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
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, October 31, 2018
THE DIFFICULT QUESTIONS PRESIDENT AND THE POLITY NEED TO ANSWER
by Jehan Perera-October 29, 2018, 12:00 pm
The
dismissal of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe following the
withdrawal of the SLFP headed by President Maithripala Sirisena from the
government alliance has become yet another source of instability within
the polity. It has also caused international ripples with the
governments of many countries publicly expressing their concerns and the
UK issuing a travel advisory to its citizens to be careful when
travelling to Sri Lanka in the near future. Therefore the sooner this
crisis is resolved the better it will be for the country. It is to be
hoped that all parties concerned will act with restraint. The desire to
corner the other and utterly defeat it can be a cause for further
instability that outlives the present crisis.
The main issue at stake is the transfer of power from one government to
another and this needs to be done in conformity with the Rule of Law or
else the longer term consequences can be catastrophic. In his first
address to the nation after the change of government, President
Maithripala Sirisena explained his motivation in sacking Prime Minister
Ranil Wickremesinghe. He spoke of corruption, an assassination plot
against him and the sale of national assets to foreign parties, among
others. These were all serious issues. But he did not mention the issue
that was considered the elephant in the room during their period of
cohabitation. This was a contentious issue, to which the answer is still
far from clear, as to who would be the presidential candidate on the
government side.
It is now generally believed that President Sirisena is not interested
to adhere to his one-time promise to be a single term president. The
increasingly contentious relationship between the president and prime
minister, and their two respective parties, the SLFP and UNP, made it
unlikely that either UNP voters or UNP leaders would have wanted him to
be the beneficiary of their votes once again. But if contesting the
presidency is his ambition, then President Sirisena will have a
challenging task ahead. He will need to restore the confidence of the
people that he has acted wisely and in conformity with the Rule of Law
which exists to ensure social peace and justice.
CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS
In his speech justifying his action in sacking Prime Minister
Wickremesinghe, the president gave much emphasis and spent most of his
time in elaborating on his abhorrence of corruption. However, he failed
to explain why he had appointed former president Mahinda Rajapaksa as
the new Prime Minister when he had accused him of abuse of power,
violation of human rights and corruption in the past. During the past
three years, during which time President Sirisena has been head of
state, and chairs the meetings of the cabinet, the former president and
his close asssociates were regularly assailed for having engaged in
corruption, abuse of power and violation of human rights during their
period of supremacy in the country. Some of the former president’s close
family members had corruption cases filed against them in the courts of
law and even had to spend time in remand custody. These cases are
likely to get stalled if not thrown out in the present circumstances.
It is worthy of note, and remembrance, that President Sirisena was
elected in 2015 by the votes of people who rejected corruption, abuse of
power and human rights violations that had reached excessive
proportions and had made Sri Lanka a virtual pariah state in the eyes of
the international community. Just a week before he sacked Prime
Minister Wickremesinghe, Sri Lanka had obtained first place in the world
for being the best country to visit, on account of its enjoyment of
democratic freedoms among others. Chief amongst those who campaigned for
presidential candidate Sirisena at those elections was Prime Minister
Wickremesinghe. But on Friday last week, even as the courts of law
closed for the weekend, and no immediate recourse to them was possible,
he appointed his former nemesis as the prime minister and thereafter
sacked the man who had campaigned for him.
Dr Asanga Welikala who teaches law at Edinburgh University has analysed
the events on Friday evening in the following manner - "Indeed, the
whole set of circumstances suggest not the way a change of government
ought to occur in a democracy, but the sharp practices associated with a
constitutional coup, which is likely to lead to a constitutional
crisis. It is a constitutional coup because the serving Prime Minister
has not legally ceased to function in office before a new Prime Minister
has been appointed. And it will lead to an unprecedented constitutional
crisis because there are now two competing Prime Ministers and their
parties jostling for power, authority, and legitimacy at the very heart
of the state."
Although most Sri Lankans are unlikely to be able to express themselves
in this analytical and concise manner, they seem to have imbibed its
essence in much the same way. Many of those who are supporters of former
president Mahinda Rajapaksa, and admire him for his leadership and what
he did to defeat the LTTE, do not agree with the way he became prime
minister. This was the case in Colombo, Badulla and Negombo from which I
got first hand anecdotal reports.
In the North and East of the country, which experienced the three-decade
long war, there is also concern that the promises made by the
government in terms of return of land, release of detainees and finding
of missing persons and reform of the constitution will not happen. Over
the past three years the people there have been complaining that the
changes are too slow and they want them speeded up. A few weeks ago,
President Sirisena pledged that all civilian-owned land in the North and
East that is under military occupation would be returned by the end of
the year. The president was even specific that it would be December 31
when all land was returned. But there is now doubt that this promise
will be delivered on.
BUILD UPON
The concerns of the ethnic minorities about the new government formation
is not limited to the North and East. This may account for the fact
that the leaders of nearly all the ethnic minority parties have
continued to stand by Prime Minister Wickremesinghe and support his
position that he continues to be the legitimate prime minister. They
appear to have accepted the position that his sacking was not in
conformity with the constitution. Prime Minister Wickremesinghe has
contested his dismissal, and the appointment of a new prime minister, on
the grounds that it does not conform to the 19th Amendment to the
constitution. The 19th Amendment specifies that the Prime Minister can
only cease to hold office by death, resignation, by ceasing to be a
Member of Parliament, or if the government as a whole has lost the
confidence of Parliament by a defeat on the throne speech, the budget,
or a vote of no-confidence.
Legal opinion is divided on this matter and the final arbiter will
necessarily have to be the Supreme Court. The legality of the Prime
Minister’s dismissal needs to be resolved by the Supreme Court. Apart
from questions of law there is also the question of democratic process.
The changing of governments and leaders is part and parcel of democracy.
But due process needs to be followed, the constitution must not be
violated and the Rule of Law must prevail when such changes take place.
Despite violent conflicts in the past, Sri Lanka can take pride in the
fact that transfer of power to successive administrations was achieved
through democratic electoral processes.
The practice of democracy requires consultation with the general public
and transparency in decision making. The secrecy in which the
president’s decision to sack the Prime Minister was made with no
transparency so much so that it caught the country’s people, and most of
the government, by surprise was not in the spirit of democracy.
Parliamentary democracy is a public process not a secret enterprise.
Therefore the president’s action in proroguing parliament until November
16 is unacceptable in democratic terms. The discussion that is taking
place all over the country, on the streets, in workplaces and in
people’s homes, needs to be taken to parliament. The most urgent need is
for parliament, as the supreme law making body, to meet and find ways
and means to resolve the crisis. The president needs to heed the
imperatives of democracy, the need to follow due process and reconsider
his decision to prorogue parliament till November 16.