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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, January 27, 2016
A few suggestions for the proposed new constitution
The
powers and responsibilities of each level of administration shall be
determined on the basis of the need to hand over certain powers and
responsibilities to the next higher level on a ‘needs’ basis; that is,
these are not so much to be devolved to the periphery starting from the
centre but to be centralised from the periphery to the centre.
( January 26, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Most
thoughts for a new constitution are constrained by the form(s) of
existing or past ones, either in Sri Lanka or elsewhere. However, it may
be useful to look at them not so much as models, but as providing
lessons to be avoided.
1. Representative democracy has failed in most situations, even in the
fairly well established ‘democracies’; one glaring example of which
being Britain’s intervention in Iraq despite the opposition of the vast
majority of its people to such intervention. Ensuring that electorates
are kept very small (of the order of a100), allows for the recall of the
representative in case the representative ceases to reflect the wishes
of the electors.
The assemblies so elected should also be small (not more than 100
members) to ensure meaningful interaction among them. This may be
implemented by visualising a threetier structure as follows:
Basic unit a ‘ward’ of about 100 electors.
Level 1 administration ( Local government) consisting of about 100 ward
representatives), electing one among them to represent it at the next
level.
Level 2 administration (Provincial administration) consisting of about
100 representatives elected by each of the Local government units. Thus,
each of these would ultimately represent about 1M electors.
Level 3 administration (National administration) to consist of about 30
members, two (one male, one female) elected by each Provincial
administration. These thirty members would represent about 15 M electors
(as the eligible population now stands) The Level 3 assembly should
have, in addition to the thirty members elected as above (on a
territorial basis), another thirty members elected on a national basis
to represent group interests; one each representing peasant
(agricultural) farmers, industrial workers, estate workers, fishers,
workers in service industries, University students, academics, school
teachers, medical practitioners, engineers and architects, scientists,
small industrialists, medium scale industrialists, large industrialists,
other entrepreneurs (such as traders, bankers etc.).
The Level 3 assembly (the National assembly) will thus have about 60 members, a minimum of fifteen (and a maximum of 45) of whom being female.
2. The National assembly will elect the President and the Speaker, the
President being from outside; and divide itself into not more than 12
subcommittees representing the major areas of governance: Defence and
Foreign affairs, Finance, Health, Education, Food and agriculture,
Justice, General administration and law enforcement, Industries etc.
Each subcommittee shall elect a chairperson. The committee of such
Chairpersons shall form the Cabinet, which will elect the Prime Minister
from among themselves.
3. Even though the wards and Local administrative districts will be
geographically determined (by a delimitation commission), the Local
administrations (Level 1) will be able to negotiate among themselves as
to how to affiliate to form the Provincial administrations (Level 2)
4. The powers and responsibilities of each level of administration shall
be determined on the basis of the need to hand over certain powers and
responsibilities to the next higher level on a ‘needs’ basis; that is,
these are not so much to be devolved to the periphery starting from the
centre but to be centralised from the periphery to the centre.
5. As there will exist the power of recall at all levels, the term of
office of all bodies can be fixed at (say four years, similar to that of
the President of the USA), and all elections rescheduled to the month
of December, every four years. The ward elections may be scheduled to be
completed during the first week of December, and elections to each
succeeding level at one week intervals so that the new National
Government can takeover at the beginning of January. This will minimise
the cost and disruption caused by unscheduled elections.
This is only a very brief outline of what is possible, to form a basis
for discussion among the public. The two main criteria are the Right of
Recall, and small and manageable institution.