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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, February 2, 2013
The Case Against Mohan Pieris’s Misconduct; Dismissed With Cost Awarded To The Respondents !
Sathya
Hettige
The
case was taken up before a Supreme Court bench headed by Justice P.A. Ratnayake
and comprising Justice Eva Wanasundera and Justice Sathya
Hettige at Court Room No 403.
At
the outset, Justice P.A. Ratnayake declined to hear the case citing personal
reasons. Counsel for the petitioner, Nagananda
Kodituwakku objected to Justice Hettige hearing the case on grounds
that he was biased towardsPieris.
Justice
Hettige refused to consider the submissions made by the Counsel Nagananda
Kodituwakku, including a submission referring to his own disqualification from
hearing the case. Justice Hettige simply went on to uphold the preliminary
objections raised by the Additional Solicitor General and dismissed the
Application with Cost awarded to the Respondents. The awarding of cost to
Respondents had never been done before by the Supreme Court, especially in the
Fundamental Rights Applications filed by the Citizens of this country.
“The
decision in this case, amply demonstrates to which direction the Supreme Court
is heading today. It seems that the era of the independent judiciary has come
to an end in this country and is now replaced with an absolutely dependent
‘Executive Judiciary’, headed by a disqualified person appointed to the Office
of the Chief Justice. All this time the people of this country had faith in the
Judiciary that it would exercise the ‘peoples’ judicial power’ faithfully and
independently and honor the trust placed in it by the people,.” a senior lawyer
told Colombo Telegraph.
After
Justice Ratnayake refused to hear the case on ‘personal grounds’ and then an
application was made by the Additional Solicitor General Shavindra Fernando to
hear the case by the other two judges. Then the Counsel for the Petitioner,
Nagananda Kodituwakku, objected ‘Hettige J taking part in the hearing’ and made
an application to re-fix the case for an earlier date. The said objection was
raised on the basis that Hettige J was biased towards Mohan Pieris, as he had
disregarded a motion filed by the Petitioner on 04th July 2012, seeking an early
date (11th 12th or 13th July 2012) to support the application and instead fixed
the case for support for 06th September 2012. It was further submitted to Court
that the Petitioner filed the said Motion, since the case which was due to
support on 02nd July 2012 had been called in Court with no notice to the
Petitioner on 21st of June 2012, and had been postponed for support on 06th Sep
2012.
It
was further submitted, that Justice Hettige’s conduct was reported to the
CJ Shirani
Bandaranayake by the Petitioner by way of an affidavit dated 04th
July 2012 and as a result CJ intervened and Hettige J was compelled to reverse
his order allowing the petitioner to support the matter on 05th July 2012.
The
Additional Solicitor General, Shavendra Fernando then took a preliminary
objection to the hearing, on the basis that the original Petition, filed by the
Petitioner dated 24th September 2010, does allege that the Supreme Court was
responsible for the right violation, which is not an executive action and hence
that the application dated 24th September 2010 should be dismissed and the
Petitioner should not be allowed to support any amended application thereafter
filed in Court.
In
response to these submissions the Counsel for the Petitioner, Nagananda
Kodituwakku submitted to the Court that the Petitioner does not rely on the
Petition dated 24th September 2010, which was amended with the permission of the
Court (comprised of Marsoof J, Imam J and Suresh Chandra J), on 05th December
2011, after the Counsel Nagananda Kodituwakku was retained by the Petitioner, in
place of Upul Jayasooriya. The Petitioner had reported Counsel Upul Jayasooriya
to the CJ by way of an
affidavit (22nd November 2011) for his professional misconduct of
withdrawing the affidavit filed by the Director General of Customs (seeking the
disenrollment of Mohan Pieris for his professional misconduct) and also citing
Mohan Pieris only in his official capacity and thereafter abandoning the
Petitioner. It was further submitted by the Counsel Nagananda Kodituwakku that
the bench chaired by Marsoof J, on 05th December 2011 had allowed the Petitioner
to amend the application with ‘specific permission’ to include amendments the
Petitioner wished to make, ‘reflecting the allege misconduct and dishonesty of
Mohan Peiris’ as reported by the Director General of Customs. And accordingly
the Petition dated 23rd December 2011 was filed in Court and the Petitioner only
relied on that Petition.
Justice
Hettige refused to consider the said submissions made by the Counsel Nagananda
Kodituwakku, including the one referring to his disqualification from hearing
the case.
Related
posts;