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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, October 28, 2016
Draft of new counter-terror law triggers old fears in Sri Lanka
- MEERA SRINIVASAN-October 27, 2016
Even as Sri Lanka drafts a new law to counter terrorism, human rights
activists and lawyers here fear it might be worse than the Prevention of
Terrorism Act (PTA) they want repealed and replaced.
One of the key demands around regime change in Sri Lanka in January 2015
— when former President Mahinda Rajapaksa was unseated —was to repeal
the PTA. “After the new government came to power, all of us expected a
shift, but now people are disappointed,” says senior human rights lawyer
K.S. Ratnavale. The government, he observes, was not willing to
dismantle the security apparatus. “They seem unwilling to release
political prisoners as well. They are about 160 now.”
The PTA was enacted in 1979, under President J.R. Jayawardene, primarily
to crush the emerging armed struggle of Tamil youth protesting the
state’s apparently discriminatory policies. Modelled on South Africa’s
apartheid-era legislation and laws that the British used against Irish
militancy, the PTA became a permanent law in 1982.
Call for repeal
Ever since Sri Lankan armed forces defeated the rebel Tigers in May
2009, bringing a nearly-three decade-long war to an end, civil society
groups have been campaigning for repealing the PTA. “The government has
eliminated the LTTE. Why do we still need the PTA?” asks Mr. Ratnavale,
who has appeared for many arrested under the Act.
It was this question and mounting international criticism that pushed
the government to consider a new law to replace the PTA with, but the
draft of the proposed legislation has only reinforced old fears.
“The preamble itself is worrying,” says Mr. Ratnavale, pointing to a
provision that calls for protection of other countries and areas from
the “scourge of terrorism”. “This goes far beyond the legal framework.
It means that it is left to political institutions to eradicate the
scourge of terrorism.”
‘Extremely troubling’
An aspect of particular concern, according to lawyers, is with regard to
confessions and the right to counsel. Lawyer and columnist Kishali
Pinto-Jayawardena says it is extremely troubling that according to the
draft policy framework, confessions made to police officers were
admissible in the court of law. “This, despite overwhelming evidence
that similar latitude under the PTA encouraged the brutal torture of
detainees in the north and south, across all ethnicities,” she adds.
According to human rights activist Ruki Fernando, the draft policy and
legal framework of the counter-terror law, much like the PTA, have broad
definitions that may infringe on free expression and human rights
activism. “Like the PTA, it [the new law] can serve as a licence for
enforced disappearances and torture, taking away life-saving protections
when it is most needed — within the first few hours and days of a
person being arrested,” says Mr. Fernando, who was in March 2014
arrested under the PTA and released on bail after two days of
interrogation.
Commenting on a section regarding “new offences”, Ms. Jayawardena says
“causing serious harm to the economy and environment” is also swept up
within the ambit of what constitutes a terrorist act. “Taken in
conjunction with the prohibition on ‘illegally’ or ‘unlawfully’
attempting to change policy, this may infringe constitutional rights and
upturn decades of progressive judgements by the Supreme Court.”
Unpleasant memories
For hundreds of families in the north, the PTA evokes unpleasant
memories. The Act was used indiscriminately during Sri Lanka’s war
years—then the army would round up Tamil-majority villages in the north
and arrest large groups of people using the Act, says Mr. Ratnavale.
Some never returned.
One of the few times that the Sri Lankan state evoked the Act in the
south was during the second JVP insurrection from 1987-89, to arrest
revolting Sinhalese youth.
Political parties in opposition have periodically demanded the repeal of
the PTA. In the post-war context, the Leftist nationalist JVP called
for its abolition, to quell foreign interference in Sri Lanka’s domestic
matters, and the Tamil National Alliance — the main political grouping
representing the island’s northern Tamils — has also voiced concern over
“the draconian law” and the apparent influence that the security
establishment has on the government.
The draft of the new legislation is to be submitted to an oversight
committee on National Security, government sources said. Concerns would
also be presented to the committee which, in turn, would submit it to
Parliament.
However, lawyers like Mr. Ratnavale appear sceptical. “The government
anticipates political opposition even to its economic policies. In the
guise of tackling terrorism, it might use the [counter terrorism] law to
curb all dissent.”
The draft of the new legislation will be submitted to an oversight committee on National Security