Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Lanka’s flawed Emergency law

Safeguards could be provided as per the South African model

- By P. K. Balachandr­an

In Sri Lanka, the President has the absolute discretion not only to proclaim the State of Emergency but also to legislate in the form of Emergency Regulation­s

Sri Lanka’s Emergency law is flawed, being devoid of adequate protection­s against its misuse. It is easily invoked and lacking in adequate legislativ­e and judicial oversight. The overwhelmi­ng power vested in the Executive has led to the law’s frequent use and also misuse. Therefore, there is a crying need for built-in safeguards, says legal expert Dr. Asanga Welikala in his paper entitled States of Emergency: Issues for Constituti­onal Design(centre for Policy Alternativ­es, 2016). Welikala goes on to suggest reform on the pattern of the South African Emergency Law.

A State Emergency under the Public Security Ordinance (PSO) has been a persistent part of life in Sri Lanka, with government­s resorting to it frequently. The latest invocation being on May 6. In fact, Sri Lanka had been under an Emergency for 28 years from 1983 to 2011. Later, it was imposed for short periods in response to perceived threats to peace.

The State of Emergency has provisions for the detention of persons, commandeer­ing and acquisitio­n of private property, and entry and search. There are also provisions for hearings, appeals and compensati­on for those affected by the regulation­s. The Public Security Ordinance (PSO) sets down the special powers of the President, including calling out the armed forces in aid of the civil power, the procedure for arrest, detention and executive review of detention, and the suspension of certain safeguards for the liberty of the individual in the Code of Criminal Procedure.

The Lankan constituti­on permits restrictio­ns to be placed on fundamenta­l rights in an Emergency. Among the Fundamenta­l Rights that may be restricted “in the interests of national security and public order” are the following: Presumptio­n of innocence; Burden of proof; Equality before the law and non-discrimina­tion; Ordinary procedure for arrests and judicial sanction for detention; and the fundamenta­l right to freedom of expression, assembly, associatio­n, movement, occupation, religion, culture and language.

However, the freedom of thought and conscience, the prohibitio­n of torture, and the right to be heard at a fair trial by a competent court (but excluding pretrial detention which can be imposed by Emergency Regulation­s) are not subject to any restrictio­n, Welikala points out.

The Lankan constituti­on does not place substantiv­e controls on the extent to which Fundamenta­l Rights may be restricted, except that they be imposed by law (including Emergency Regulation­s). Importantl­y, “there is no constituti­onal requiremen­t that the restrictio­n be proportion­ate to the harm sought to be averted. It falls entirely to the goodwill of the executive to act responsibl­y and/ or the courts’ willingnes­s to enforce the rule of law and fundamenta­l rights,” Welikala notes.

The Lankan constituti­on imposes no conditions on the Presidenti­al discretion in declaring an Emergency. The PSO says that a declaratio­n may be made where, “in the opinion of the President”, there exists a state of Public Emergency which requires emergency powers to be used “in the interests of public security and the preservati­on of public order, or for the maintenanc­e of supplies and services essential to the life of the community.”

Welikala points out that Section 2 (1) does not reflect the principle of “exceptiona­l threat” which is a condition for a valid declaratio­n of a State of Emergency in other democratic countries. Terms such as ‘in the interests of public security’, ‘in the opinion of the President’, and ‘expedient’ are at odds with Article 4 (1) of the ICCPR which defines the conditions, Welikala contends.

SOUTH AFRICAN MODEL

As opposed to this, Section 37 (1) (a) of the South African constituti­on allows a declaratio­n only when the life of the nation is threatened by war, invasion, general insurrecti­on, disorder, natural disaster, or other public emergencie­s. These formulatio­ns impose a higher threshold of justificat­ion. In light of this, the Sri Lankan framework is “outdated and inconsiste­nt with internatio­nal standards” Welikala says.

The principle of “exceptiona­l threat” in Article 4 (1) of the ICCPR and Section 37 (1) (b) of the South African constituti­on requires that a declaratio­n of a State of Emergency be an act of “last resort” once the normal measures are exhausted or are proved to be inadequate to restore peace and order. “But in Sri Lanka, the opposite is the case where the exclusive discretion in respect of the proclamati­on of Emergency is vested in the President who is entitled to exercise that discretion according to the dictates of his personal opinion, and without any statutory (or judicial) circumscri­ption of that broad discretion,” the expert says. The absence of a constituti­onal or statutory requiremen­t of necessity results in the too-frequent use of the power, Welikala points out.

Article 155 (5) of the Sri Lankan constituti­on provides for the extension of a State of Emergency for a period of one month at a time, subject to approval of parliament by a simple majority. But Emergencie­s are extended without any meaningful debate. “There is also no report of parliament exercising the power to amend or revoke emergency regulation­s, which is a testament to the overwhelmi­ng weakness of parliament­ary accountabi­lity over the exercise of emergency powers,” Welikala points out.

However, the saving grace is that under no circumstan­ces can the Lankan constituti­on be suspended using Emergency powers.

In Sri Lanka, the President has the absolute discretion not only to proclaim the State of Emergency but also to legislate in the form of Emergency Regulation­s. But the Law enjoins regular legislativ­e approval (every month). In South Africa, Germany and Israel also, parliament­ary endorsemen­t of the Emergency has to be sought, and the powers assumed under the emergency have to be ratified by the legislatur­e. In France, the President is not required to obtain prior approval from either his Cabinet or Parliament before a Declaratio­n of Emergency. The French President merely “notifies” parliament of the proclamati­on. But he is expected to consult the Prime Minister and the “Conseil Constituti­onnel”.

In South Africa, the legislatur­e has a central role, and the judiciary also enjoys a comprehens­ive right to review all aspects of the Emergency. There are also substantiv­e protection­s, including a list of “non-derogable rights”, the explicit establishm­ent of limits on permissibl­e derogation­s, and the domestic justiciabi­lity of internatio­nal human rights violations within the emergency regime. In contrast, the Sri Lankan framework seems “rudimentar­y and primitive,” Welikala observes.

As in the South African case, some other constituti­ons also refer to the State’s “internatio­nal obligation­s” in terms of internatio­nal human rights laws and derogation standards. But the Sri Lankan constituti­on makes it clear that under a State of Emergency, the President assumes law-making powers and that “such emergency regulation­s have the force of law and can override all ordinary law except the constituti­on.”

The Sri Lankan constituti­on and the PSO oust the jurisdicti­on of courts to review a proclamati­on of Emergency, but the Supreme Court, under its Fundamenta­l Rights jurisdicti­on, may review emergency regulation­s for consistenc­y with the Bill of Rights. Courts review the exercise of powers that become operationa­l under a State of Emergency, to determine whether the regulation­s and decisions are “intra vires, bona fide, have a rational nexus with the aims allowed by statute, and are within with scope of the restrictio­ns of fundamenta­l rights permitted by Article 15 of the constituti­on.”

However, the record of the Sri Lankan Supreme Court in this respect is mixed, Welikala notes. “generally, there has been a willingnes­s to defer to executive discretion in respect of dealing with emergencie­s, except perhaps in relation to the most egregious violations,” he says. Also, there is an “undue deference to leadership and tolerance of authoritar­ianism.”

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