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, October 1, 2016
SRI LANKA: FRIDAY FORUM OUTLINES KEY PRIORITY CONCERNS FOR CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM
(Incorporation of Social and Economic rights into the Chapter on
Fundamental Rights says Friday Forum; photo of a vegetable seller in
Kilinochi market, August 2016 ©s.deshapriya)
1. Repeal of Article 16 in the 1978 Constitution
Article 16 of the present Constitution states that all existing law at
the time the Constitution was promulgated remains valid notwithstanding
any inconsistency with the fundamental rights chapter of the
Constitution. This Article prevents judicial review, i.e. scrutiny by
the Supreme Court, of laws in existence before 1978 even if they violate
Constitutional guarantees on fundamental rights, including equality and
nondiscrimination.
There are many pre 1978 laws that violate fundamental rights that have
not been reformed by Parliament and our legislators even during the long
period of 38 years since the 1978 Constitution was adopted. Many of
these laws are discriminatory of women and other social groups and
include laws relating to land and criminal law.
A significant body of law that also continues to remain valid is the
diverse personal laws that are applicable in Sri Lanka and which apply
mainly in the areas of marriage and inheritance. Two of these systems of
personal law, i.e. Kandyan law, applicable only to Kandyans, and
Tesawalamai law, applicable only to Tamils of the Northern Province, are
not religion based. Further, in their present form they have no link to
their original customary or traditional roots as they have been
significantly altered by British colonial legislation and court
decisions that have superimposed ideas borrowed from Roman Dutch Law on
these systems, and diminished the rights of women of these communities.
Only the personal law of the Muslim community is based on religion and
is derived (in some respects) from Islamic Law. All these systems of
personal laws discriminate against women and need to be urgently
reformed.
It is therefore critical that the new Constitution repeals Article 16
and provides for judicial review of all the laws that violate the new
Constitution. While the constitution must continue to guarantee the
freedom of religion as part of general guarantees on fundamental rights
of the people, it must also guarantee equality by providing room for
discriminatory clauses of laws that are inconsistent with the bill of
rights to be amended or not enforceable.
The new Constitution will undoubtedly incorporate the legitimate right
of the State to enact laws and policies on manifestation of religion
that infringe fundamental rights guarantees. These limitations must
conform to the norms already incorporated in our Constitution that will
be further clarified, in harmony with accepted norms on implementation
of human rights in the public interest. Consequently, practices that
discriminate against Muslim women must be modified by the State, but in
consultation with the Muslim community. The community consists of both
men and women and the voice of the women must be heard.
2. Incorporation of Social and Economic rights into the Chapter on Fundamental Rights
The
present Constitution, following the Indian Constitution, only
recognises that State violations of civil and political rights, (for
example, the right to be protected from torture and illegal arrest and
the right to equality) can be challenged in the Supreme Court.
Socio-economic rights are not given the same status as civil and
political rights as they are considered to be issues of social welfare
policy decided at the discretion of the State. Thus, while the
Constitution declares that the State is pledged to establish a social
order in which social, economic and political justice shall guide all
the institutions of national life, and the realisation by all citizens
of an adequate standard of living, such provisions have been relegated
to the chapter on Directive Principles of State Policy, and are not
justiciable.
Yet, social and economic rights including the right of
access to health and education in State/public institutions has been
recognised as the right of all our people since the 1940s, due to the
visionary policies introduced by our early political leaders.
Today these are considered peoples’ rights despite the absence of
Constitutional guarantees or legislation. We have all witnessed the
crisis in these sectors due to the failure to increase and allocate
adequate budgetary and human resources to maintain and enhance them. At
the same time Sri Lanka’s continuing positive social indicators for the
people, in both the areas of health and education, have been
consistently traced to the investment in public education and health
from the pre-independence period.
It is critical that the negative changes that we have witnessed in
recent decades, and the reduction in allocated resources are arrested.
Recognition of socio-economic rights in the new Constitution is one way
of ensuring budget scrutiny and accountability in the use of national
resources in the public interest, instead of fiscal profligacy and waste
of public funds. Socio-economic rights such as access to the highest
available standard of health care, education at primary, secondary and
tertiary levels, and other basic needs such as food and water, housing
and shelter must be considered basic rights of all the people, to enable
all Sri Lankans to access these “public goods” and share the dividends
of economic growth and development. This does not mean that we should
not recognise a public/private mix in these areas, and discourage or
prevent the involvement of the private sector. What this will demand is
responsible allocation of public funds by the State for these sectors,
even as the private sector provides alternatives, and is regulated by
the State to ensure high quality of services.
Current global developments reflect the shift towards incorporating
socio economic rights in Constitutions. The recent multilateral UN
treaties, many of which Sri Lanka has already signed on as a State
Party, give civil and political rights and socio economic rights equal
status as justiciable and enforceable rights of the people. This
development incorporates the international consensus in Vienna in 1993,
which recognised that all these rights are indivisible and
interdependent. The same concepts on socio-economic rights are reflected
in global policy documents that Sri Lanka has endorsed over many
decades since 1978.
International agencies that this country has worked with like WHO and
UNICEF have also supported national and provincial programmes in
recognition of these treaty norms, global policies and local agendas.
The most recently accepted Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) agenda
which sets the benchmarks for progress of nations and creates
commitments for governments for the next 15 years recognises
socio-economic rights in the above areas, and expects that governments
will implement them. The SDG agenda also focuses on the aspect of
financing to ensure that SDG goals and targets are implemented.
It is also pertinent to clarify that some 70 countries have,
in the last two decades incorporated socio-economic rights into their
Constitutions, and considered their recognition and enforcement through
the courts in the public interest. These countries include those with
Common law systems, like South Africa and Kenya, and those with civil
law systems such as Bolivia and Ecuador. The Indian Supreme Court has
over the years overcome the limitations on the non- justifiability of
socio-economic rights through judicial interpretations, and these
pioneering judgments have also influenced other courts, including in
South Africa and Nepal. The jurisprudence in our courts has on occasion
tried to recognise the rights of the people in areas such as
environmental protection, but the Constitutional imperatives have been a
limitation.
Those who argue against recognition of socio-economic rights suggest
that it will result in an erosion of the separation of the legislature
and the courts as it will give the courts the power to question
government policy decisions on development and economic growth. They
argue that this must remain the proper domain for law makers in
Parliament and the Executive. However when these institutions fail as
custodians of the public good, there must be an agency that promotes
accountability and ensures the rights and welfare of the people. The
experience of other countries with Constitutional provisions on socio
economic rights indicates that clear drafting of such provisions, using
concepts such as “proportionality” “reasonableness “ “within available
resources” “allocating maximum available resources” can, and have
ensured that the courts do not exercise open ended discretion. Cases
decided in Indian and other courts demonstrate that extremely expensive
procedures and facilities are also not considered the type of resources
that the public systems must regularly provide.
The argument of “affordability” cannot be used to prevaricate on
providing the basic needs of the people. Indeed, even the implementation
of civil and political rights which governments are committed to
realise today, require allocation of adequate resources and financial
provision. Law enforcement is prejudiced by failure to allocate
resources. Socio-economic rights enforcement requires the same
accountability as in the implementation of other rights. Lack of faith
in the competence of the Courts to perform their role cannot be
addressed by limiting their powers but by using the new Constitutional
reforms to create an environment for a qualified and independent
judiciary. We can no longer afford to leave the task of allocation of
national resources to benefit the people to the legislature and the
executive without some oversight of their accountability.
Prof. Savitri Goonesekere , Bishop Duleep de Chickera, Prof. Arjuna Aluwihare
For and on behalf of Friday Forum: Prof. Savitri Goonesekere,
Bishop Duleep de Chickera, Prof. Arjuna Aluwihare, Shanthi Dias, Dr.
A.C. Visvalingam, S.C.C. Elankovan, Chandra Jayaratne, Priyantha Gamage,
Dr. Upatissa Pethiyagoda, Ananda Galappatti, Dhammapala Wijayanandana,
Faiz-ur Rahman, Prashan de Visser, Prof. Gameela Samarasinghe, Dr.
Devanesan Nesiah, Rev. Dr. Jayasiri Peiris, Prof. Gananath Obeyesekere,
Pulasthi Hewamanna, Daneshan Casie Chetty, Prof. Ranjini Obeyesekere and
Suresh de Mel.
(The Friday Forum is an informal and self-financed group dedicated to
democracy, good governance, human rights and the rule of law. It has for
over five years sought to alert the public on issues concerning the
rights of the citizen. We work on a non-partisan basis and have been
critical of both the Government and Opposition.)