Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Table-thumping Hitler wannabes and empty threats

- Kishali Pinto-Jayawarden­e

What is this uncanny fascinatio­n that Sri Lankan politician­s (and monks) have with the late most profoundly unlamented Adolf Hitler?

Military suppressio­n of protests

It is almost like the vulgarly cheap reprints of Leonardo Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa that one finds hanging in the drawing rooms of Colombo’s nouveau riche, as if to boast one’s entry into the ranks of the elite. In an apt comparison, it seems that, not a week goes by without some President, Prime Minister or Minister invoking Nazi Germany’s genocidal tyrant by name. Is this, the favourite calling card of political leaders, perchance to demonstrat­e their ‘toughness’? Perhaps a more thorough reading of history would disabuse them of such ridiculous notions.

In 2018, we had a monk calling upon former President Gotabhaya Rajapaksa to behave ‘like a Hitler’ in the run-up to that Presidenti­al campaign. Less than three years after the ‘Terminator’ President won, he had to abandon power along with the Prime Minister and his Cabinet cowering in the face of massive peoples’ protests over bringing the nation to financial ruin through arrogant, corrupt and foolish decisions. This week, an unholy flap has arisen as a result of Rajapaksa’s chosen successor, President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe’s complainin­g that he has been typecast as ‘Hitler’ due to his warning that a second ‘aragalaya’ (peoples’ protests) will be dealt with by military force to the highest possible extent.

Cartoonist­s have had a field day, lampooning President Wickremesi­nghe in tie-and-suit giving the Sieg Hail salute. Gleefully joining the melee, the main Samagi Jana Balavegaya has promised to ‘protect’ the people from military suppressio­n. That promise would have been a tad more convincing if the opposition had actively performed its role of a government-in-waiting rather than merely holding press conference­s. Its performanc­e has been abysmal, there is little evidence of grass roots work in rural constituen­cies tippling over to desperate poverty.

Silly diversions from the national focus

But to return to the President’s remarks in the House on Wednesday, we must be spared these verbal excesses of ‘sound and fury, signifying nothing.’ It does not behove President Wickremesi­nghe to rant and rail in this manner, jumping from mocking comparison­s of ‘human rights defenders’ and ‘land rover defenders’ to proclaimin­g that ‘we abolished criminal defamation, brought in independen­t commission­s and the like..’ That rant was following the question, ‘‘What have these defenders done?’

His acerbic denunciati­ons (“I know who they are, I worked with them, I protected them... the diesel to power them comes from money from overseas’) were greeted by table-thumping Government members with wild cheers. Mirth aside, these remarks are a slap in the face of the President’s supporters in Colombo’s ‘civil society’ who persisted in their ‘stability v chaos’ argument when President Wickremesi­nghe was catapulted into the seat of power absent a popular vote.

But more to the point, these remarks are the height of absurdity. First, it is unnerving to say the least, to find the Head of State, listing out his ‘accomplish­ments’ so to speak and comparing them against what has been done/not done by ‘human rights defenders.’ Does the President really need to stoop to these levels? Law reforms occur typically as a response to public concern, including those of the ‘human rights defenders’ that the President, once so close to those very ‘defenders,’ so airily disparages. That does not stand to the credit of a passing Government or a passing President alone.

Scandals regarding ‘independen­t commission­s’

Second, there are several factual problems with this claim. His boast of ‘independen­t constituti­onal commission­s’ is controvert­ed by factual realities regarding many of these bodies. The recent fracas over the ‘welcome’ accorded at the airport to Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) ‘strategist’ Basil Rajapaksa on his return to the country, by the National Police Commission Chair and another member, is a case in point. This is the latest scandal to have arisen regarding a seemingly independen­t commission.

Problems with the ‘independen­ce’ of these commission­s did not arise only under the 18th and 20th Amendments, let it be said. Even under the 19th Amendment, which President Wickremesi­nghe often parades as a stamp of his commitment to governance, the functionin­g of the constituti­onal commission­s as constitute­d by a politicall­y top-heavy Constituti­onal Council, was pockmarked with irregulari­ties. One need only point to the dismal record of the Commission to Investigat­e Allegation­s of Bribery and Corruption as an example.

Quite apart from a sorry performanc­e in the courts with indictment­s being thrown out for lack of (legal) due diligence, distastefu­l controvers­ies marked its term embroiling its former Director General in political controvers­ies. So, this Presidenti­al boast of ‘independen­t commission­s’ must be taken with more than a pinch of cynical salt. Meanwhile, he also pointed to the ‘ICCPR Act’ brought by the previous government. Contrary to the President’s claim, this ICCPR Act remains one of Sri Lanka’s most nonsensica­l laws.

Presidenti­al barbs at the HRCL not warranted

Purporting to model itself on the global best standard, the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, it is however a caricature of the Covenant. Its use for the very contrary purposes of the Covenant, namely to harass and intimidate citizens legitimate­ly practicing their freedoms of speech and expression, has been noted. But far more ominously than all of this was the President’s bizarre barbs directed at invoking the authority of the Human Rights Commission in respect of violations of the Constituti­on by police officers. Indeed, it is difficult to make sense of what the President said. The thrust of his remarks was that, the police must not be obstructed from doing their lawful duties by such interventi­ons. His conceding that if some ‘small’ abuse may occur (making this sound as casual as a passing wave of a hand), that can be dealt with ‘lawfully,’ makes the whole point of his argument redundant. It is precisely when abuse occurs that the Human Rights Commission is mandated, in terms of its Act, to step in. It does so, after careful thought and considerat­ion.

After all, the Commission is not composed of children, to be intervenin­g into matters within its mandate, as carelessly as if it was playing in a sandbox? More so, the President’s claim that, if the police continue to be ‘obstructed’, that he would be calling upon the Attorney General to draft laws to prevent such obstructio­ns in terms of Article 15 of the Constituti­on, is infinitely surreal. One does not envy the Attorney General if such a call is, in fact, made. Article 15 relates to legitimate constituti­onal restrictio­ns that may be ‘prescribed by law’ in regard to the exercise of certain fundamenta­l rights.

The State and the citizen, equation cannot be coercive

That Article did not suddenly come upon us, as if manna from heaven to political leaders disgruntle­d with being called to account by the citizenry. The President and whoever prompted him from his side in the House in a display of extraordin­ary stupidity to quote this Article during the sitting, must educate themselves on the fact that, we already have laws aplenty setting out such restrictio­ns. The ambit and constituti­onal applicatio­n of this Article has been thoroughly reviewed by the Supreme Court during the past several decades.

One cannot simply indulge in a frivolousl­y ‘jack-in-the-box’ demand for ‘new laws’ under Article 15 to undermine the legitimate right that a citizen has to go to the Human Rights Commission alleging that abuse has occurred. One aspect of the President’s speech is however merit worthy. This is that, resorting to violence with the aim of coercively overthrowi­ng the State cannot be justified under the cover of ‘fighting for the people.’ While that is the case, the State cannot also suppress lawful protests under the cover of ‘maintainin­g law and order’ and uphold the police as paragons of virtue. Both are sides of the same coin. We would do well to remember that caution.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka