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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, February 3, 2013
Towards an Inclusive Constitution for Natural Justice
Groundviews Jude Fernando-3 Feb, 2013
The period that we have before us comprises the most motley mixture of crying contradictions: constitutionalists who conspire openly against the constitution; revolutionists who are confessedly constitutional; a national assembly that always wants to be omnipotent and always remains parliamentary; an executive power that finds its strength in its very weakness and its respectability in the contempt that it calls forth…Thus so long as the name of freedom was respected and only its actual realization prevented, of course in a legal way, the constitutional existence of liberty remained intact, inviolate, however mortal the blows dealt to its existence in actual life. (Karl Marx, Eighteenth Brumaire of Napoleon)
We
should cautiously welcome and proactively engage with the Sri Lankan
Government’s latest interest in creating a new Constitution to address the
pressing needs of today’s society. Sri Lanka’s governments since 1972, have
been infamous for enacting constitutional reforms, both during and immediately
after economic and political crises, then conveniently forgetting about them
once the crises no longer appear to threaten the legitimacy of the state. The
reforms that were implemented merely emasculated many institutions vital for
democracy. What resulted were gross violations of the independence of the
judiciary and calamitous setbacks to the rule of law. In addition, reforms led
to a culture of impunity, with power concentrated in the hands of a few who do
not hesitate to seek the connivance of the servile legislation to fulfill
whatever wish they had. Recently, the chief justice was impeached against the
order of the nation’s highest courts and advice of local and international legal
community; many observers referred to this act as the end of constitutional
governance in Sri Lanka.
As
recent history has clearly demonstrated, we must recognize that undemocratic
constitutional measures enacted, ostensibly for purposes of political expediency
or as a necessary evil to ‘save the country’ at one moment, often plunge it into
crisis at another. The nation thus finds itself imprisoned in a vicious cycle of
“reform”, whereby the threat of anarchy is used as an excuse to institute
authoritarianism and suppress the real economy and democracy.
The
regime’s interest in constitutional change is consequently an expression of its
anxiety in the current situation. Its will for change is imprisoned in the
tension, simultaneously, between the necessity for change and the fear of it.
Change entails the risk of undermining the very forces that sustain the
government’s power base, which is not only driven by the interests of the ruling
party but also the dictates of the neoliberal economy and the military security
apparatus that protects it. The onus is therefore on the people to enable the
legislature to initiate change, because— paradoxically— state power is
consensual as well as coercive. Resistance to change, even in the most
authoritarian and coercive regimes, is generated from the voluntary or
manufactured consensus of society, as we recently witnessed in the events from
around the world.
Society
cannot expect the political leadership from the opposition parties to develop a
consensus for constitutional change. Both the United National Party and its
left-wing allies made laughing stocks of themselves among the masses during the
recent impeachment. As S.L. Gunesekara noted, the opposition “appeared
champions of the independence of the judiciary while maintaining a deafening
silence about their own efforts to undermine that noble principle.” At least
the Government took extraordinary measures to inform the public of its position.
The actions of the UNP meanwhile, were confined to press conferences in Colombo,
where they simply expressed their desire to topple the regime and warned the
Government of its international isolation. Apparently the UNP was speculating
that rifts within the ruling party would emerge so the former merely promised
the public it would form a new government in 2016. It is therefore
counterproductive to rely on the UNP for change when it has no clear roadmap for
Sri Lanka’s future and is in fact responsible for most of the undemocratic
constitutional reforms. In the words of its own senior leaders, the UNP is
failing to “make peace within the party that is plagued with internal
rifts.”
Nor
can we expect much assistance from the powerful countries of the First World.
With its double standards, the First World has always unfairly penalized the
Third World when it comes to applying international human-rights laws. The Sri
Lankan Government, for its part appears unperturbed by international opprobrium
and unconcerned about maintaining a positive image in the international arena.
The Government has in fact been extremely skillful in deflecting international
criticisms of its human-rights abuses by calling attention to the hypocrisies
and limitations of its critics. At the same time, it has enhanced its image
among the local population and further consolidated power. With these
successes, the Sri Lankan Government has come to believe in the efficacy of
procrastination in lieu of fulfilling its international obligations.
In
responding to the United States’ warning that it would decrease investments in
Sri Lanka because of the impeachment, Minister Susil Premajayantha noted that
“that there were similar concerns during the humanitarian operation (against the
LTTE), but, following the end of the war, foreign investments increased.” The
Government is confident that non-Western countries will replace Western military
assistance to Sri Lanka and that the Commonwealth Ministerial Summit in Sri
Lanka will happen as planned. The country’s alignment with China, moreover,
makes irrelevant the threat that the Western world would isolate Sri Lanka.
Historically unprecedented competition for global natural resources and markets
for investments and commodities— including Sri Lanka’s— has provided little
incentive for Third World states to make human rights and democracy a priority.
Given the extent that solidarity among states is driven primarily by economic
and geopolitical interests, the anxiety that a state may be threatened with
isolation is not as serious a concern as one would expect.
Today,
different organs of the state face multi-layered legitimacy crises arising from
two intertwined processes — the securitization of neoliberal development
projects and ‘humanitarianization’ of the global military industrial complex—but
both are equally essential for the survival of the global capitalist system from
which development, democracy, peace and national security are expected to
trickle down). As long as states abide by the neo-liberal paradigm of
development and have complete command over all organs of the state and civil
society— contrary to Mr. Ranil Wickramasinghe’s wishful thinking— they seem to
worry less about the wrath of Latimer House Principles or United Nations
Conventions or UN resolutions on good governance and human rights.
There
is hope!
This
does not mean that history has come to an end and that the neoliberal state will
henceforth be our only model of social organization. Crises of social and
environmental inequalities and injustices are permanent features of the
Neoliberal project. Also permanent is the obligation of the State as the
primary agency responsible, to address these injustices.
Consequently,
in the current global political economy, progressive constitutional reforms
confront an intractable dilemma. On the one hand, the people everywhere want
greater democracy and more human rights. As a result, states and corporations
are developing various ways to cloak their respective activities and demonstrate
an apparent respect for human rights. On the other hand, states more than ever
expect human rights to trickle down from the very capitalist development that is
responsible for the violations of those rights in the first place. Any future
improvement in human rights is thus now predicated on the ever-quicker
adaptation of national policies to the demands of capitalist development
regardless of its consequences for the people.
States’
interest in constitutional reforms arises because, in the final analysis, it,
not the multinational corporations or non-governmental actors, that is expected
to manage this dilemma. Contrary to the claims by the proponents of
globalization, the current world order is far more tightly governed by
nation-states, which employ every means at their disposal and penetrate and
regulate every area of social life. Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to a
great extent reproduce the very state power they want to transform, because the
political economy of the NGOs does not fundamentally differ from that of the
nation-states.
All
this opposition to change does not mean that developing countries like Sri Lanka
are doomed. Sri Lanka is a resilient nation with the strength and fortitude to
overcome both local and international obstacles and may yet turn the anguish of
the impeachment into a new constitution that would make the country a better
place to live. Malinda Senevirathna in his praise for Parliamentarian
Sumanthiran’s ability to articulate his position beyond narrow identity politics
(the kind of politics I generally dislike in favor of a politics of
redistribution) pointed out that we could be proactive in helping the Government
to “design a new constitution, more inclusive, more democratic and [with] better
safeguards against abuse.” To realize such a vision for Sri Lanka, an ideal
shared in public by President Rajapaksha, society has no option but to become
proactive in helping to make the purported new Constitutional changes. Such
proactivity, I believe, is the best option for peacefully negotiating a space
between authoritarianism and anarchy.
An
inclusive constitution upholds natural justice in all spheres of a society.
Natural justice is not a gift from the Divine or the state, but people’s
inalienable entitlement to economic and civil rights. We must keep in mind
that the tensions between a legislature and a country’s judiciary, or
contradictory behaviors in different organs of the state, do not cause a
constitutional crisis; the true origins of the crisis lie in the political
economy when it violates natural justice. Natural justice, as I refer to it
here, is not isolated from moral values (equality and fairness) of the natural
law. Under natural law, the Constitution is a social contract that secures
equality and justice and holds the society accountable for them. This contract
is derived from the notion that men and women are created equal; hence they
deserve equal access to a good life and ought to love their neighbors as
themselves.
Therefore,
natural justice from its inception is a deeply moral and spiritual principle.
The principle of love is superior to any other principle of justice because it
forces both the individual (e.g. Bonaparte) and institutions (e.g. Constitution)
to uphold justice rather than simply letting one to blame the other for
injustices. Sri Lankans are in a strongly position to uphold the principle of
love-with wisdom and compassion-because it is shared by every religious
community in the country. Be that as it may.
Below
I shall outline two interrelated requirements that may help achieve the kind of
constitution that would be best for the people of Sri Lanka.
Accountability
is non-negotiable!
The
first requirement of a good constitution is to ensure that the reform being
enacted does not substitute for justice. The reforms must not undo past Supreme
Court judgments against the wishes of the state or any individual, and thus,
allow individuals to escape from being held accountable for their alleged
violation of law and order.
We
will help the government to improve its credibility if we demand that for
constitutional reforms will not simply a means Government to weather the
political storm created by the impeachment and to avoid facing the concern of
many patriotic citizens. If the Constitution was flawed, then the impeachment
of Chief Justice Bandaranayke was also flawed, and the entire process should
have been declared a mistrial. If one has to abide by the existing Constitution
in spite of its faults until it is amended, then the Government is guilty of
assuming the responsibility for interpreting the Constitution and not abiding by
the orders of the Supreme Court.
“It
would be a mistake of monumental proportions for us, now, to say ‘let’s put the
past behind us’ and proceed with business as usual,” said S.L. Gunasekera. That
would only undermine of what is perhaps the only institution that still retains
some capacity and public confidence to check abuse of power by the
legislature.
I
will not be surprised if the Government appoints a committee-perhaps one
composed of members of all political parties—which will deliberate matters until
the anti-protests wither away. By the time the committee is ready to present
its recommendations, the Government and public will have lost interest in
constitutional change, being distracted by far more important issues. By then,
ministers such as Wimal Weeramawsa and ultra nationalist forces will have
recruited forces against the recommendations. The international community will
forget its crusade for justice and begin to fall in line with the Government’s
agenda after having wasted enormous amounts of public money on sending
delegations to Sri Lanka and appointing committees to re-evaluate what really
happened in Sri Lanka.
If
Sri Lanka desires improve its democratic credentials, its citizens need to
shoulder a great deal of responsibility to ensure that the new constitution is
not an excuse for the state to procrastinate or jettison its obligation to honor
the implementation of the LLRC, the Thirteenth Amendment, and the United
Nations’ calls for investigations into human rights abuses. In particular, the
new constitution should not, in anyway, retreat from the 13th Amendment
and, thus, lead to even more centralization of power in the hands of a
few.
Be
Proactive!
The
second requirement is for us to be proactive in helping the Government
understand the areas of constitutional change that are indispensable for Sri
Lankan society to enjoy meaningful democratic freedoms, sustainable development,
devolution, and national security. These are the arenas within which society
experiences natural justice.
Below
I shall outline thirteen ideas that may help.
1.
The new Constitution should embody a new social contract to safeguard access to
basic economic needs on the part of every Sri Lankan citizen so that all may
enjoy social and economic equality regardless of their social, economic, or
political identity. The current Constitution’s bias toward capitalist interests
fails to honor an egalitarian social contract because the formal equalities
promised in the domain of law are undermined by the inevitable inequalities
created by a neoliberal economy. The state thrives on constitutional
protections to enable it to honor its commitment to other countries, maintain
the interest of transnational capital, and discipline those who protest against
the inequities the first two actions generate. As a consequence of capitalism,
economic and social inequalities arise, and the state becomes even more militant
in suppressing dissent against inequalities that neoliberal policies inevitably
bring.
The
progressive abandonment of basic needs based on social contracts, which,
according to the dictates of the World Bank and IMF, pave the way for capitalist
development, is primarily responsible for violence, corruption, and moral decay
within a society. The resulting deprivations and inequalities are
disproportionately borne by the marginalized segments of the population.
Social
contracts created for fulfilling basic economic needs (that give people more
than the austerity diet imposed by the World Bank and IMF) expand the space for
socially responsible international trade and investments, make the society less
prone to conflict and adverse external interferences, and also in the long run
empower the state to safeguard the national interests. Such social contracts
are about entitlements which provide the space for individuals to enjoy their
freedoms and develop their capabilities. But we must remember that economic
equality is a necessary but not sufficient condition for natural justice in
societies where the political inequalities are driven by ethnicity, religion,
and territoriality. Martin Luther King, Jr., as he was closer to his
assassination, emphasized that while civil and economic rights are inseparable,
justice for people of color cannot be attained simply through economic equality.
Equitable civil rights are required as well.
2.
A new constitution means a radical re-imagining of the present meaning and
structure of a country’s sovereignty. Such a constitution would uphold the equal
entitlement to natural rights of its citizens and promote zero tolerance for
external interference in the internal affairs of the country except for when
they violate such entitlement. Such was the responsible sovereignty that Martin
Luther King demanded from the United States in his Riverside Speech. He
insisted that his country’s international and domestic relations be driven by
natural justice rather than by its economic and geopolitical interests and
military might. Domestic relations in states that are ostensibly governed by
inclusive sovereignty should respect the equality and justice that it demands
from other states.
The
inclusive sovereignty should not be one where the claim that “we all are Sri
Lankans” becomes a substitute for devolution of power. Devolution should not be
a by-product of development and security, nor must development and security
jettison devolution until development is sustainable and the country is secure
from terrorism. Rather, devolution should precede development and security. In
particular, economic development in the northern and eastern parts of Sri Lanka
should take place within the context of meaningful devolution. In other words,
concern for economic development should not drive the devolution process but
vice-versa. Claims of land should not be exclusively driven by the interests of
developers, but by the economic and political vulnerabilities people who
actually live there.
Devolution
was a promise that all Sri Lanka governments to date have betrayed, usually
justified by the need to battle terrorism. Denial of devolution predated
terrorism in our country and in fact was a cause of it, while providing
legitimacy for the concentration of state power, convergence of security and
development, and suppression of democratic institutions, all of which
subordinated land and resources to neoliberal economic policies. In effect,
refusal of devolution has functioned as an ideology that allows the government
to disguise its primary commitment to neoliberal policies by ’indigenizing’ and
thus delegitimizing dissent against those neoliberal policies.
Devolution
is not antithetical to a unified Sri Lanka; rather, one complements the other.
Devolution is the best form of governance to safeguard a country’s sovereignty
against foreign powers as well as abuse of power by elected officials. It would
make even the goal of economic self-sufficiency in the Divi Neguma Plan more
feasible and acceptable to Tamils.
Effective
devolution combined with egalitarian social contracts would serve as an antidote
to the inequalities generated by capitalism, which, in different pockets of Sri
Lanka, are becoming visible along ethnic lines and might, in the future, lead to
conflicts among the main ethnic groups. In this respect we hope that the
Parliamentary Select Committee will pave the way for constitutional safeguards
against the communal hatred like the recent anti-Muslim agitations aroused by
Bodu Bala Sena.
3.
The new Constitution should purge itself of all ethno-nationalist biases in
social, economic, and political institutions. The state must secularize the
Constitution. The current Constitution, which gives priority to Buddhism, does
not help Buddhism hold the state accountable to the teachings of the
Buddha.
In
states where the Constitution is closely aligned with one religion, power often
becomes the dharma of the state, and the more powerful the state becomes, the
less concern it has for the dharma of the religion it purports to protect. The
appropriation of dharma by the state is often responsible for the religious
social forces that commit ethnic violence and subsequently turn against the
state.
Today,
religious authorities thrive on wealth and power provided by politicians in
return for the much-needed blessings politicians need to cover their evil
deeds. The state does not really care for the voices of the religious leaders,
nor does the public want to rally around them against the evil deeds of the
politicians. Even more importantly, religion’s association with the capitalist
state makes religion appear complicit with the inequities of the capitalist
system and the violence associated with it. Competition, greed for power and
wealth, and the pride that the inequalities create, serve as an impediment for
people who wish to uphold the dharma.
A
secular constitution is not antithetical to religion nor does it devalue the
role of religion in society; in fact, such a constitution and religion
complement each other. A secular constitution enables a religion to reclaim
its mission from politicians and limits the possibility of its politicization,
which destroys its credibility as a moral force that holds society accountable
for justice. People will thus have greater reason to shed their nominal
allegiances and seriously apply their religious values to their daily lives.
Today, the claim that Sri Lankan society is religious as opposed to secular, as
in the West, is a myth because even if many citizens regularly practice their
religious rituals, they are not necessarily living out the moral tenets of their
religion. Developing a positive synergy between religious faith and people’s
daily behavior is however impossible in societies like Sri Lanka’s, that are
riddled with economic and political inequalities.
A
secular constitution is not a perfect antidote to the polarization caused by
differences in religion. There are not apolitical religions as they are all
theoretically about social justice. A secular constitution rests on the
credibility of religion to safeguard its teachings and provide moral checks and
balances for human behavior. Religion’s first responsibility is to secure the
sovereignty of its teachings rather than sovereignty of the nation state.
4.
The new Constitution should embody national symbols that are inclusive and
neutral in terms of the ethnic and religious diversity of the country. The Sri
Lankan national anthem is a good example of helpful multiculturalism, which from
its inception was accepted by all communities with little resistance. The
Vasudeva Nanayakara’s interest in inserting Tamil verses into this anthem is
unnecessary and was not ever requested by the Tamils.
Not
all our national symbols, however, are sufficiently multicultural. For example,
the national flag and emblem are unsuitable to symbolize our country’s
multicultural identity. To identify national institutions (e.g., government
ministries, military establishments, public schools, etc.) exclusively with the
symbols of one religion and one ethnic group is counterproductive to national
unity and reconciliation. Symbols have profound impacts on the way social
realities are perceived and interpreted, an outcome which in turn gives birth to
social forces that are counterproductive to the well-being of the country.
Our
choice of symbols should be driven by equality and a great deal of sensitivity
to the potential of symbols becoming a source of conflict. We cannot hope to
generate social conditions supportive of devolution or egalitarian social
contracts with particularized symbols. At the same time, multicultural symbols,
while helpful, are not substitutes for an egalitarian social contract or the
devolution of power from the government to all the people.
5.
The new Constitution should introduce strict laws to protect the country’s
archaeological and cultural sites. Identifying and preserving these sites
should be the exclusive responsibility of experts working under the Department
of Archeology. Erratic attempts to renovate and rename these sites should be
prevented when they merely assert one group’s cultural hegemony over another in
ways detrimental to national harmony. The modern nation state has no right to
use these archeological sites to strengthen its political power because their
origins predate the nation state.
6.
The new constitution should introduce checks and balance on the role of the
military in development. To be sure, we must maintain a strong military to
defend the vital interests of the country, and we must compensate the military
appropriately. The military can play a vital role in civilian affairs when all
civilian institutions are paralyzed. For example, we Sri Lankans witnessed the
military’s remarkable efficiency in the reconstruction work that they did after
Tsunami and defeat of the LTTE.
National
development cannot altogether ignore security concerns. The evidence of
capitalist development taking place totally independent of a military is rare.
Those wealthy countries that champion human rights are, paradoxically, the main
beneficiaries of military “peacekeeping” in our nation. Their interest in their
own bottom-line pre-empts their interest in the material development, let alone
the rights, of the native populations in countries like ours.
There
should thus be checks and balances to mitigate the convergence between defense
and capitalist development as well as devolution for popular decision-making in
development. As capitalism takes over development, military decisions in the
battlefield run the risk of being driven by commercial interests. This result
blurs the distinction between civilian and military affairs and undermines the
professionalism and effectiveness of military decision-making.
Military-capitalist
convergence has disastrous consequences for societies where economic and
political inequalities, patronage, and corruption reign over justice and
equality. Such societies are also prone to militarization and the state runs
the risk of losing control of its military. Constitutional checks and balances
ensure that the best options for the demilitarization of development and culture
and for the de-politicization and de-commercialization of the military while
enabling the military to function as the guardian of national security.
7.
The new Constitution should make the learning of the two major languages used in
Sri Lanka mandatory in all schools and public-service institutions. No
government circular or billboard should appear in only one language. School
textbooks should be cleared of any language biases or distortions or omissions
that are in effect racist or undermine unity among our different ethnic groups.
This dual-language approach should complement rather than become a substitute
for egalitarian social contract or political devolution of power, however.
8.
The new Constitution should ensure that appointments to civil and diplomatic
post are not driven by nepotism or commercial and political patronage but rather
by merit, with provisions to ensure racial and gender balance. Today,
boundaries between civil servants and politicians are blurred to the extent that
civil servants are handicapped in performing their functions. The lack of
adequate salaries for members of the civil service, moreover, drives them to
corruption.
9.
The new constitution should make clear the supremacy of the Parliament and in
particular introduce checks and balances to prevent the abuse of majority
power. Parliamentary supremacy meanwhile should not mean that it has the
privilege of interpreting the constitution without a judicial review.
10.
The new constitution should re-introduce the laws that deprive any MP a seat
after crossing from one party to another with impunity. Cross-over MPs cease to
represent their original constituencies and may help create an artificial
parliamentary majority. Free, constructive dialogue on issues of national
importance is impossible when the cross-over MPs are subservient to the dictates
of those who control state power or are subject to disciplinary action for
expressing opposition to national policies enacted by their own party. Today,
parliamentary affairs are governed by a Parliament devoid of transparency,
accountability, and civility. As a result, the body is no longer able to
safeguard the interests of the people.
11.
The new constitution should strengthen the principles of the non-aligned
movement. Such principles are necessary to safeguard a country’s economic and
political sovereignty from the adverse impacts of policies resulting from the
economic and geopolitical interests of ruling or foreign groups. We have
learned from history that the powerful Western and Non-Western states have
always used and abused less powerful countries to serve their own interests.
Even today there are no exceptions. We should note with caution the current
controversies regarding Chinese investments in Sudan in particular and Africa in
general.
12. The
constitution need to strengthen Standing order 78A to provide for the process of
inquiry preceding the resolution to remove a Judge be conducted by Judges chosen
by the Speaker from a panel appointed for this purpose, and give legislature
absolutely no rights to interpret the constitution.
13.
Finally, the new constitution should abolish the executive presidency and the
Eighteenth Amendment to the current constitution. Democracy cannot prevail when
the executive president enjoys immunity to the law of the land while engaging in
important aspects of economic, political, and social affairs of the country.
After all, s/he is only an elected member and the head of a political party. A
ceremonial president without direct political power would command far more
popular legitimacy when using the presidential powers in situations of national
emergencies.
These
thirteen constitutional reforms are reformist but not revolutionary. They could
nevertheless pave the way for revolutionary changes. The implementation of
ideals, however, is a gradual process that involves compromise and risk while
requiring a great deal of caution and will power.
Perhaps
President Rajapaksha could abolish the executive presidency himself after
facilitating the other twelve areas of constitutional changes suggested above.
Autocrats earn good karma when they demonstrate their benevolence by creating
conditions that makes autocracy unnecessary for a well-governed society. Such
enlightened action on the part of President Rajapaksha may require a very long
wait. Meantime, the society can form a movement to develop a blueprint of a new
constitution along the lines suggested in this paper and exert pressure on
Parliament to follow through.
We
may not see the result of our efforts within our lifetimes. Our responsibility,
however, is to do what we can for the moment and passes this charge on to future
generations in the hopes that they will come closer to the results we hope for
from our efforts today.
As
Dr. King sagely remarked, “Faith is
taking the first step, even when you don’t see the whole
staircase.”