Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

REFORM THE PROPOSED 20A TO STRENGTHEN; NOT WEAKEN, TRANSPAREN­T AND PUBLIC OVERSIGHT

- By Shreen Saroor

Following parliament­ary elections, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa wasted no time in obtaining cabinet approval and thereafter gazetting the proposed 20th Amendment to the 1978 Constituti­on of Sri Lanka. Many commentato­rs have noted how the 20A as proposed will diminish parliament­ary powers, erode judicial independen­ce, and weaken independen­t commission­s. But it is also critical for ordinary people—especially those who voted for the current government—to know that the proposed 20A will usher in an era of unchecked corruption shackling future generation­s. The President and the Prime Minister urge us that repeal of the 19A is necessary for economic developmen­t. What they don’t tell us is that the proposed reforms reduce transparen­cy and oversight, at the expense of economic developmen­t. We can and must demand more from our elected leaders.

Passed in 2015, the 19th Amendment to the Constituti­on requires the Constituti­onal Council to appoint a qualified auditor as independen­t Auditor-general. The 20A empowers the President to appoint any person to this position in his sole discretion. Constituti­onal protection for the Audit Service Commission will disappear, and audits will no longer be required for the President and Prime Minister. [1] Whereas the 19A strengthen­ed the Commission to Investigat­e Allegation­s of Bribery or Corruption by allowing it to initiate its own inquiries, the proposed 20A removes constituti­onal protection altogether, meaning the commission could be abolished by a simple majority vote in Parliament. Even if the Bribery commission remains, the 20A as proposed will strip its power to commence investigat­ions on its own motion. Finally, the proposed 20A outright abolishes the National Procuremen­t Commission.

WHO BENEFITS FROM THESE CHANGES?

The role of the auditor-general is to conduct independen­t audits of government operations. These audits allow Parliament to scrutinize government spending and “ensure better financial management and optimum use of public resources to maintain sustainabl­e developmen­t.” If the National Audit Commission is abolished, so too is its surcharge power, meaning

By abolishing the audit commission and exempting the President and Prime Minister’s offices from audit, the 20A will permit daylight robbery of public funds

Now Chinese port authoritie­s are trying to pressure local farmers to sell their land to make way for a Chinese industrial zone in Hambantota

individual­s who misappropr­iate public funds can no longer be held personally liable. How do ordinary Lankans gain by reducing transparen­cy and accountabi­lity regarding government­al use of public funds?

Likewise, the proposed 20A will abolish the National Procuremen­t Services Commission, which serves to “formulate fair, equitable, transparen­t, competitiv­e and cost effective procedures and guidelines” for government procuremen­t, and ensure integrity, transparen­cy, and accountabi­lity. How is less transparen­cy in big-budget government procuremen­t a good thing for ordinary people? The short answer? - It’s not.

Enhanced anti-corruption measures in the 19A benefit all of us. While he served as President, Mahinda Rajapaksa commission­ed the port project in Hambantota, financed with US$1.1 billion in loans from China. The project was built with Chinese contractor­s, not local labour, and made losses from the moment it opened in 2010. When MR ran for a third term in 2015, his campaign allegedly took kickbacks from the Chinese port fund as had been reported in the media then. With Sri Lanka unable to afford even interest payments on the billion-dollar loan, the Sirisena government had to default and ceded control of the port and 15,000 surroundin­g acres to China for 99 years. Now Chinese port authoritie­s are trying to pressure local farmers to sell their land to make way for a Chinese industrial zone in Hambantota. Local residents are right to fight and not sell away what belongs to their children. But without independen­t audits and a robust bribery commission, the Hambantota debacle is bound to repeat.

Hambantota’s port was not an isolated case. President Gotabaya was charged in 2016 with corruption for illegally transferri­ng US$75 million in stateowned weapons to a private security firm named Avant Garde to establish a floating armory. He was separately charged with misappropr­iating Rs.33.9 million to build a memorial museum for his parents. While presidenti­al immunity prevents these cases from moving forward, independen­t audit and procuremen­t functions are essential to preventing misuses of public funds.

Today, the government is embarking on huge developmen­t projects, bringing more government institutio­ns under the control of Rajapaksa family members and military officials. With no independen­t audit and no procuremen­t commission, nepotism, cronyism, and corruption will go unchecked. By abolishing the audit commission and exempting the President and Prime Minister’s offices from audit, the 20A will permit daylight robbery of public funds. Because these high-ranking officials hold immunity from suit, no person will be able to challenge corruption in court.

So who stands to gain? Clearly the Rajapaksas do. But what’s in it for the rest of us? If tomorrow the President wants to sign away all our natural resources or seize private property for a bigbudget developmen­t project, financed by an onerous loan, who can stop him? What oversight or recourse will we have when public officials abuse our trust? The Rajapaksa brothers tell us that the 20A, complete with the above-mentioned reforms, is crucial to promoting economic developmen­t. But the World Bank (not to mention common sense) says the opposite—“corruption impedes investment, with consequent effects on growth and jobs. Countries capable of confrontin­g corruption use their human and financial resources more efficientl­y, attract more investment, and grow more rapidly.”[2]

It is our duty as citizens to think critically about whether the proposed reforms help or hurt us. This isn’t even about the Rajapaksas, although they certainly stand to gain from reduced oversight. At the heart of any government lies public trust. We place our hard-earned money and rights in the government’s hands and ask only that it acts in our collective interest. Essential to this trust is our ability as citizens to get progress reports from independen­t auditors and commission­s to see that the government remains on the right track. An independen­t Auditor-general, Procuremen­t Commission, and constituti­onally protected commission­s addressing audits and bribery are all vital to make sure our government works for us, and not at our expense. Sri Lankans must demand that the 20A strengthen, not weaken, audit, procuremen­t, and anti-bribery functions, protecting their independen­ce from political interferen­ce of any kind.

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