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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, January 2, 2016
Towards dystopia?
Editorial-January 1, 2016, 7:51 am
Judge Hirunika Premachandra
Every time Police Spokesman ASP Ruwan Gunasekera trots out a lame excuse
for not taking action against UNP MP Hirunika Premachandra over the
recent abduction of a man by her security guards, his nose elongates.
His predecessor who defended the Rajapaksa government to the hilt in
spite of its illegal operations was also affected by the Pinocchio
syndrome, as it were.
ASP Gunasekera insists that MP Premachandra’s statements to the media
and the victim’s complaints are not admissible and, therefore, the
police cannot act thereon to take action against her. He has gone on
record as saying that the Attorney General will be consulted on the
issue. But, there have been instances where the police went hell for
leather to arrest even minors over lesser offences.
A 13-year-old girl was hauled up by the Thebuwana police before the
Kalutara Magistrate in September 2010. What was her crime? She had
stolen Rs. 5.00—yes, five rupees only—from a kiosk! She was enlarged on
bail. She said she had taken the money because she could not think of
any other way of dulling hunger pangs. In 2013, another 13-year-old
schoolgirl was arrested, arraigned on charges of stealing a few coconuts
from her neighbour to pay her school fees and bailed out. The police
said the offence she had committed warranted her arrest!
Will the Police Spokesman or the IGP tell us whether the police had
consulted the AG before arresting those 13-year-old girls and explain
why that kind of high octane performance is sadly lacking on their part
in dealing with a 28–year-old female MP? Of the theft of a few coconuts
or five rupees and an abduction, which is the more serious offence?
Last month, a man was sentenced to eight months in jail for yawning in a
courthouse. If he had taken to politics, amassed enough wealth through
legal or illegal means, and become a ruling party MP he would have been
able to get away with even criminal offences such as masterminding
abductions.
Meanwhile, the Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) has condemned an
attack by Kolonnawa Urban Council Chairman Ravindra Udayashantha’s
supporters on a group of persons engaged in a peaceful protest against
the Meethotamulla garbage dump the other day. When Hambantota Mayor Eraj
Fernando, brandishing a small firearm, chased after a group of UNP MPs
all hell broke loose with the champions of good governance raking the
Rajapaksa government over the coals—and rightly so. (The likes of
Fernando were also responsible for bringing down the Rajapaksa
government.) But, today, when peaceful protesters are assaulted at the
behest of a UC chairman those knights in shining armour bury their heads
in sand.
The police who swing into action to arrest schoolchildren over minor
offences and lovers on beaches shamelessly waited till the suspect UC
chairman surrendered to the police.
The BASL fought quite a battle against the Rajapaksa government and was
instrumental in effecting the Jan. 08 regime change. The new
administration greatly appreciated its services so much so that its
president at that time was rewarded with a plum government job. The BASL
should, therefore, go beyond issuing mere media statements and take the
bull by the horns. It is duty bound to grant legal aid to the victims
of Meethotamulla violence and ensure that justice is done. Floating like
a bee and stinging like a butterfly won’t do. Killer hooks like the
ones which floored the mighty Rajapaksa government are called for if the
incumbent regime is to be tamed for the benefit of the public. Will the
BASL rise to the occasion?
It would have been far less demeaning for the police to tell the public
the truth about their failure to act impartially and independently as
regards the Dematagoda abduction case than to function as a
ventriloquist’s dummy in the hands of the powers that be. They ought to
admit that they are under tremendous political pressure. Where are those
who told us that the establishment of the National Police Commission
would enable the police to act independently? Trying to make empty khaki
sacks stand upright is an exercise in futility.
Gross injustices and the selective enforcement of the law make us wonder
whether the utopia we were promised before the last presidential and
parliamentary elections is fast becoming a dystopia like the one we come
across in Orwell’s Animal Farm, where crafty pigs proclaim that ‘all
animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others’.