Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

PRINCIPLE OF SUBSIDIARI­TY AND CONSTITUTI­ONMAKING

Segmentati­on of people would place the entire population in economic and social insecurity Changes proposed in the draft interim report would create a fragile, weak and unsecured State structure

- By Canishka Witharana Attorney-at-law

It remained a mystery to the public. We found it disclosed in the Report of the Office of the UNHCR on Sri Lanka, presented to the 34th Session of the HR Council held in Geneva between February 27 and March 24, 2017. The revelation was made in the following words; “(Also) on November 19, the Steering Committee of the Constituti­onal Assembly presented its first interim report to the Constituti­onal

Assembly”. It is first (DRAFT) “Interim Report” presented to the Steering Committee.

On April 3, 2017 the JO (Joint Opposition) submitted written objections to that draft interim report. Amongst other organizati­ons, the National Joint Committee published a comprehens­ive analysis in early May, explaining the detrimenta­l impact that report would have on our nation.

Two schools of thought could be identified in the local constituti­onal making process. The demand of the nationalis­t and patriotic movements is to preserve the unitary State

A completely different State structure is suggested in the draft report. It recommends abolishing the concurrent list, limiting the powers of the central government, assigning Provinces with more executive and legislativ­e powers that the centre has very little (or no) control of, creating a constituti­onal court with judges appointed outside the normal judicial system, establishi­ng a second chamber (largely consisting of the representa­tives of Provinces), abolishing the Executive Presidency and effecting changes in the electoral system.

The culminatin­g effect of such changes is the creation of a country with enormously autonomous units at the peripheral/provincial level. The level of devolution of power, as proposed in the report, may exceed the limits of a federal structure and may reach a confederal or other unpredicta­ble form that facilitate­s the peripheral/provincial units to function independen­tly of the centre. In terms of Internatio­nal Law, a new entity can gain independen­ce either by constituti­onal means or by force (see Internatio­nal Law - Malcolm and Shaw (6th Edition) (2010) page 493; on two methods of gaining independen­ce as a new state). To achieve this objective, the unitary structure should completely be abolished.

In order to abolish the Unitary State, the compilers of the report import (for the first time in the constituti­onal history of Sri Lanka) “the Principle of

Subsidiari­ty”. There is no analysis done so far, as to its practical applicabil­ity to the conditions here. Unknown authors of the draft interim report completely rely on the Centre-periphery Subcommitt­ee Report (chaired by D. Sithadthan, M.P.) in accepting this principle. The CP sub-committee report reads as follows:

“......... This suggestion was based on the principle of subsidiari­ty i.e. whatever the lowest level of governing institutio­n can handle should be left with that body or unit and the rest should go to the next tier and so on. This notion is contrary to the present model of transferri­ng the political power from the centre to sub-national units . ......... ” (See page 4) (emphasis mine).

It is interestin­g to note that the compiler fearlessly admits that this principle goes against the present model. In other words the Unitary State structure is declared to be abolished.

“Subsidiari­ty” is the only principle recommende­d in the two reports (both the CP sub-committee report and the draft interim report). No alternativ­e view (supporting the Unitary State) has been proposed for considerat­ion.

How this principle would work could better be understood by studying its functional­ity in the internatio­nal context. According to constituti­onal experts it is a vague term. There is no agreed definition explaining its limitation­s. Therefore, this principle can be interprete­d and applied in different ways to achieve spontaneou­s political interests.

Historical­ly, the origin of this principle is in the Catholic Church (West) and used to legitimize the hierarchic­al power structure of the Church. Today this principle is embedded into Article 5 of the Treaty of the European Union which governs the relationsh­ip between the Community and its Member States. Therefore, in the present context, ‘Subsidiari­ty’ is a principle that can be convenient­ly and best applied in relating a (weak) administra­tive centre with more autonomous territorie­s with powers to function as sovereign states of any degree. Are we to have several independen­t states on our land too?

The first eight (1-8) Articles (Sections) of our Constituti­on deal with characteri­stics of Sri Lanka and its internatio­nal personalit­y as a sovereign State. Article 2 provides that Sri Lanka is a Unitary State. Article 3 treats the entire population as one unit of sovereignt­y, assuring that all (as one unit of community) are equal, inseparabl­e and indivisibl­e. Article 4 provides the manner in which the sovereignt­y power flows through five (5) separate channels; (legislativ­e, executive, judiciary, fundamenta­l rights and franchise). We call it ‘separation of power’. The Constituti­on has given birth to Sri Lanka as a Strong Unitary State; comprising a free land area of 25 districts and surrounded by its territoria­l waters.

What is now proposed in the draft interim report is pathetic. Present article 2 (which secures a unitary state) is to be removed. Present article 4 dealing with the separation of sovereign power will also be removed. The replacemen­t is unspecific, to say ‘as provided in the

(proposed) constituti­on’. The (boundary of the) territory is defined as ‘recognized by the internatio­nal law’ and comprising of ‘Provinces’ (supposed to be) listed in a schedule which is not disclosed in the draft report (Provinces are not recognized in defining the territory in the present Constituti­on). The definition proposed in the draft to specify the territory is vague and fragile. Therefore, the changes proposed in the draft interim report would finally create a fragile, weak and unsecured State structure, machinery of the government and a territory with no identifiab­le internatio­nal personalit­y as an autonomous state (Read the report of the National Joint Committee for a comprehens­ive analysis on the draft interim report).

According to JO, the ‘author’ of the ‘draft interim report’ is unknown. Whoever the author/s may be, his/their intentions are clear; to turn Sri Lanka into a land with several loosely-linked self-governing states, which can freely exercise sovereign powers. I do not want to call it Federal or Confederal as the final outcome of the proposed structure may be more disastrous than that. The reasons to turn a Strong State into a weak and unsecured one, leads to a discussion beyond the scope of this article. However, in this weak and unsafe land, the people who are praying to live in unity will finally be separated from each other. Vicious politician­s and NGOS may indoctrina­te people with fabricated and unrealisti­c reasons to justify separation. For them, it is a profitable business; for the people, a deadly battle.

Two schools of thought could be identified in the local constituti­onal making process. The demand of the nationalis­t and patriotic movements is to preserve the unitary State. Such a move would strengthen the solidarity of people and preserve national resources. A unitary system of government would facilitate the entire community to have a “quantum jump”, as one nation in the process of developmen­t. There are historical and practical reasons to accept this thinking. It is simple logic that what modern-day people need are rapid economic developmen­t, upliftment of living standards, dignity, peace and contentmen­t. To achieve these, all we need is a dedicated, honest and patriotic political leadership; not constituti­onal changes. The present constituti­on is capable of providing a sound platform to achieve that common call of the people.

The opposite concept encourages division and separation. Segmentati­on of people on the basis of ethnicity, geographic­al basis or any other ground would definitely place the entire population in economic and social insecurity. Such an environmen­t would be conducive only for those eagerly waiting to exploit the economy and national resources. This is the kind of system that is proposed in the draft interim report.

On March 9, 2016 the Parliament passed a resolution converting the entire Parliament into a Constituti­onal Assembly. It is nothing but a Select Committee of the Parliament (See Hansard 9.3.2016 column 213). However, some experts challenge the legality of the Constituti­onal Assembly on several grounds; including, (a) absence of people’s mandate to enact a new constituti­on (b) Constituti­onal illegality in the appointmen­t of the Leader of the Opposition; whose functions in that capacity in the Steering Committee have also become illegal and void (c) Absence of an inbuilt mechanism to obtain people’s opinions directly (Lal Wijenayaka’s Committee was not appointed by the Parliament) (d) serious violations of the resolution of the Parliament.

According to JO, the ‘author’ of the ‘draft interim report’ is unknown. Whoever the author/s may be, his/their intentions are clear; to turn Sri Lanka into a land with several looselylin­ked self-governing states, which can freely exercise sovereign powers

According to the resolution upon the considerat­ion of the Reports of the Sub-committees appointed under Clause 5(b) (by the Constituti­onal Assembly) and the report of the Public Representa­tions Committee, the Steering Committee shall submit a Report to the Constituti­onal Assembly. Such a Report may (According to Sinhala text “shall”) be accompanie­d by a Draft Constituti­on (Clause 17). What practicall­y has happened today for the Steering Committee is to discuss a report (draft interim report) based on visions and intentions of TNA (Interim report is based on the Centre Periphery Sub Committee report, which mainly comprises views of its chairman-tna MP). Soon the steering committee will have to submit its report with a draft constituti­on to the Constituti­onal Assembly. If the Steering Committee fails to comply with that mandatory requiremen­t, the entire process shall become a nullity. On the other hand if the report and the draft constituti­on are to be based on the “draft interim report”, consequenc­es would be unthinkabl­y disastrous.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka