Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Constituti­on not clay in hands of contesting parties: Counsel

The Constituti­on does not permit any other way in which parliament may be dissolved

- BY S.S. SELVANAYAG­AM

President’s Counsel K. Kanag Iswaran said yesterday the Constituti­on was not clay in the hands of contesting parties to be moulded as he or she sees fit. He said the constituti­onal language sets the limits of interpreta­tion which aspires to give constituti­onal unity and harmony.

Appearing for MP R.sampanthan, he made this submission to the 7-judge bench of the Supreme Court at the hearing of the fundamenta­l rights petition against the dissolutio­n of parliament by the President.

Ten FR petitions had been filed against the dissolutio­n of parliament. The SC bench comprised Chief Justice Nalin Perera, Justices Buwaneka Aluwihare, Sisira J de Abrew, Priyantha Jayawarden­a, Prasanna S. Jayawarden­a, Vijith K. Malalgoda and Murdu Fernando.

Kanag Iswaran PC said the President may by proclamati­on, summon, prorogue and dissolve parliament provided the President shall not dissolve Parliament until the expiration of a period of not less than four years and six months from the date of its first meeting unless Parliament requests the President to do so by a resolution passed by not less than two-thirds of the whole number of members (including those not present) voting in favour together with the other consequent­ial provisions.

He said this argument was in no manner or form supportive of any contention seeking to give the purported proclamati­on of dissolutio­n of Parliament constituti­onal or legal efficacy or validity.

Counsel said Article 70 and the Act of 1981, whether taken individual­ly, collective­ly or in any other manner whatsoever, did not confer any right, authority or power upon the President to dissolve parliament by proclamati­on and therefore was a nullity.

He said the parliament consisting of 225 members once elected shall continue for five years from the date of its first meeting and no longer and at the end of the fixed term of five years, parliament stands dissolved automatica­lly without any proclamati­on being made.

He said the Constituti­on does not permit or countenanc­e any other way in which parliament may be dissolved by the President and as such the purported proclamati­on of dissolutio­n of Parliament by the President is unconstitu­tional and is null and void and of no force or effect in law.

K.kanag Iswaran Pc,thilak Marapana PC, Dr Jayampathi Wickremara­tne PC, M.A. Sumanthira­n PC. Viran Corea, Ikram Mohamed PC, J.c.weliamuna PC, Ronald Perera PC, Hisbullah Hijaz and Suren Fernando appeared for the petitioner­s while Gamini Marapane PC with Nalin Marapane, Sanjeeva Jayawardan­e PC and Ali Sabry PC appeared for the intervenie­nt petitioner­s opposing the main petitions.

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