Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Lanka ratifies UN Convention on mediation for commercial dispute resolution

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&Ј 6͓˪π˪ Ĩͫ͘˪Ј˪ϓ͘ͳ˪̧ͮࡊ 6͘π̧̒ϓΐπ ˪΀̛ í̧̒π̧ϓ˪πЈ ḑ΀̧π˪ͳ ΐ̈́ ϓ̧͓ x΀ϓ̧π΀˪ϓ͘ΐ΀˪ͳ 6ã -̧΀ϓπ̧ࡑ

Sri Lanka ratified the UN Convention on Internatio­nal Settlement Agreements Resulting from Mediation, popularly known as the Singapore Convention on Mediation, last Thursday, February 28, 2024. As of today, the Convention has 56 signatorie­s and has been ratified by 14 nations. The Convention was developed by the UN Commission On Internatio­nal Trade Law (UNCITRAL) after extensive consultati­ons over almost four years, was adopted by the UN General Assembly in December 2018 and came into operation in September 2020. This Convention is to Mediation what the 1958 UN Convention On Enforcemen­t of Foreign Arbitral Awards (the NY Arbitratio­n Convention), is to Arbitratio­n.

Legislatio­n to give effect to the Convention was enacted by the Sri Lankan Parliament in January 2024 and is titled Recognitio­n and Enforcemen­t of Internatio­nal Settlement Agreements Resulting from Mediation, Act No. 5 of 2024. The Act will come into force and the Convention will apply to Sri Lanka with effect from six months from the date of ratificati­on, ie from August 28, 2024.

UNCITRAL’s work was a response to a need for a uniform framework to enforce mediated internatio­nal agreements. Mediation was becoming popular as a commercial dispute resolution method and uniformity of cross-border arrangemen­ts was a dire need. The UN Convention recites in its preamble that mediation is increasing­ly used in internatio­nal and domestic commercial practice as an alternativ­e to litigation and that the use of mediation results in significan­t benefits such as reducing the instances where a dispute leads to the terminatio­n of a business relationsh­ip, facilitati­ng the transactio­n of commercial business and producing savings to States in the administra­tion of justice.

The Convention applies to settlement agreements that are the result of mediation; are internatio­nal in nature at the time of entering into the agreement; resolve a commercial dispute, and are in writing.

How does ratificati­on benefit Sri Lanka?

The enactment of domestic legislatio­n and the ratificati­on of the Convention will contribute to Sri Lanka offering an improved dispute resolution regime that will be attractive to investors and business partners engaged in cross-border trade and business. Importantl­y, it signals to investors that Sri Lanka has a universall­y accepted regime for the enforcemen­t of internatio­nal mediated settlement agreements. Efficient contract enforcemen­t is vital to attract foreign investment and facilitate domestic commercial activities.

This developmen­t comes at a time when Sri Lanka’s dispute resolution regime is unattracti­ve, because it is riddled with delay, expense and unpredicta­bility. These weaknesses that were predominan­tly a feature of litigation have crept into the practice of Arbitratio­n as well, with a few exceptions. In past years, Sri Lanka struggled to improve its ease of doing business performanc­e given its importance to attract investors. However, the business community was left with disappoint­ing alternativ­es. The Sri Lankan scene is, however, changing.

In 2019, Sri Lanka signed the UN Convention when it was first opened for signature. The legislatio­n to give effect to the Convention was prepared by the Internatio­nal Alternativ­e Dispute Resolution Centre (a purely private not-forprofit company establishe­d in 2018 to provide ADR services – www.iadrc.lk), and submitted to the Government. The key provisions of the Convention provide for the enforcemen­t of an internatio­nal mediated settlement agreement and provide for limited grounds on which an agreement can be refused. They also provide for the admissibil­ity of a settlement agreement to establish that a matter being litigated was in fact settled by a mediated settlement agreement. The Sri Lankan Act incorporat­es these principles.

Countries in the region have invested in mediation with success. Singapore is a great example of a nation that has developed its mediation ecosystem with exemplary results. India enacted a new Mediation Act in October 2023 to promote and facilitate mediation for the resolution of commercial and other disputes. Efforts and initiative­s in the countries in our region have had the support of their government­s.

Sri Lanka has had mediation statutes since 1988 to provide for the resolution of minor community disputes, but there was no legal regime for mediation in respect of higher-value commercial disputes outside of State-managed boards. Given the growth of mediation and its acceptance as a meaningful method of resolving all kinds of disputes, legislatio­n is being prepared to establish a legal regime for the mediation of civil and commercial disputes. The envisaged law will provide for principles and standards that will apply when parties refer disputes to mediation voluntaril­y to private mediators, but will not establish boards or provide for mandatory reference to mediation.

Why mediation?

The universal buzz about mediation stems from the benefits the process offers. Mediation is a nonadversa­rial process, where a third party (the mediator) facilitate­s better communicat­ion and understand­ing between disputants to identify their interests and decide how those interests can be satisfied. The mediator has no power to impose a solution. There is no judgment of past actions and omissions nor a determinat­ion of right and wrong. Rather, it is a process that helps disputants identify and satisfy their needs and interests.

The role of the mediator is extremely important and hence proper training is vital. The mediation process is informal but discipline­d and structured and disputants engage directly with the mediator and with each other. Lawyers play a role which is distinct from that of the adversaria­l lawyer in litigation. Mediation advocacy is starkly different and requires a different focus that supports a settlement.

Confidenti­ality of matters discussed is ensured and is a key feature of the process. All statements made during the process are made without prejudice ensuring that concession­s made and proposals submitted are not permitted to be used against the party making them in any other dispute resolution process. The independen­ce and neutrality of the mediator is ensured through an obligation to disclose real or perceived conflict of interest situations.

Party autonomy is ensured in several ways. The disputants have the discretion to select the mediator; disputants stay in mediation only if they wish to and have the option to leave at any time if dissatisfi­ed with any aspect; disputants enter into a settlement agreement only when fully satisfied that the terms and conditions are acceptable to them; until disputants place their signature to a settlement agreement nothing is binding.

A mediated settlement agreement is as valid and binding and enforceabl­e as any other written agreement between parties. It is a myth that such an agreement is not enforceabl­e. Breach of any obligation in a settlement agreement can either be mediated again or enforced as a breach of a contractua­l obligation in a court of law. It is well known that the instances of breach are very insignific­ant given that such an agreement is the result of a consensus reached through a process that affords the opportunit­y for a full, fair and exhaustive discussion of issues, concerns and interests. Mediation is a smart business option.

Global initiative­s

In addition to the work of UNCITRAL, other Internatio­nal Organisati­ons are expanding their services to include mediation to resolve disputes and to adopt Institutio­nal rules. Some of these

initiative­s are the following: The Internatio­nal Bar Associatio­n adopted InvestorSt­ate Mediation Rules in 2012. The Internatio­nal Chamber of Commerce– adopted its Mediation Rules in 2014.

The World Intellectu­al Property Organisati­on (WIPO) adopted its Mediation Rules in 2021.

The Internatio­nal Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) (World Bank group) – adopted its Mediation Rules in 2022.

The European Parliament and the Council, adopted Directive 2008/52/EC on ‘Certain aspects of mediation in civil and commercial matters’ in May 2008.

Sri Lanka’s challenge

The challenge to Sri Lanka is to provide a comprehens­ive ecosystem for the delivery and sustenance of quality mediation services. This requires many things—a legal regime that adopts universall­y accepted principles; a judiciary that appreciate­s the vision; infrastruc­ture that meets with internatio­nal standards; service providers of excellent quality; awareness by stakeholde­rs of the distinguis­hing features that offer benefits of value and very importantl­y policy acceptance at the highest levels of government. It is the country that will benefit from better and smarter dispute resolution options. A push from the private sector alone is inadequate.

 ?? ?? Illustrati­on courtesy legalbites.in
Illustrati­on courtesy legalbites.in

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