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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, March 28, 2013
Administrative Liquidation And The Independence Of The Judiciary
By Basil
Fernando -March 28, 2013 |
For
this Court, the life of a policeman or a member of the security forces is no
less precious and valuable than any other person. The lives lost in the fight
against terrorism and insurgency are indeed the most grievous loss. But to the
State it is not open to cite the numbers of policemen and security forces killed
to justify custodial death, fake encounter or what this Court called
“Administrative liquidation”. It is simply not permitted by the Constitution.
And in a situation where the Court finds a person’s rights, specially the right
to life under assault by the State or agencies of the State, it must step in and
stand with the individual and prohibit the State or its agencies from violating
the rights guaranteed under the Constitution. That is the role of this Court and
it would perform it under the all circumstances. We thus, find that the third
plea raised in the counter affidavit is equally without substance.
(Suresh Singh vs. Union of India & Another – Writ Petition
(Criminal) order dated January 4, 2013 )
This
order was made relating to two writ petitions which allege that a large number
of Indian citizens have been killed by the Manipur police and other security
forces while in custody or in stage-managed encounters or in ways broadly termed
as extra-judicial executions. In one of the petitions it was stated that during
the period of May 1979 to May 2012 1,528 people were killed in Manipur in
extra-judicial executions.
During
this same period, that is 1979 to 2012 in Sri Lanka, the number of people who
were killed by way of extra-judicial executions is easily over 100,000 of which
at least 50,000 were enforced disappearances.
In
recent months the issue of the arbitrary removal of Chief Justice Dr. Shirani
Bandaranayke has been among the top most issues discussed both
locally and internationally. It is quite relevant to note that this bold attack
by the executive to remove the Chief Justice of Sri Lanka for the first time in
the long history of the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka the first chief justice of
which was appointed in 1802 did not happen by way of an accident. There was a
long process leading up to the gradual undermining of the Supreme Court.
Close
examination of the conflict between the Supreme Court and the executive would
show that one of the very important causes (perhaps not the sole cause) for the
conflict the executive and the judiciary lies in the area of dealing with the
very issue of what the Indian Supreme Court has referred to as ‘Administrative
liquidation’.
From1971
following a minor insurrection the government, with the complete support of the
opposition at that time, engaged in a ruthless spree of killings of between
5-10,000 persons, mostly youths. Most of these killings took place after arrest.
There has never been a proper judicial intervention to inquire into these
killings by way of ‘Administrative liquidation’. From then on there has been a
continuous causing of extrajudicial killings often by way of enforced
disappearances and the number of such disappearances would easily exceed 50,000.
The government appointed commissions themselves recorded the complaints of
enforced disappearances of around 30,000 persons between 1987 and 1991, mostly
in the south. The conflict with theLTTE has
caused large numbers of disappearances in the north and east and these have
never been counted. It was recently reported that about 5,000 complaints were
made to the United Nations Working Group on enforced disappearances and the
government was only able to account for 17 out of that 5,000.
What
is relevant to this article is that in Sri Lanka these killings were considered
as a legitimate form of ‘Administrative liquidation’ in. It was the inability of
the Sri Lankan Supreme Court and the judiciary to challenge these arbitrary
killings and its willingness to be silent on the issue that has undermined the
judiciary in Sri Lanka more than any other reason. A vast gap has been created
between the people and the courts. The courts did not prove capable of
intervening on this crucial issue demanding accountability on the part of the
governments in power.
This
was perhaps the reason why the executive was able to move to the extent of the
arbitrary removal of the Chief Justice herself. Had the courts maintained their
moral authority by way of a proper judicial intervention to require
accountability when the state had taken the lives of some of its citizens, the
people would have not allowed the executive to strangulate the judiciary by way
of such an arbitrary removal. The judiciary having failed to play its role in
the protection of the most precious of all rights, the right to life, it has
bared its throat to an extent that the executive is now able to take away its
own life.
The
judicial role in the protection of the life and liberty of the people and
judicial independence are inseparable. The judiciary needs to be independent in
order to play the role of the protector of the individual. On the other hand the
courts need to play that role effectively so as to justify their existence
legally and morally.
Thus,
when threats to the independence of the judiciary is posed, as in Sri Lanka, the
responsibility of the executive as well as the responsibility of the judiciary
itself should be examined at the same time. The judiciary that fears to expose
itself to risk by way of defending the rights of the individual will sadly
expose itself to the executive who would not fear to attack the judicial
independence knowing the great gap that has come to exist between a judiciary
that lacks courage and the people could be exploited to their advantage. When
the judiciary passively watches the killing of citizens by the security forces
the executive sees in the judiciary not a lion but a monkey. Then the executive
begins to monkey with the judiciary. In 1978 Dr. Colvin
R. de Silva wrote an article entitled ‘Monkeying with the judiciary’.
From that monkeying with the judiciary to the arbitrary removal of the chief
justice herself was only a small step.
The
Indian Supreme Court has been able to maintain its independence because it has
been quite alert to the threats posed by the executive to the dignity and the
rights of individual citizens in India. When Indira
Gandhiattempted to acquire greater authoritarian powers the Indian
Supreme Court was able to stop it. No government in India would even think of
the removal of its chief justice in the manner in which the Mahinda
Rajapaksa government did. In India the role played by the courts to
be the protector of the rights of the people has helped to protect the courts
themselves. This is a lesson that should be kept foremost in the minds of
everyone who wishes to see the judiciary in Sri Lanka regain its
independence.