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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, August 26, 2018
Nihal Jayawickrema comes out to bat for MR
Campaign to nominate MR revs up as the Opposition’s options run out
It is difficult to believe that the timing of a piece entitled
"Disqualifying Twice Elected Presidents – A Failed Endeavour?" in the
Sunday Island of 19 August written by Dr Nihal Jayawickrama, was
fortuitous. In the alternative one would be compelled to say that Nihal
has miscued. I have known NJ from 30 years from Hong Kong days,
respected his integrity and enjoyed his impish humour. So if I were
compelled to, I would prefer to allow that he has goofed than made
himself a tool of the Rajapaksa bandwagon. But the facts! The Eighteenth
Amendment (18A) by which Mahinda Rajapaksa (MR) abolished term limits
was greeted with revulsion; it split political parties, evoked mass
campaigns and was a factor in his defeat in January 2015. NJ knows this
as well as any ardent observer of the political scene. 19A was enacted
with the express intention of preventing all presidents past, present
and future from exceeding the two-term limit. NJ knows as well or better
than any political animal that this was the public demand, what was
promised and what every one of us took for granted till that fateful 19
August Sunday.
I reiterate that the timing and content of NJ’s intervention conveys the
compelling impression that it is part of the campaign, now in full
swing, by the Rajapaksa opposition to overturn term restrictions and
allow MR to contest the presidency in 2020. I have no evidence to
suggest Nihal is colluding with GL and his gang or conniving to benefit
GL’s case in the Supreme Court but undoubtedly it is helpful for MR and
GL. Is it not said that justice must not only be done, it must also be
seen to be done? Likewise, the remit of one’s interventions is the remit
of what those interventions appear to convey. My reluctant conclusion
is that my friend Nihal is a pawn in an obnoxious political game.
The way NJ phrases his intervention not only says explicitly that MR can
contest the presidency in 2020, but it also implies that if he wins,
and wins again in 2025, only thereafter would he be ineligible, having
been twice elected after 19A was enacted! NJ is no fool and he must
realise this import of what he is saying. NJ knows that term limits for
all presidents was what the people called for when they demanded repeal
of 18A; he has by hook or by crook distanced himself from this.
Let us for the space of this paragraph concede that the drafters of 19A
goofed – I don’t think so, but grant it for a moment. Then the import of
NJ’s intervention reeks of: "Hooray they mucked it up! MR can ride
again!" (Mention of the Chandrika option is a red herring pure and
simple). If that was not NJ’s intention he would have couched his piece
entirely differently. His thrust would have been to protect the intent
and purpose of 19A. He would have pleaded that inadequacies in wording,
if any, notwithstanding the Court must hold with the sentiments of the
people and the intentions of the assembly that enacted 19A. The latter
is clear from the Hansard records which I trust will be placed before
Court. Thankfully I am no accredited lawyer but not an idiot either;
NJ’s legalist sophistry undermines the intent of 19A.
If NJ is right that the drafters of 19A goofed, then lawyers are asses
as there is not the slightest ambiguity about what the people wanted.
Even worse, human rights lawyers who have spoken up against torture, the
white-van culture and authoritarianism, if they switch sides and come
out to open the batting for Rajapaksa’s team, need to explain the
morality of their switch. The Opposition is opting for the ‘Mahinda as
candidate’ tactic as a last resort. The first fling was to try out Gota,
the barrage of criticism ("racist-fascist") and negative evaluation
(you can’t win against a 100% Tamil-Muslim block) put that strategy on
the back-foot. Then a JO chucker went out pimping for Dinesh. That never
took off, nor did the dead-left’s kite flying for Chamal gain traction.
The SLPP Opposition finally fell back on what had always been its
trump, Mahinda. There is no gainsaying MR is the JO’s strongest (though
still beatable) suit. The danger with this strategy is that if excessive
expectation is created but the Supreme Court says "nope", or if it says
"come back if the Elections Commissioner throws you out", then the
psychological setback could be severe. The dice is on the roll.
The question that many ask is "If NJ is playing along with MR, why is he
doing it?" After all he is remembered as a critic of white-vans and
assassins. I can only speculate till the maestro himself bowls his next
over. There are two possible lines of speculation. He is, reasonably,
fed up with Yahapalana’s failures and has decided, unreasonably, that
reverting to MR is better. A mistake but I know others too who have
shifted to reverse gear. This is political. The other is a personal feud
due to the grossly unfair treatment meted out to Mrs B and Nihal by the
JR government in which Ranil was a Minister who held his opportunist
tongue. Ranil has compromised his moral integrity on more than one
occasion so in the context of a failing administration perhaps NJ
decided to change sides. Frankly this is all speculation, but
speculation NJ has brought upon himself by the content and timing of his
article.
The law is an ass
The crucial operative section of NJ’s missive, shortened here and there
(why are lawyers so verbose, do they get paid by the word like copy
editors?) is as follows.
"A new Article was included by the 19th Amendment. That Article 31(2)
reads: "No person who has been twice elected to the office of President
by the People, shall be qualified thereafter to be elected". To whom
does the disqualification in Article 31(2) apply? On the one hand, it
undoubtedly applies to anyone who has been twice elected (after) the
19th Amendment was enacted. On the other hand this is an entirely new
prohibition on (others). Immediately prior to the 19th Amendment, the
Constitution did not impose such disqualification, therefore, a person
who had previously been twice elected by the repealed Article 30
(should) not (be) subject to such a disqualification".
A further point that NJ makes is that the powers and function of the
president, when changes enacted by 19A are taken into cognisance, are
different (far less) than they were prior to 19A. Under the much hated
JR constitution the Executive Presidency was more powerful and odious
than the post-19A. NJ’s point is that when 19A imposed term limits it
did so only on this less obnoxious presidency that it created and this
does not carry over to the odious pre-19A presidency which was a
different animal. This is sophistry; the cry in the country was against
the excessive, Bonapartist, near dictatorial powers of the JR crafted
presidency and the public outcry was against 18A and abandoning term
limits. NJ’s incredible story line amounts to: ‘The presidency is not as
obnoxious as it was before 19A, so why not let any sod who has had two
goes at the loathsome version have two more goes at the improved
version’. Insane!
Jayampathy has refuted NJ in the Observer "Mahinda Ineligible to Contest
2019 Prez Poll" in the Observer of 19 August and I guess lots more
chaps in black cloaks will weigh in.
(http://www.sundayobserver.lk/2018/08/19/news/mahinda-ineligible-contest-2019-prez-poll-%E2%80%93-jayampathy).
I will not add to this legalistic cacophony because what is crucial is
the will of the people and the intentions of the legislature at the time
and in the processes of enacting 19A. But I must add that I have been
present at forums prior to the enactment of 19A where drafters were
pointedly challenged to reassure participants that the disqualification
provision was retroactive. We were assured that this had been
meticulously attended to.
Let me make just two final points and sign off. Nothing that I have said
here should be taken to mean that I advocate a Tom Mix style brashness
in respect of the law. Of course one must not highjack the written word
in cavalier fashion to suit some convenience of the moment. I foresee
the criticism that I advocate denigration of the law as written, but
such censure is false. Such a concern cannot arise in this instance as
this is the first, and in all likelihood it will be the only time, that
this aspect of 19A will be put to the test.
Nor must this discussion be jumbled with concerns much debated in the US
where judges are differentiated as traditionalist-conservative or
liberal-modernist. The former hold that the constitution is a fixed
document to be taken literally and the function of a judge is to ensure
its proper usage in each specific instance. These judges promote
conservative values and rarely challenge reactionary executives. Liberal
justices on the other hand believe that the constitution is dynamic and
open to advance and they value judicial progress. Nothing of this
philosophical debate is even remotely relevant to this piece.
