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, April 30, 2013
Government Considering Amending The Thirteenth Amendment Before NP Elections
April 30, 2013 |
Caught between its promises to India and
the international community to hold elections to theNorthern
Provincial Council in September 2013 on the one hand and certain
defeat at the hands of the Tamil Nationalist Alliance on the other, the
Rajapaksa Government is now mulling an amendment to the Constitution to take
away some of the powers of Provincial Councils, theColombo
Telegraph understands. According to Government sources, the proposed
amendment will make far reaching changes to the Thirteenth
Amendment.
Under
the Thirteenth
Amendment, if a Bill on a subject devolved on Provincial Councils is
to be passed by Parliament, the Bill has to be referred to all Provincial
Councils for their views. If all Provincial Councils agree, then the Bill can be
passed by a simple majority. However, if one or more Provincial Councils do not
agree, then the Bill must be passed by a two-thirds majority if it is to apply
to the provinces which did not agree. If passed only by a simple majority, the
Bill will be law only in the provinces that have agreed.
It
may be recalled that several Bills of the Rajapaksa Government on provincial
subjects were rejected by Provincial Councils including Councils controlled by
the UPFA. The Government is worried that with a TNA-controlled Provincial
Council in place, other Councils, especially the Eastern Provincial Council,
would follow the Northern Provincial Council and not agree to government Bills.
As such, the new amendment would provide that a Bill on a provincial subject
will become law applicable to the whole country, if a majority of Provincial
Councils agree to the passing of the Bill. The Government is confident that
Provincial Councils other than the Northern and Eastern Provincial Councils can
be pressurized into supporting any Bill.
Another
amendment being considered relates to Police powers. Although Police powers have
been devolved to a certain extent by the Thirteenth Amendment, Provincial
Councils are unable to exercise those powers as the Police Commission Act, No. 1
of 1990 which provides for the establishment of a National Police Commission and
a Provincial Police Commission for each province has still not been brought into
operation by successive Governments. Police powers will be completely taken back
to the central government or limited to minor offences, Government sources told
Colombo Telegraph.
At
present, Provincial Councils have certain powers over State land. Under
paragraph 1:3 of Appendix II of the Thirteenth Amendment, alienation or
disposition of State land within a Province to any citizen or to any
organisation shall be by the President but only on the advice of the relevant
Provincial Council. It may be recalled that in the case filed against the former
President, Chandrika
Kumaratunga, for transferring state land to Water’s Edge Golf
Company, one of the grounds on which the Supreme Court bench headed by Chief
Justice Sarath
Silva held that the transfer was illegal was that the advice of the
Western Provincial Council had not been given. The Government is now considering
deleting the requirement of advice and also taking back many other land powers
devolved.
However,
the Rajapaksa government
is worried that the required two-thirds majority will not be forthcoming in the
new political climate. The Sri Lanka Muslim Congress is already under severe
pressure from the Muslim community to withdraw from the Government because of
the Government’s reluctance to deal with extremists who are fuelling anti-Muslim
hatred. Muslims also believe that the newly formed extremist
Buddhist organizations have the covert support of the Government.
Further, the SLMC would find it extremely difficult to agree to a dilution of
the powers of Provincial Councils. The Government may also find it difficult to
get the Left parties to support such an amendment. At the vote on the
impeachment of Chief
Justice Bandaranayake, the Secretary General of the SLMC and three
MPs of the Left parties, all Cabinet Ministers, did not vote with the
Government.
However,
the Government is exploring the possibility of getting a few more UNP MPs to
join the Government “to strengthen the hands of the President”, Government
sources stated.
Colombo
Telegraph -