Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

DISCLOSURE OF EDUCATIONA­L QUALIFICAT­IONS OF MPS

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Responding to a Right to Informatio­n (RTI) applicatio­n filed by our sister paper, The Sunday Times, Parliament interestin­gly has refused to disclose the educationa­l qualificat­ions of ministers and Parliament­arians (MPS), on the basis it would be an ‘invasion of privacy’. The paper had quoted Parliament’s Assistant Secretary-general and Informatio­n Officer Tikiri Jayatillek­e as saying “Educationa­l qualificat­ions relate to personal informatio­n, the disclosure of which has no relationsh­ip to any public activity or interest or which would cause unwarrante­d invasion of the privacy of the individual unless the larger public interest justifies the disclosure of such informatio­n or the person concerned has consented in writing to such disclosure.”

The Assistant Secretary-general in his answer lists several reasons to justify the non-disclosure of the educationa­l qualificat­ions of the lawmakers. 1. The disclosure has no relationsh­ip to any public activity or interest. 2. It would cause an unwarrante­d invasion of the privacy of the individual. 3. There is no larger public interest that justifies the disclosure of such informatio­n. 4. The persons concerned should consent in writing to such disclosure.

The officer also had rightly said that according to the Sri Lanka Constituti­on’s Article 90, no references had been made to the educationa­l qualificat­ions of an MP. The only qualificat­ion to be elected as an MP, according to the Constituti­on is that he or she should be an elector.

It is true that in a democracy the paper qualificat­ion of a person cannot stand in his way to be elected to the Parliament, a Provincial Council or a Local Government body. Neverthele­ss, can we argue that educationa­l qualificat­ions or the paper qualificat­ions of an MP or a minister have no relationsh­ip to any public activity or interest? Relying totally on rare cases of point one can conclude that educationa­l qualificat­ions of Parliament­arians have nothing to do with public interest. There is a possibilit­y of a person getting his knowledge and skills sharpened by experience or with his links to any academic or intellectu­al field even without such paper qualificat­ions. We have in fact witnessed in the past MPS with an average or very low educationa­l qualificat­ions having served the public interest while some who had seen the heights of education being slaves of political parties. But it is common knowledge that learned people possess a higher capacity to discharge their duty as MPS than those who are dropouts from schools.

Former Chairman of the Committee On Public Enterprise­s (COPE) and veteran leader of the Communist Party of Sri Lanka (CPSL) D.e.w.gunasekara said a few weeks prior to the last Parliament­ary election that only a handful of members in the last Parliament were qualified to be called lawmakers. He listed four qualificat­ions that a Parliament­arian should possess. They were the capability in contributi­ng to law-making, policymaki­ng, monitoring of public financing and representa­tion of people who elect them to the legislatur­e.

Despite the law permitting even an illiterate person to be an MP as Mr. Jayatillek­e has pointed out, it is very clear that uneducated people cannot properly contribute to these four responsibi­lities. Hence, the people who elected the MPS have the right to know if their representa­tives are competent. (In fact, they should have known it before they elect their MPS)

The official’s conclusion that the disclosure of educationa­l qualificat­ions of MPS would cause unwarrante­d invasion of the privacy of the individual is puzzling. Is it something that others should not know? How can the disclosure harm the MPS? However, the very reply implies that there are MPS who do not like to disclose their educationa­l level, which must be so low.

When asked through the RTI applicatio­n how many sitting MPS have criminal charges against them, the officer had said that the informatio­n was not in Parliament’s possession, custody or control. That implies that he would reveal the informatio­n if Parliament possessed it. Yet, no references have been made to this matter also in the Constituti­on. It is difficult to understand that disclosure of informatio­n on criminal charges would not be an invasion of privacy, whereas the informatio­n on the education qualificat­ion would be.

However, one cannot hold any official or the Parliament for the educationa­l or other qualificat­ions of the MPS and ministers. It is the political parties that field them as candidates and the people who vote for them. People must realise their responsibi­lity to elect only learned, cultured and competent men and women as their representa­tives.

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