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
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, May 2, 2016
NPC Resolution:Federalism, Confederation or Separate State?

By Laksiri Fernando-May 1, 2016, 9:25 pm
The size of the country also should be taken into account, although the
population is nearly 21 million with three main ethnic or national
communities in competition or conflict. The other diversities should be
taken into account not necessarily through the state structures but
state practices and policies such as human rights, equal opportunities
and political culture. What most suitable might be ‘cooperate
devolution’ with constitutional safeguards to ensure that the center
does not take back or infringe the powers and functions of the
provinces, while coming closer to federalism or quasi-federalism.
Nature of Proposals
It is unfortunate in this context what is proposed by the Northern
Provincial Council (NPC) is far beyond the realistic conditions in the
country and it cannot even be considered an ideal model. There is
nothing particularly wrong in ideals, but they in that case should be
impartial and open-minded. This quality is not there in the proposals.
It is understandable that the proposals are from the Tamil side, or
(major) part of the Tamil side. However, any reasonable proposal should
be able to see the ‘other’ side, or the problems in a total Sri Lankan
context.
One positive aspect of the proposals however is their clarity.
Objectives are articulated clearly, and the proposed constitutional
principles and structures are elaborated with details. Therefore it is
necessary to assess them objectively without emotional outbursts. This
is a responsibility on the part of all political parties and all
concerned people. It is reported that a copy is now handed over to the
Speaker, Karu Jayasuriya, who is also the Chair of the recently
constituted Constituent Assembly of Parliament, by the NPC Chief
Minister, C. V. Wigneswaran. This is now official.
What is not clear is the origin or the authorship of the proposals. Of
course some of the ideas were there for a long time going beyond
federalism, but I am here referring to the ‘political authority’ behind
the proposals. Although the proposals popularly named as TNA proposals,
the text of the proposals are in the name of the Tamil People’s Council
(TPC). The exact title of the document says "Tamil People’s Council:
Final Proposals for Finding a Political Solution to the Tamil National
Question."
The document is not something formulated by the TNA, or even the NPC,
although the NPC Chief Minister was apparently involved in the process
and there had undoubtedly been many public consultations before its
final formulation. What the NPC has done apparently is to pass the
proposals through a resolution on 22 April 2016 with 28 members sitting
and 10 absent.
According to the website of the TPC, a sub-committee was appointed to
formulate the proposals on 2 January 2016 and an initial proposal was
inaugurated on 31 January within a month for public consultations. We
have to keep in mind that the founding of the TPC was only on 19
December 2015. According to the same website, there had been a five
member external panel assisting the proposals, as it says, including
"two foreign experts on constitution and three experts from Diaspora."
The names are not given.
None of the above should discount the seriousness of the proposals or
their necessary critical evaluation in the process of finding a
constitutional framework for a viable solution to the ethnic
confrontations in the country. However it appears that the proposals are
more political or ideological than constitutional as will be discussed
below. This discussion is introductory more details may be followed up
in the future.
Framework
The proposal constitute two clear parts (1) a very long Preamble
expressing political or ideological objectives and (2) constitutional
proposals which calls for a loose confederation with a weak ‘federal’ or
‘central’ government. In this 6,912 word document, 1,916 words are
spent on the Preamble and the call for a ‘political agreement prior to a
constitutional enactment.’ It is intriguing to contemplate why this
size of a preamble was required if the purpose is for a ‘political
agreement’ and a subsequent ‘constitutional enactment.’
The Preamble can be extremely controversial and might be
counterproductive for any pragmatic solution/s that could be achieved
based on some of the proposals in the section on the constitution. It
begins by saying "throughout the centuries from the dawn of history, the
Sinhalese and Tamil nations have divided between themselves the
possession of Ceylon."
Even if we leave out the historical inaccuracy of the first part in
respect of the origins of the ‘nations,’ it is questionable why the
claims of the Sinhalese and the Tamils are considered as a matter of
‘dividing the possessions of the country, between the two groups.’ Are
we talking about a conflict for ‘real-estate’ or material possessions?
If that is the case, the ordinary people are not part of it, except they
are mobilized on emotional grounds.
It may be correct to consider the Kings and their families divided the
possessions of the country between themselves in old days (with some
corollaries in recent times!), but not the people. Even that not
necessarily on ethnic or nation lines but dynasties. The first three
paragraphs delightfully talk about the ancient Kingdoms.
It may be the case that the drafters wanted to trace the history. But
the way that has been done gives the impression that at least the first
approach of the proposal is quite primordial. The primordial approach in
nationalism is quite well known. As the "The Nationalism Project"
rather critically says, "Nationalists argue that nations are timeless
phenomena. When man climbed out of the primordial slime, he immediately
set about creating nations." This primordial approach is shared by both
the Sinhalese and the Tamil extremists. At least they have one point in
agreement!
Ideological Approach
The above does not mean that the whole historical narrative traced in
the Preamble, particularly for the period after independence is
completely incorrect. There is a general agreement among the moderate
people about some of the points traced in the paragraph seven which
begins by saying, "Acknowledging that successive Sinhalese governments
since independence have always [sic] encouraged and fostered the
aggressive nationalism of the Sinhalese people and have used their
political power to the detriment of the Tamils,"irrespective of the
explosive language used and exaggerations or distortions committed.
However, it is questionable whether this is the way to go about
political negotiations for a constitutional settlement for the national
question. It is strange again to note the reference to the ‘territories
of the former Tamil Kingdom’ when it refers to ‘a system of planned
state-organized Sinhalese colonization’ in point (b) in the same
paragraph. Be as it may, more controversial might be the assertion of
the Vaddukoddai resolution (1976) and the Thimpu principles (1985) as a
Preamble to constitutional negotiations.
Nowhere in the proposal is it said that the TPC is not asking for a
separate state. Instead, the catastrophic adventure of the LTTE is
defended in the following terms.
"Bearing in mind that the Tamil armed struggle as a measure of
self-defense and as a means for the realization of the Tamil rights to
self-determination arose only after more than four decades of
non-violent and peaceful constitutional struggle / attempts by the
various Tamil political parties to win their rights, by co-operating
with the successive governments in order to achieve the bare minimum of
political rights proved to be futile and due to the absence of means to
resolve the conflict peacefully,"
It is a subjective or unilateral assessment to say about the complete
exhaustion of ‘more than four decades of non-violent and peaceful
constitutional struggle/attempts’ - while there is some relative truth
in it. What we have to understand is that the struggle for democracy is a
long and an arduous struggle. (By the way I have not seen the concept
of democracy or the word ‘democracy’ appearing in any significant manner
in the whole document.) There are various forms of ‘non-violent and
peaceful struggles.’ If there is no engagement or dialogue, then those
might not reap results.
However, none of those would justify the so-called "Tamil armed struggle
as a measure of self-defense" or "as a means for the realization of the
Tamil rights for self-determination." In my view, the statement is a
clear justification of LTTE terrorism which is unfortunate and
unacceptable.
Constitutional Structure?
It may be true that the proposal has not directly called for a
‘separation of the country.’ But it has called for a weak Federation and
strong (provincial) States, North-East as a Tamil state. For example,
the document proposes 55 powers for the States, but 37 powers for the
Federation! The interpretation of these powers and the ‘mingle’ of the
‘federation and the states’ are as follows. Let me quote the full
section to give a taste of it. This is titled "Powers of the Federation
and the States" (Section 8).
8.1. Powers of Government shall be shared between the Federation (Centre) and the States.
8.2. The Federal List of the Constitution shall determine the powers to be exercised by the Federation.
8.3. The States shall exercise all powers not falling within the Federal
List including those powers listed under the States List.
8.4. The Federation and the States shall be supreme in their respective spheres of competence.
The ‘fashionable’ proposition (yet erroneous or ambiguous from the
beginning in my opinion) for ‘power-sharing’ seems to be the formula
that was utilized for the ‘mingled arrangement.’(My good friend Dr.
JayampathyWickremaratne might be in a difficult position to sort this
out.)Thus it proposes to share power ‘between the Federation (Centre)
and the States’ particularly between the ‘Centre and the (Tamil)
North-East State.’
There is an interesting ‘Note’ to the section that I have quoted above,
which says "The States' List has been prepared from the perspective of
the powers that the North-East State Assembly would exercise." This is
in a way understandable, because it talks about ‘Tamil’ interests or
aspirations. What the proposal has perceived is a multi-unit federation
and question whether there is a need to have the same powers for the
‘other units’ saying, "We recognize that unlike the North-East no other
part of the country makes claims to maximum self-government."
Most intriguing are the last two sub-sections (8.3 and 8.4) which says
(1) ‘the States (read North-East) shall exercise all powers not falling
within the Federal List’ and (2) ‘the Federation and the States (again
read North-East) shall be supreme in their respective spheres.’ This is
about a ‘separate state’ within a loose federation, with ‘supremacy for
that state’ in its own sphere.
