasa transferred all
executive power of the Province to centrally controlled Divisional Secretaries
to whom the Governor can give directions.
d)
The Provincial List, which contains a list of subjects devolved to the
provinces, has lengthy descriptions of the subjects, in order to restrain the
scope and extent of the actual devolution. The three appendices to the
provincial council list contain in eight pages restrictions on three most
important subjects of devolution: law and order, education and land. These
appendices take away most of what appears in first reading to have been devolved
as a subject under the list. Experience has shown that on all these three issues
the provinces have very little or no powers.
e)
The Central executive can in the name of formulating ‘national policy’ make
decrees on any subject ‘devolved’ to the provinces.
f)
State Land alienation, prime among Tamil concerns, continues to be vested with
the Centre more particularly the President, vide Article 33 (d) of the
Constitution[1].
g)
Police powers though appearing to be devolved remain with the Centre with most
policing powers retained for the National Police and appointments to the
Provincial Police Service being strictly controlled by the Central Government.
Even the appointment of the DIG, where the Chief Minister and the IGP don’t
agree, is a matter for the President.
h)
Subjects relating to the developmental and livelihood needs of the Tamil people
are not ‘devolved’ to the Provincial Councils. For example. Planning is
mentioned in the provincial council list but is also a subject in the concurrent
list, which includes the ‘formulation and appraisal of plan implementation
strategies at the provincial council level’. The concurrent list has everything
else that is important for the immediate reconstruction of the livelihood of the
war-affected population – fisheries, agriculture, social services, employment
planning at provincial level etc – the list is quite long. The concurrent list
for all practical purposes is an appendix to the reserved list (which details
the powers of the centre). On top of all this there is the unconstitutional,
illegal Presidential Task Force, which has to approve every single developmental
programme carried out in the North.
The
particular political role given to the Governors in the provincial
administration in the North and East adds to the agony and pain of the
experience of the 13th amendment in the North and East. In the South
the Governors are dormant. (The image that should come to your mind are retired
politicians like an Alavi Moulana or a WJM Lokubandara) They do not interfere
with the Provincial Council administrations. However in the North and East,
wherein the Governor’s chair is occupied by two retired army personnel, the
Governors make maximum use of their constitutionally granted power. The
13th amendment gives the Governor a choice as to whether s/he wants
to be active or not. In the North and East the Governors act like Viceroys from
an alien land. But the hard truth is that the Governors are constitutionally
empowered to act like the colonial Viceroys.
Here
is what M.H.M Hisbullah, then a Minister in Chief Minister Pillayan’s
Eastern Provincial Board of Ministers, had to say in 2009 about the functioning
of the EPC:
“I
have spoken to Chief Minister from other provinces as well. The bitter truth for
us is that they don’t face any of the problems that we face [with the Governor]
in their provinces. They should at least give us the powers that the other
provinces are allowed to enjoy. The Governor of the Eastern Province summons
Provincial Ministry Secretaries and speaks to them and issues orders. He calls
and conducts his own meetings. He has declared that he is fully in control of
the subject of finance. He says that appointing power of even a health labourer
is with him. Therefore even the little powers that have been devolved to us we
have not been in a position to exercise because of the Governor’s intrusion in
our work[2]”
And
guess what, Pillayan and Hisbullah were part of a UPFA coalition in the East.
What are TNA’s chances then of running a Northern Provincial Council as per
their people’s mandate? The Provincial Councils cannot impeach the Governor.
They can only pass a resolution recommending to the President his removal.
The
above should make it clear that the Provincial Councils are mere appendages to
the Centre. As Prof Ranjith
Amerasinghe has observed the relationship between the Centre and the
Provincial Council is a principal – agent relationship[3].
The Provincial Council or the Board of Ministers have no
self-agency.
Given
the above, are the Tamils not entitled to ask the logical question, as to what
we the Tamils stand to gain from the 13th amendment? Or what we stand
to gain from an elected Northern Provincial Council? Can an elected Northern
Provincial Council help the war-affected with livelihood support?, stop the land
grab?, leave alone do anything about the release political prisoners lingering
in prisons in the south? To articulate this sounds ‘moronic’ and ‘ultra
nationalistic’[4] and
worse sounds like ‘Kaluthaihal’ (donkeys)[5] for
some pundits. Purely from a realist, pragmatist framework, I beg to ask the
question, why is what we are saying irrational or illogical?
I
do not understand why some people waste so much energy pressing for a ‘full
implementation of the 13thamendment’, except of course in adherence
to the liberal democratic principle that the constitution in a constitutional
democracy needs to be given full force. (Extra-constitutionalism has become part
and parcel of Sri Lanka’s constitutional culture and hence, sadly, the need for
liberals to spend a lot of time developing a ‘serious discouse’ about the need
to implement the constitution in full). It is true that certain portions of the
13th amendment such as the establishment of a National Land
Commission and a Provincial Police Division have not been given heed to, both of
which have anyway been designed to ensure the dominance of the centre. But
nothing changes in terms of the provincial council’s capacity to respond to the
problems faced by the Tamil people. Even with ‘full implemetation of the
13th amendment the design related flaws of the
13thamendment that I have referred to earlier very much remain.
I
also do not understand the talk about a ‘13 +’ or ‘beyond the
13th amendment’ or ‘building upon the 13thamendment’[6].
In addition to the point about the many minuses that have already been deducted
from the 13th amendment (including the North East merger), 13 + is
constitutionally unfeasible. The Supreme Court in its determination on the
constitutionality of the 13th amendment clearly said that the 13th
amendment was the maximum that one could do in terms of devolution within the
confines of the 1978 unitary constitution. So any more pluses, the Supreme Court
is likely to hold, will violate the entrenched unitary character of the
constitution which cannot be amended without its being sanctioned by the people
at a referendum. In short then, is impossible to add more things to the
13th amendment within the confines of the present constitution.
So
who wants the 13th amendment?
The
US Government thinks it can be a starting point. Asst Secretary of State Robert
Blake said so in a press conference in Colombo in September 2011[7].
Ambassador Michelle Sison in her confirmation hearings said that holding
elections for the NPC will be one among three steps that Sri Lanka can take
towards reconciliation[8].
The US Resolution at UNHRC of March 2013 also makes a reference to the Northern
Provincial Council Elections. That India is pushing for an implementation of
the 13th amendment and for 13+ is well known and documented. US and
India are only asking the Government of Sri Lanka to deliver on something as
minimalistic as the 13th amendment because they don’t want to push
Sri Lanka too much. Fear that Sri Lanka will get further entrenched with the
Chinese is one reason why US and India may be playing slow ball. India has also
got the TNA to exhibit willingness to consider 13th amendment as a
starting point or a reference point to a solution. (For example see Mr. Sambanthan’s
ITAK National Convention Presidential address (May 2012) where he said that the
TNA is willing to consider ‘a point above the 13th amendment’ as a
starting point for a solution)
Dayan
Jayatilleke understands the geopolitics and sees an instrumental
purpose for the Sri Lankan state in calling for an implementation of the
13th amendment. In 2009 he wrote, “The full, if reasonably graduated
implementation of the 13th amendment is the cornerstone of our
postwar relationship with India, the relationship with which is the cornerstone
of our international relations”[9].
Nirupama Subramaniam of the Hindu seems to agree with Dayan’s assessment when
she wrote for the Hindu soon after the Geneva 2012 vote that, ‘had Sri Lanka
taken steps to implement the 13th amendment, India may never have associated
itself with the UNHCR resolution.[10]
The
important point to note is that Dayan is not really saying implementing the
13th amendment will benefit the Tamil people in the short or the long
term. He is saying it will release Sri Lanka from international pressure or at
least ease that pressure.
The
Tamil Civil Society’s position on the 13th amendment
Since
the provincial council system does not offer any solution to the immediate
problems of the Tamil people, the Tamil Civil Society has taken the position to
reject the 13th amendment as a starting point or even a reference
point to a political solution. We see any promise of incrementalism as an empty
promise. We also see any engagement with the elections as being a stumbling
block towards finding a political solution. The Tamil Civil Society’s rejection
of the 13th amendment, I would emphasize, is is not a reflection of
ideological intransigence but is a reflection steeped in experience and
reality.
No
doubt, the Sinhala
Buddhist establishment also would like to get rid of the
13th amendment. By rejecting the 13th amendment, the
pundits say we are sending ‘gifts to the hawks’. But surely whatever the
Sinhalese reject cannot be what the Tamils desire? Shouldn’t we be making our
own assessments? One cannot, like Dayan again, hold the Tamil people to ransom
by keeping on repeating that we have to adhere to the ‘democratic principle of
deriving legitimacy from the consent of the majority of one’s fellow citizens’.
When the Tamils feel that the State itself has lost legitimacy, invocation of
the democratic principle within that state apparatus makes no sense.
As
for provincial elections our stance in December 2011 was that the TNA should not
directly take part, but at the same time work out strategies where by they make
sure that the Provincial Councils in the North and East do not fall into the
hands of pro-Government forces[11].
In July 2012 before the Eastern Provincial Council elections we requested the
TNA to contest the elections based on a manifesto rejecting the
13th amendment and seeking a mandate from the Eastern Tamil Community
for rejecting a demerged North and East[12].
The TNA responded by not issuing a manifesto.
It
is in the above circumstances that the Tamil Civil Society has come out with the
position that the North and East of Sri Lanka, needs a transitional
administration. To call for a transitional administration should not be
interpreted as a call for a separate state. The social and political transition
of the Tamil people from an environment of war and oppression to an environment
of peace and justice cannot be achieved under the present framework of
governance with or without the 13th amendment. Given that the
Government of Sri Lanka in particular and the Sinhala Buddhist polity in
general, is reluctant to seriously engage with the political solution question,
the Tamil people cannot be asked to wait, and hence an interim arrangement is of
urgent necessity. Hence the call for a transitional administration.
Many
ask as to whether the Tamil Civil Society’s position is pragmatic. As for our
assessment of the 13thamendment – our assessment is one based on a
realist analysis of the state of affairs. As to what we prescribe, if we are
thinking of what is only possible, the options are very limited within the
status quo. To be pragmatic should not be a call to learn to live with the
oppression. To be pragmatic should not be a call to accept minimalistic
solutions, which do us no good.
“Nothing
in my view is more reprehensible than those habits of mind in the intellectual
that induce avoidance, that characteristic turning away from a difficult and
principled position which you know to be the right one, but which you decide not
to take. You do not want to appear too political; you are afraid of seeming
controversial; you need the approval of a boss or an authority figure; you want
to keep a reputation for being balanced, objective, moderate; your hope is to be
asked back, to consult, to be on a board or prestigious committee, and so, to
remain within the responsible mainstream… For an intellectual these habits of
mind are corrupting par excellence. If anything can denature, neutralise and
finally kill a passionate intellectual life, it is those considerations,
internalised and so to speak in the driver’s seat”. – Edward Said,
‘Representations of an Intellectual’, BBC Reith Lectures (1993)
*Kumaravadivel
Guruparan is a Lecturer attached to the Department of Law, University of Jaffna
and an Attorney-at-Law practicing in Jaffna. He is an active member of the Tamil
Civil Society.
[1] The
President, the 13th amendment says, has to do exercise this power on
the ‘advice’ of the Provincial Council. Former CJ Sarath N Silva in a judgment
claimed that the 13th amendment has created an ‘interactive’ regime
with regard to state land alienation. But to put it quite bluntly the President
doesn’t have to act on the interaction/ advice of the Provincial Council. The
President can ask for the advice for constitutional sake, but then reject or
ignore it completely. Nobody can question him for ignoring advice. For example
what is the chance that President Rajapaksha will accept the advice of a TNA
Chief Minister with regard to state land alienation in the Vanni?
[2] A.N.
Siddic Kariapper (in Tamil), ‘The Governor intervenes to the detriment of
the functioning of the Eastern Provincial Council’, Interview with MHM
Hisbullah, Virakesari, 12 July 2009, ‘Samakala Arasiyal’, p. 5
[3] Ranjith
Amerasinghe, ‘Provincial Councils Under the 13th Amendment – Centres
of Power or Agencies of the Centre’? in Lakshman Marasinghe
(ed), ‘13th Amendment: Theory and Practice’, (Stamford Lake,
2010), pp 106-132.
[4] Dayan
Jayatilleke, “TNA President’s Avurudu gift to the hawks’
http://www.dailymirror.lk/opinion/172-opinion/28144-tna-presidents-av
urudu-gift-to-the-hawks.html
[5] Kumar
David, ‘The Irrelevance of India in Geneva’,
http://www.eurasiareview.com/11032012-sri-lanka-the-irrelevance-of-india-in-geneva-oped/
(11 March 2012)
[6] Shri
SM Krishna, the then External Affairs Minister in a Suo Moto statement that he
made to both Houses of the Indian Parliament on 04 August 2011.
http://pib.nic.in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx?relid=73900
[7] US
Embassy, Colombo, http://srilanka.usembassy.gov/tr-14-2sept11.html (September
2011)
[8] US
Embassy, Colombo, http://srilanka.usembassy.gov/st-6june12.html (June
2012)
[9]Dayan
Jayatilleke, – ‘13th Amendment: Why non-implementation is a
non-option’ (13.06.2009)
http://groundviews.org/2009/06/13/13th-amendment-why-non-implementation-is-a-non-option/
[10] Nirupama
Subramaniam, ‘Lessons to Learn From Geneva’, The Hindu, April 07,
2012. http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/lessons-to-learn-from
geneva/article3288136.ece
[11] Available
on Groundviews:
http://groundviews.org/2011/12/15/a-public-memo-to-members-of-parliament-representing-the-tamil-national-alliance-from-the-tamil-civil-society/
[12] Available
on Groundviews:
http://groundviews.org/2012/07/29/tamil-civil-society-memo-to-the-tna-regarding-the-eastern-provincial-council-elections/

