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, October 16, 2018
Legal Fraternity Conspires Against The Election Commission
By K. Sivapakiam –OCTOBER 15, 2018
Conspiracy
A
conspiracy is formally defined as a group of people planning and doing
something illegal. After years under the LTTE when some 600,000 voters
were denied their franchise for a payment as is now being proved in
court, sections of Jaffna beating the LTTE drums, seem not to have grown
out of their habit of not taking elections laws seriously. At the
centre of the unfolding storm is the TNPF led by Gajendrakumar
Ponnambalam and his Tamil Congress (TC). The TC and Jaffna’s law
enforcement are, I believe, into a conspiracy to violate the Jaffna
voters’ franchise, a fundamental right associated with Article 3 of the
Constitution, by obstructing the work of the Election Commission (EC) so they can cheat and win even when voters vote otherwise.
Rather strangely, the TC seems to be very lucky with Jaffna’s law
enforcement, including judges and the police. Three cases raise eyebrows
and prove the point.
Maviddapuram
The first concerns the TNPF launching its manifesto for the local
government elections of 10 February 2018 from the Maviddapuram Temple.
Several newspapers and Facebook pages of TC candidates boasted of the
event at the famous temple and displayed photos of the TC leaders at the
event. Mr. V. Manivannan, a TC candidate at the Jaffna Municipal
Council (JMC) was merely mentioned as present. In a long story detailed
by Prof. S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole of the EC, the police charged only the priest, and when the EC complained, only Manivannan.
It was amazing that when the complaint was the violation of Section 82
of the Local Authorities Election Ordinance about campaigning at a
religious assembly, the police charge-sheet was violating Section 81
about campaigning close to a polling station. It was designed to find
Manivannan not guilty. The B-Report did not contain the photographic
evidence and news reports given to the KKS Police by the complainant,
the ITAK Candidate Mr. S. Suhirthan.
Although Hoole was not a party, court papers showed he was and claimed
he was served summons, but there is no record of it. The judge, Mr. A.
Judeson, described by a lawyer present as unhinged, launched an attack
on Hoole without verifying that he had been served notice. He ruled that
Hoole as a Christian should never have charged a Hindu! He dismissed
the charges in a small part of the morning. He faulted Hoole without
giving him a hearing. And of course, he found no evidence to sustain the
charge when there really was none on the offence he was charged with.
Many lawyers see corruption written all over the case. Some say that a
senior female TNPF lawyer from Uduvil/Chunnakam visited Judeson in his
chambers just before the hearing and that may explain many things.
The Mallakam Registrar denied Prof. Hoole the court transcript when he
first heard of the judgment from press reports. The Registrar first asked
for a letter from a lawyer, and then after getting that asked for time
to prepare the transcript while Mr. Kumaravadivel Guruparan, counsel for
Manivannan, was waving the transcript at a press conference threatening
action against Prof. Hoole. By the time Prof got the transcript, he
says, it was too late to appeal.
Interestingly, Mr. Guruparan is the Head of the Law Department at Jaffna
University. Information obtained by Prof. Hoole through RTI shows that
he has been given special permission by the University Council to
practice law from the chambers of Ms. Abimanasingam, PC, despite his
full-time university appointment. Yet he has appeared in many TNPF cases
with Ms. Abimanasingam nowhere on record. His father is a Member of the
University Grants Commission, which appoints the majority of Jaffna
Council members who gave Guruparan permission to work for Ms.
Abimanasingam while paid by the university. Prof. Hoole says the matter
is being investigated by CIABOC.
Prof. Hoole complained to the Judicial Service Commission and the Bar
Association and did not even receive any acknowledgement. The EC also
wrote a reminder to the JSC and got no reply. It seems clear to me that
the JSC is unwilling to act against lawyers and judges.
Jaffna Municipality
In Court of Appeal Case No. CA 217/2018 by Stephenson Ronoldon Versus V. Manivannan, it is because there is prima facie evidence
that Manivannan did not qualify on grounds of residence to contest the
elections to the JMC that the court has issued an interim order
prohibiting him from functioning as member of the JMC. Till the end of
the case Mr. Ronoldon, a voter within the JMC area, has alleged Mr.
Manivannan’s ineligibility to be a member based on residence.
Court papers show that Mr. Manivannan was not registered as a voter
inside the JMC area, and to all appearances had no eligibility to be so
registered in Jaffna – the either-or clause to be eligible to be a
candidate His
party had published photographs of his voting elsewhere (in Kokkuvil
West). His nomination papers had the fudged Jaffna address of Sir Pon
Ramanathan Veethy for him with no house number. In court, he claimed an
address in Vannarponnai within the JMC but was not registered as a
resident there on the householders’ list. The chief householder at the
Vannarponnai address was or had been a TC candidate. For his identity
card issued by the JMC after it met in March 2018, he had given his
Kokkuvil address where he had his vote.
It appears that after filing nominations Mr. Manivannan bought a
property at Sir Pon Ramanathan Veethy. His attorney, Ms. Kajapiriya
Manickavasagar, also of Kokkuvil, has drawn up a deed where the deed
requires the date in four places. In the first three places, it is dated
29 December 2017 which appears to have been altered to 10 December
2017. In the fourth place, the date remains 29 December 2017. The
allegation is that in forging the dates, he forgot the fourth date. The
stamp duty on the land transaction has to be paid at the Municipality.
The receipt for this stamp duty has to be then pasted on the deed and it
is dated 29 Dec. 2018. The stamp duty receipt states that the date of
registration is 29 December. The deed states that it was filed at the
land registry on 2 Jan. 2018.
The significance of these dates is that nomination was on 21 Dec. 2018.
The date of the deed will establish whether he was eligible to be a
Jaffna candidate on that date – was it filed before or after the date of
nomination? This will explain why 29 Dec. was changed to 10 Dec. The
Court of Appeal judges had suggested that because of all this confusion
Mr. Manivannan might like to resign. He wanted time to think about it.
As these problems mounted, TC sources say that Mr. Manivannan has
sounded his party on whether he may resign as JMC Member before the
court decides. Whether such resignation would foreclose any possible
case on forgery is doubtful and might explain why he has not resigned.

