Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Court can’t rely on draft documents : Respondent­s’ Counsel

- BY SHEHAN CHAMIKA SILVA

President’s Counsel Kushan de Alwis, Ali Sabri and Romesh de Silva -appearing for the respondent­s in the Quo Warranto writ petition filed by 122 MPS questionin­g the legitimacy of Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa and his government to hold office -- said the applicatio­ns should be dismissed on the basis that the Hansard produced as a supporting document was not final and thus not admissible in Court.

Kushan de Alwis PC said the petitioner­s had sought relief based on a document which can be corrected even tomorrow, because of a two-week time limit for the parliament proceeding­s as published in the Hansard to be corrected if necessary.

He said the applicatio­ns were filed in Court on November 23 based on the Hansard prepared on the proceeding­s that took place in Parliament on November 14 and as such there was a question on the finality of the Hansard, because as at that date it was an uncorrecte­d document.

Counsel said the Hansard on which the petitioner­s based their applicatio­ns could not be admissible or entertaine­d in Court because the Court could not rely on draft documents, which are yet to be finalised.

He said the burden of proof on whether the documents were final was the responsibi­lity of the petitioner­s and that an applicatio­n based on a draft document was sufficient enough to be dismissed.

President’s Counsel Romesh de Silva said it was a misreprese­ntation of material facts by the petitioner­s because they had not informed Court that the Hansard that they had relied upon was an uncorrecte­d version.

President’s Counsel Ali Sabri said the petitioner­s, in their applicatio­n, despite challengin­g the appointmen­t of the respondent as prime minister by the president in the first place, they are seeking relief only on the matters which took place on November 14 and onwards.

He said the manner in which the parliament­ary proceeding­s took place on November 14 was nothing but a sham because the manner in which the motion to suspend the Standing Orders was decided and the no-confidence motion was voted on through a division of ‘Ayes and Noes’ contradict­ed the parliament­ary SOS.

Associatin­g with the President’s Counsel Gamini Marapana’s earlier argument, Ali Sabri PC was of the view that the proclamati­on issued by the president on November 9, 2018 to dissolve parliament will stand dissolved despite the interim order given by the Supreme Court was not the final determinat­ion of the Court because when something is dissolved it cannot be suspended, and the interim order is prospectiv­ely effected, therefore the decision of dissolutio­n stands and as such Parliament could not have even met on November 14.

Responding to the arguments by the counsel for the respondent­s, President’s Counsel K. Kanag-iswaran said the parliament­ary proceeding­s were admissible as evidence under the law and not impeachabl­e by Court.

He said the question here was about the respondent (Mahinda Rajapaksa) holding on to illegal power, as Prime Minister the concern should be on the illegality, because under the Article 48 when there is a no-confidence motion passed, the Cabinet stands dissolved.

Kanag-iswaran PC said there could not be any dispute on the matter of the no-confidence motion because 122 parliament­arians had filed this petition.

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