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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, March 7, 2017
It’s President Sirisena’s call now
JSC disowns Ramanathan Kannan recommendation:
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By C. A. Chandraprema-March 6, 2017, 8:27 pm

The standoff between the Bar Association of Sri Lanka and the Judicial
Services Association over the appointment of a member of the Batticaloa
bar as a High Court Judge has ended. Accordingly, members of the JSA
will be officiating at the BASL elections to be held on 15 March.
Earlier, in a strongly worded letter to the BASL, the JSA had made it
clear that they would not officiate at the BASL elections unless the
latter took steps to undo the damage done by some members of the BASL in
canvassing for this appointment. When the JSA first became aware that a
member of the private bar had been appointed to the High Court on the
recommendations of the BASL, they had made inquiries and found that the
recommendation had been made by the BASL’s outgoing President Geoffrey
Alagaratnam and not by the BASL itself with even its Secretary being
unaware that such recommendation had been made.
Thereupon, the JSA made three requests to the BASL and made their
participation in the BASL elections conditional upon the latter acceding
to these requests which were: a) that the BASL should officially
confirm in writing that they did not make this recommendation to appoint
a High Court judge b) if someone had used the name of the BASL to make
this recommendation that they should inform the President and the
Judicial Services Commission of this fact and c) that the BASL should
make a formal request that this decision be reversed. Following this
stand taken by the JSA, the BASL election which was to be held on
February 21 had to be postponed indefinitely. When the executive
committee of the BASL met to discuss this matter, one group of lawyers
had suggested that the BASL constitution should be amended to enable
them to hold the election without the participation of the JSA and
accordingly the BASL election was rescheduled for March 15.
As the standoff escalated, Amal Randeniya the Secretary of the BASL took
steps to defuse the situation and after holding talks with the JSA, a
letter was issued to the Secretary of the JSA under the hand of the
Secretary of the BASL stating unequivocally that ‘the Executive
Committee of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka has not arrived at any
decision in the past to recommend the appointment of Mr R.Kannan as
Judge of the High Court and therefore there is no recommendation from
the Bar Association of Sri Lanka’. Copies of this letter had been sent
to the Judicial Services Commission and the President of Sri Lanka. The
Judicial Services Commission (JSC) deals with matters relating to the
appointment, transfer disciplinary control and dismissal of Judges below
the Appeal Court. The covering letter sent by the BASL to President
Sirisena also stressed that this letter was being placed before him to
explain the stand of the BASL with regard to the appointment of R.Kannan
as a High Court judge.
Based on this letter from the BASL, the Judicial Services Commission had
in turn written to President Sirisena stating that the Secretary of the
JSC had written to him earlier, recommending the name of R.Kannan for
appointment as a High Court judge on the strength of a letter from the
BASL dated 15 December 2016. They stated that if the BASL has made ‘no
proper recommendation’ in this regard, the recommendation that the JSC
had sent to the President has ‘no force or avail in law’. Thus in
effect, the JSC has by this letter dated 23 February 2017, retracted the
recommendation they made to the President to appoint R.Kannan as a High
Court judge. However in terms of Article 111(2) (a) of the
constitution, judges of the High Court can be appointed by the president
only on the recommendation of the Judicial Services Commission and the
JSC will in turn have to consult the Attorney General before making such
recommendation to the President. It is clear from this constitutional
provision that the central role in the appointment of High Court judges
is played by the JSC and the President cannot appoint HC judges on his
own without the recommendations of the JSC.
The question now is, what happens if the JSC makes a recommendation to
the President to appoint a certain individual as a High Court judge and
then due to information that surfaces after that appointment is made,
retracts the recommendation it made? This is an unprecedented situation
but logically, one would think that in such instances, Article 111(2)(b)
which provides for the removal of High Court judges by the president on
the recommendation of the JSC should kick in automatically. It should
be noted that in the JSC’s letter to the President of 23 February 2017,
they have not directly asked for the removal of Ramanathan Kannan from
his position. What they have said is that the recommendation that the
JSC made for his appointment has ‘no force or avail in law’. What this
would logically mean is that Ramanathan Kannan has no right to be
holding the position of a High Court judge.
The President may not have any option but to remove Kannan from the High
Court. If he is allowed to remain as a High Court judge one major
practical difficulty will be that every judgement that he delivers can
be and will undoubtedly be challenged as having been delivered by an
irregularly appointment judge who had no right to be sitting in
judgement over any case at all. Overriding even that will be the issue
that Kannan had originally been recommended for appointed as a HC judge
to Minister of Justice Wijedasa Rajapakshe by an unnamed political
party. Minister Rajapakshe had reconfirmed this story to President’s
Counsel Hemantha Warnakulasuriya when the latter made inquiries about
it. How can there be a sitting High Court judge with such an allegation
hanging over him? The High Court now even has appellate jurisdiction and
no HC judge should be seen to be a camp follower of any political
party.
Judging by the organisations and individuals who were publicly
supporting the appointment of Kannan it is clear that there is substance
in what Minister Rajapakshe said about him having been recommended by a
political party. Anyway, the ball is now in President Sirisena’s court.
"The JSC stated that if the BASL has made ‘no proper recommendation’ in
this regard, the recommendation that the JSC had sent to the President
has ‘no force or avail in law’."
