Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

More (legal) horrors of the counter-terror draft

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The Government’s proposed draft on a new counter-terror law for Sri Lanka is rather like a thoroughly unpleasant case discovery. Each time that one revisits afresh, new horrors are unearthed.

Several other fiendish offences

Drawn reluctantl­y back to this document following representa­tions from several quarters, it may be said that absorbing its contents could well qualify as being subjected to cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment within the meaning of Article 11 of the Constituti­on. Possibly, this exercise may not warrant that necessary degree of severity amounting to an infliction of torture. But even that is debatable, given that psychologi­cal torture is encompasse­d within the modern definition of the term.

This accusation is warranted by the draft’s atrociousl­y wide reach of acts classified as offences which, in whole, would prohibit the entire range of democratic activity. A few such offences were commented upon in these column spaces following extracts of the draft being exclusivel­y published in this newspaper, (see ‘Is this counter-terrorism in a far deadlier garb?’ the Sunday Times, October 16, 2016). Apart from these, several other fiendishly contrived offences are also included as ‘terrorism related offences’ and ‘associated offences’ which carry stiff penalties. I will return to this later.

But first, some general observatio­ns are pertinent. On sober considerat­ion, it is the very height of unfounded optimism as expressed by some politician­s, to claim that this document can somehow be ‘cleaned up’ during the parliament­ary committee process. In fact, there is a distinctly mischievou­s danger therein, given the eager propensity of even the political representa­tives of the minorities to conform to unhealthy compromise­s of the Unity Government. Leaving this draft to their slender mercies carries a high degree of risk.

Government must formally admit ownership

Accordingl­y the only viable safeguard lies through robust public calls demanding that the Government formally admit to the ownership of this counter-terror draft. Thereafter public discussion must follow on its contents. Timorous complaints that the Government has failed to present the document for public scrutiny really will not do.

And lest the misguided think that this is a concern limited only to the North and East, the contrary is the case. The Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA, 1979), which this new counter-terror law is meant to replace even though it is far worse, was first used against leftist activists of the majority community under the Jayawarden­e dispensati­on.

Since then, the PTA has been employed with scant regard to ethnicity, though the decades long Wanni war meant that its victims were predominan­tly of Tamil ethnicity. In the eighties, ordinary Sinhalese citizens were targeted by the PTA during the so-called ‘period of terror’ in the South. The media was the first victim of the combined ill effects of the PTA and emergency regulation­s imposed under the Public Security Ordinance (PSO, 1947). Journalist­s were threatened, assaulted, imprisoned and killed under these laws.

Cardinal fault is ours

Those pontificat­ing on media standards while living in the comfort of their secluded corners amidst retreating in dismayed disorder at the disarray of their much hyped rainbow alliance need to be forcibly reminded that journalist­s lived (and sometimes died) under the shadow

The day that we complete our duties to our parents, children, our spouses and our relatives will mark the beginning of our peace and independen­ce. Till such time there will be no real peace and independen­ce even in our country. The Lord Buddha preached at great length about our duties and responsibi­lities. We also know the teachings of other religions. If duties are performed by people, whatever their caste or creed, the country will be genuinely free and independen­t.

Before the pre-school we have day care centres. Then we have schools run by religious denominati­ons. After that we have government and approved schools. Before all these we only had the home upbringing. There was a proper training at home prior to becoming parents. This way parents brought up children in a manner they became useful citizens. In those days, most women did not work in the public or private sectors. With a change in living standards, women had to go to work and children lost the primary education they received at home. The knowledge and education that these young ones gained from their parents were not available to them from the care givers or helpers at home who worked for a wage. That is one of the main reasons why many children are going astray these days.

Government school teachers have duties and if these duties are properly performed, children need not attend tuition classes. of these laws. From that perspectiv­e, it is somewhat miraculous that notwithsta­nding its considerab­le racist, communalis­tic and chauvinist­ic warts, the mainstream media continues to function at all in this country.

Returning to that era of terror is still very much within the bounds of possibilit­y. The cardinal fault is ours in allowing such a horrendous draft to emerge in the first instance. Secretive legislativ­e drafting in exclusive conclaves, whether in relation to transition­al justice, counter-terror or constituti­onal reform, should have not been tolerated from the inception. This is an exercise which runs directly counter to good governance precepts.

Pulling out ad hoc parts of the transition­al justice package rather like a seedy magician with his rabbit’s hat has already led to incendiary resentment on the part of people directly affected by the conflict feeling excluded and marginaliz­ed. This miserable experience suffices to illustrate the dangers of complacenc­y, even with the best of intentions. That process must not be repeated where the counter-terror draft is concerned. The repercussi­ons would be exceedingl­y unfortunat­e.

Offending the principle of legality

As a matter of law, there is a clear argument why this draft is incapable of being revised to be acceptable. Each and every paragraph offends the first principle of legality which stipulates that a contemplat­ed offence should be clearly defined, described in precise and unambiguou­s language. This was why in the past, terms such as “threatenin­g or endangerin­g the sovereignt­y or territoria­l integrity” of Sri Lanka or effecting “any other political or government­al change” in national security laws were completely contrary to the Rule of Law. The public uproar to revise these arbitrary laws arose from that exact objection.

Quite apart from the draft’s vague definition of terrorist acts, there are terrifying­ly familiar echoes in its classifica­tion of ‘terrorism related offences.’ This prohibits ‘words either spoken or intended to be read or by signs’ etc which ‘causes or intends to cause the commission of acts of violence between different communitie­s or racial or religious groups. The prohibitio­n is coupled with intent to cause harm to the ‘unity, territoria­l integrity or sovereignt­y of Sri Lanka or the peaceful coexistenc­e of the people.’

These were the same clauses used to imprison journalist­s and dissenters in the past with the importatio­n of additional references to ‘unity’ and ‘peaceful coexistenc­e.’ These prohibitio­ns are contrary to the Johannesbu­rg Principles on National Security, Freedom of Expression and Access to Informatio­n which permits expression to be punished only if it incites imminent violence and there is a direct and immediate link thereto.

Disposing of the draft without further ado

Ludicrousl­y the proposed offences also encompass theft of property by the State, including data, intellectu­al property or ‘other informatio­n.’ What exactly is meant by ‘other informatio­n’ is a matter for wild surmise.

In sum, this is the worst national security draft ever to be proposed in the history of this country, including under the Executive Presidenci­es of Jayawarden­e, Premadasa, Kumaratung­a and Rajapaksa. It remains to be seen if President Maithripal­a Sirisena is desirous of having this dubious honour associated with his celebrated ‘yahapalana­ya’ Presidency.

The public demand must be to dispose of it unceremoni­ously and without further ado.

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