Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

RATCHET EFFECT MUST PROTECT CONSTITUTI­ONAL RIGHTS:NPC

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The National Peace Council (NPC) in a statement has urged the Government to reconsider its position with regard to the 20th Amendment to the Constituti­on.it states; “There has been an unpreceden­ted public outcry against the draft 20th Amendment which is presently being subjected to Judicial scrutiny. Neverthele­ss, the Government appears determined to strengthen the presidency at the cost of other institutio­ns.the Government’s public position has been that the presidency needs to be provided with the necessary powers and immunities to proceed with the urgent task of developing the country,” the National Peace Council urges the government to reconsider its position.

Constituti­ons evolved over the centuries to be a compact between the government and people, to protect the people from abuse by the rulers whether for good reasons or bad.the protection­s of human rights and the resources of the people through judicial review, financial audit and parliament­ary oversight stems from this desire to protect the people from the caprice of those who lead government­s from time to time.the National Peace Council notes that the draft 20th Amendment to the Constituti­on as it currently stands is an emasculati­on of the protection­s available to the people and also to other institutio­ns of state available in the Constituti­on.

We note that the special committee of the Bar Associatio­n has in its report stated among others, that “no person is above the law and to grant absolute immunity from suit is contrary to all known principles of the rule of law.” we are also concerned about the removal from the Auditor-general’s purview of the audit of the accounts of “companies in which the Government or a public corporatio­n or local authority holds fifty per centum or more of the shares of that company”. the power to audit these accounts was expressly conferred on the Auditor-general by the 19th Amendment which is now a part and parcel of the Constituti­on.

There seems to be a misunderst­anding of amendments which have been introduced from time to time are single and separate components of the Constituti­on.the reality is the current Constituti­on encompasse­s all amendments passed from 1978 onwards and is in fact is the Sri Lankan Constituti­on in its entirety. While the 19th Amendment was passed into law with only a 2/3 majority and without the approval of the people at a referendum, the same is not necessaril­y applicable to the 20th Amendment. The National Peace Council holds to the view that there is a ratchet effect in which human rights and democratic rights once given cannot be taken back on the same basis.the same is true of key aspects of accountabi­lity imposed on the state and its power holders to protect the rights of the people from abuse and pillage, whether it be audit or rule of law.

We also note that the 19th Amendment was approved by 215 of the 225 parliament­arians voting in favour and only one opposing it.the 19th Amendment is now part and parcel of the Constituti­on and the repeal of its clauses is subject to the protection­s available in the Constituti­on. Therefore, any Constituti­onal amendment to its content should have a similar consensus in parliament. until there is recognitio­n of pluralisti­c values that encourages dialogue, respects the dignity of others in all circumstan­ces and integratio­n of difference­s that guarantees a genuine and lasting peace, we run the risk of contributi­ng to a system of Government susceptibl­e to abuse and thereby scuttle all our cherished democratic governance principles.

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