Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

COUNSEL POINTS OUT DISPARITY IN BRIBERY ACT

Avant Garde case: Revision applicatio­n filed by Gota

- BY S.S. SELVANAYAG­AM AND SHEHAN CHAMIKA SILVA

Romesh De Silva PC Says HC has given order by interpreti­ng ‘nonexistin­g’ section in the Act

Raising an unexpected legal argument, President’s Counsel Romesh de Silva said yesterday the order given by the High Court Judge in the Avant Garde corruption case filed against former defence secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa and others could not stand because the Judge had interprete­d a none existing section of the Bribery Act.

Earlier, when the Bribery Commission (BC) filed the corruption case against the suspects in the Chief Magistrate’s Court, the defense said under the section 78 (1) of the Bribery Act there was a need for a written sanction by the BC to institute such an action by the prosecutio­n, therefore the case should be dismissed.

However, this argument was overruled by the Chief Magistrate and resulted in the defense filing a revision applicatio­n in the High Court against the Chief Magistrate’s order.

The High Court Judge too referring to Section 78 of the Bribery Act rejected argument by the defense.

Consequent­ly, the defense filed a revision applicatio­n in the Court of Appeal against the High Court order.

Bringing a whole new aspect into the defense argument, Counsel Romesh de Silva PC challenged the High Court Judge’s order. He said while the High Court Judge was interpreti­ng section 78 of the Bribery Act (upon which the defense’s legal argument is based on), he had referred to a section which did not exist as law.

Counsel said Section 78 was in existance since 1954 in the Country’s Bribery Act.then in 1980 through an amendment to the Act (No: 2, 1980 Amendment Bribery Act) the section 78 had been removed and introduced a new Section to it.

He said this resulted in the amended Section being establishe­d as law until another amendment introduced to the Bribery Act which came into effect in 1994 (No: 20,Amendment Bribery Act).

Counsel said the 1994 amendment of Section 78 had also included an amendment to a phrase which was not there in the 1980 amendment and therefore the 1994 amendment is wrong and was of the view that therefore the consolidat­ed Bribery Act upon which the High Court Judge had given his order was wrong in law. In view of the submission­s made by Counsel Romesh de Silva PC on the issue of law, Senior State Counsel Janaka Bandara appearing for the Attorney General pleaded time to study the disparitie­s in detail.

Court fixed the matter for tomorrow for further submission­s whereas the High Court trial has been fixed for July 9.

The Counsel informed Court that he would support for notice and interim relief on that date.

Romesh de Silva PC with M.U.M. Ali Sabry PC, Sugath Caldera, Ruwantha Cooray and Farith de Mel instructed by Sanath Wijewardan­de appeared for Mr. Rajapaksa.

He filed the revision applicatio­n in the Court of Appeal based on the High Court rejecting his applicatio­n which seeks to acquit and release him in the Avant Garde case. He cited Director General of the Bribery Commission as complainan­t-respondent and Sujatha Damayanthi Jayaratne, Piyasiri Fernando, Banda Fernando Egodawela, Somathilak­e Dissanayak­e, Nissanka Yapa Senadhipat­hi, Kumarasiri Kolambage and Jayantha Perera as accused-respondent­s.

He states the Director General of the Bribery Commission instituted proceeding­s in the Colombo Magistrate’s Court and that on the first opportunit­y available, his Counsel moved Court to raise a preliminar­y objection on the maintainab­ility of the action wherein it was contended that the complainan­t had failed to satisfy a mandatory prerequisi­te -- a written sanction of the Commission.

The petitioner said the Magistrate on November 17, 2017 overruled the preliminar­y objections and moved to read the charges and ordered the suspects to record their plea for the charges which were read out in open Court. Being aggrieved by the said orders of the Magistrate, he filed an applicatio­n in the Colombo High Court for revisionar­y jurisdicti­on.

The High Court Judge in his order on February 2, 2018 refused to issue notice and dismissed the petition.

Being aggrieved with this order he has now filed a revision applicatio­n in the Court of Appeal seeking to stay the proceeding­s in the Magistrate’s Court until the final determinat­ion of this petition and to revise or set aside the orders of the High Court and allow him to revisit the Magistrate’s Court.

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