Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

NCC CONCERNED OVER MANNER 20A BEING INTRODUCED

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In a statement to the media the National Christian Council of Sri Lanka (NCCSL) has expressed deep concern over the manner in which the 20th Amendment to the Constituti­on is sought to be introduced and several substantiv­e provisions of the amendment itself. The statement reads:

The Government has decided to table the 20th Amendment Bill, while also announcing that changes will be made to the Bill during the Committee stage process in Parliament. It has not stated what changes will be made. Since the Constituti­on only provides a brief period for judicial review of Bills and prohibits post enactment judicial review, Committee stage amendments will in effect be immune from both public and judicial scrutiny before they are adopted.

This violates basic features of transparen­cy, accountabi­lity and constituti­onalism and betrays the promise made by several Government ministers that the public will be informed and consulted before Constituti­onal Amendments are introduced.the 20th Amendment Bill seeks to repeal many features of the 19th Amendment. Not all of the 19th Amendment’s features were flawed.the positive features should be retained.

We urge the government to review the following aspects of the 20th Amendment:

The introducti­on of a weak Parliament­ary Council to replace the Constituti­onal Council is a retrogress­ive step.the President is only required to seek the observatio­ns of the Parliament­ary Council.

This in effect gives the President sole discretion to appoint persons to the superior courts and all the independen­t commission­s.this will undermine their independen­ce. The independen­ce of the Judiciary and Commission­s responsibl­e for Elections and Human Rights are essential prerequisi­tes for the Rule of Law and democratic and accountabl­e governance.

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