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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, November 23, 2017
Our Education:-Prisoner of a long, largely undeclared war
Part I: From Presidential Immunity to Immunity of Presidential Appointees
The subject given was the effect of the internal war on Higher Education
in this country with special reference to the region mainly affected by
the Tamil insurgency and its suppression.
Addressing a Science Faculty forum on university recruitment, Professor
Tharmaratnam told the audience, "At least in the recruitment of
academics, you must be honest and responsible so as to nurture students
who are morally and intellectually sound. After all you are the ones who
are going to raise our future teachers. If you abuse this process to
bring in favourites, they would in turn be paranoid about recruiting
those with superior ability and character. Then you are doomed for
thirty years, as Jaffna College is now doomed."
The universities have followed our presidential system and the immunity
the holder of the office enjoys. The courts have now come to treat this
immunity as blanket immunity; Likewise, the vice chancellors of
universities. The ministers, the courts, the University Grants
Commission and the University Services Appeals Board, treat this state
of affairs as sacrosanct. The result is a crippling incidence of
malpractice; I refer in particular to the recruitment of staff and the
exclusion of competent scholars who might rock the boat. Behind a façade
of activity, the universities have tended to a state of intellectual
torpor. I submit that the problem of universities is one of contempt for
the law, for which we have for decades, happily blamed terrorists.
Where it began, goes back to the surrender of rationality to
nationalism. The earlier emphasis on classics helped us to think
meaningfully about the human condition. The ideology of humanism which
the classics communicated was healthy; such as Cicero’s, "There is a
true law, right reason, agreeable to nature, known to all men, constant
and eternal…Nor is there one law at Rome and another at Athens, one
thing now and another afterwards; but the same law unchanging and
eternal, binds all races of men and all times."
The first disaster that followed on the heels of Independence in 1948
was the Citizenship Acts, whose effects have continued as a long
undeclared war.
Criticism of what was accomplished by the Citizenship Acts from our
universities barely touched the surface. Deepika Udagama observes in her
contribution to the volume Fates of political liberalism in the British
post-colony, "The court was not keen to examine the practical realities
of the application of the laws, nor the motives for enacting them." On
the Privy Council’s support for the Act the contribution quotes its
reference to the alleged ‘migratory habits’ of Indian Tamils. This was
mere dressing up, not argued fact. The essence of the Privy Council’s
stand is contained in, "the court will not be astute to attribute to any
legislature motives or purposes or objects which are beyond its
powers." That is a sovereign nation has the right to enact its own
positive laws – the French Jurist Jean Domat used the term arbitrary
law.
The important point for us is that the Privy Council was part of the
British Imperial system and how it viewed legislation in the Dominions.
British jurists were fine with slave laws in Virginia and Trinidad, but
were astute to block any trace of slavery or racial discrimination in
British law. That was how they viewed Ceylon and that is not very
flattering to us.
The main point is that we got used to doing business with arbitrary law.
The 1978 Constitution with its Section 35 on presidential immunity
became a rich source of arbitrary law. The spirit of it became the bane
of universities by translating vice chancellors into kings and queens
with little concern for the law. We briefly view this.
Presidential Immunity, Arbitrary Law and Effects on the Judiciary
On this question, the Judiciary has been on the horns of an unresolved
dilemma. The first was the interpretation given in 1983 by a bench
presided over by Chief Justice Neville Samarakoon. The relevant part of
the interpretation written by Justice Sharvananda reads: "Though the
President is immune from proceedings in Court party who invokes the acts
of the President in his support will have to bear the burden of
demonstrating that such acts of the President are warranted by law."
Sharvananda reversed this interpretation in two judgments during 1985
which practically made the president above the law. The first related to
the proscription of the JVP on 30th July 1983 under cover of the
anti-Tamil violence in a piece of downright deceit over the so-called
Naxalite Plot. The action was justified by Presidential immunity, that
it protects "the person holding such high executive office from being
subject to legal process or legal action and from being harassed by
frivolous actions."
The second related to the Mahara election petition, where Sharvanada
ruled "Article 35 gives blanket immunity to the President from
proceedings of any kind whatsoever..."
Justice Mark Fernando reversed this in a judgment in December 1998. But
‘blanket immunity’ became entrenched when Fernando was overlooked in
favour of Sarath Silva for Chief Justice in 1999. In a case filed by
Victor Ivan and others challenging President Kumaratunga’s appointment
of Sarath Silva as Chief Justice who was facing ongoing inquiries into
his conduct, Justice Wadugodapitiya covered this under Presidential
immunity. He chose the authority of Sharvananda over that of his
colleague Mark Fernando.
The long term result of this was that presidential immunity – translated
to impunity – extended to presidential appointees from chief justices
to UGC chairmen and vice chancellors. The courts succumbed, leading to
anarchy in the higher education system where rules were held in scant
regard.The period 2000 to March 2006 may be held to be a transition
period of relative judicial independence, where public interest cases,
or from another standpoint, ‘harassing busy people in authority, with
frivolous actions’, still enjoyed some traction.
The Citizens Movement for Good Governance or CIMOGG, which Elmore
Pererarepresented with senior activist A.C. Visvalingam, got around them
a group of outstanding persons to act as appellants in public interest
cases. During the years 2002 – 2005, they exposed through a series of
appeals the astounding rot that had set in at the country’s two leading
universities at Peradeniya and Colombo.
In September 2005 CIMOGG’s case against the President’s appointment of
the Colombo University vice chancellor was heard in the Appeal Court.
Given the complexity and interconnectedness of the charges, the
appellants had torely on getting the court to order the University to
produce documents.
It should have been routine as in the Poulraj case below. M.A.
Sumanthiran with Viran Corea instructed by Mohan Balendra, who
represented Colombo University,accused in their motion the CIMOGG, Prof.
S.R.H. Hoole (of the UGC), Elmore Perera and the petitioners of abusing
the process of court and violating various laws under the guise of
public interest. It said the petitioners had ventured to speak untruths,
half-truths and even diabolical falsehoods and this could be
demonstrated from their affidavit itself. Alleging that they were
engaging in the vilification and defamation of the Colombo University
Vice Chancellor, it called for deterrent action.
Justice Sripavan castigated the petitioners in the same spirit. The case
was thus aborted, sparing Justice Sripavan from overtly resorting to
presidential immunity.
Saraswathie Poulraj, the Colombo Law Faculty, and a Follow-up
Mrs. Saraswathie Poulraj was one among 25 candidates who responded in
2003 to an advertisement by the University of Colombo for Probationary
Lecturers in the Faculty of Law, of whom 7 or 8 had second class upper
degrees.
The University shortlisted 8 candidates for interview, of whom 4 had 2nd
Upper and 4 had 2nd Lowers. About 4 who had 2nd Uppers were not called
for the interview. One 2nd upper and three 2nd lowers were selected. The
University Services Appeals Board’s (USAB’s) Justice DG Jayalath, who
heard Saraswathie Poulraj’s complaint of discrimination, duly affirmed
the interviewsas contrary to the intention of the Circular 721, which
obliged the University to consider first class and second upper
candidates, who formed Category (1) separately, before considering
second lowers – Category (2).
Unfortunately, the Law Faculty that should set an example in respect for
the law and even go the extra mile in that direction, resorted to
tactics that increasingly brought the university system into disrepute.
Encouraged in all likelihood by the Law Faculty, the selected candidates
went to the Court of Appeal and requested it to stay the inquiry by the
USAB until the decision by the Court of Appeal. This was obstruction of
the course of justice; perhaps they felt the Appeal Court was friendly
territory. Justice Jayalth of the USAB declined to hold up proceedings
there because of the Court of Appeal matter, as there had been no
decision of the USAB to appeal against, and moreover not all the facts
before the USAB have featured in the Appeal Court action. The fact that
the USAB called for documents from the University to test Saraswathie’s
allegations, is relevant to the aborted case by CIMOGG againstthe
Colombo University VC.
By calling for documents, Justice Jayalath also faulted the way the
University had tampered with marks at the interview. He ordered the
University to advertise and call afresh.The disease is common to the
system.
The North
Up to about the early 1980s, JaffnaUniversity had a strong democratic
tradition and students were active. It held out hopes of high standards.
However with the July 1983 violence and the onset of war, there was a
recession. The rot started in the Arts Faculty while, by 1990, Science
and Medicine remained largely unaffected. The LTTE’s assassination of
Dr. Rajani Thiranagama, who stood for internal accountability, was the
signal for the illiberal tide. Favouritism in the Arts Faculty gathered
new momentum.
Jaffna University in 1990 was the leading centre for most students from
the North-East. From the nature of events, it is evident that a
complaint was made to the LTTE about favouritism and academic jobs being
given mainly to favourites from Jaffna. The LTTE told the university
authorities to recruit staff from all districts of the North-East. This
directive applied mainly to the Arts Faculty. Several then recruited
were persons designated by the LTTE. However local corruption thrived
unabated, while the LTTE tolerated and perhaps, unintentionally,
provided cover for it.