Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Putting the 18th Amendment at the core of the debate

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For decades, advocates working on Sri Lanka's deficit of justice had to cope with manifest reluctance on the part of many well intentione­d minds to question and critique the national legal process. This reluctance was perhaps understand­able. Complex questions of law were at issue. Then again, convention­al wisdom assumed that Sri Lanka's legal institutio­n, with all its cosmetic trappings of a functional adversary system worked, if not all the time, then at least some of the time. A calamitous collapse

So constituti­onal checks and balances were assumed to be in proper order and departures thereof were treated with a casual shrug of the shoulder. For example, the deliberate underminin­g of the 17th Amendment to the Constituti­on by the Government and the opposition after just three years of its enactment occasioned scarcely a whimper at the time.

The point was not that the 17th Amendment was perfect. Yet this amendment constitute­d the one rational check on extraordin­arily wide Presidenti­al powers mandated by the 1978 Constituti­on. As such, the national effort should have been to fine-tune its content rather than to belittle it, paving the way for the diabolical 18th Amendment to be approved by a compliant Supreme Court presided over by Justice Shirani Bandaranay­ake.

Ironically Justice Bandaranay­ake later became a victim of this same political mala fideswhen, as Sri Lanka's 43rd Chief Justice, she was thrown out of office with less ceremony than that afforded to a common thief. Juxtaposed with the ending of war in 2009 amidst the anguish of Tamil civilians caught in conflict, this set the stage for a calamitous collapse of the domestic process of justice under the Rajapaksa Presidency. Not impressed with government defences

This week, the United Nations Human Rights Committee's Concluding Observatio­ns on Sri Lanka's Fifth Period Report constitute­s a refreshing change from this general reluctance to critique the national legal process. Obviously not impressed by the shrill tone of the Government defences, the Committee's Observatio­ns laid bare the reality in several important respects.

As this column has noted previously, the Committee should not be confused with the United Nations Human Rights Council before which a current investigat­ion on Sri Lanka's war time actions is being conducted by the Office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights. These are parallel procedures that take place quite independen­tly of one another. In terms of the Committee's functions, States are required to report to it periodical­ly in regard to their compliance with the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). In an extension of this mandate and where a State party agrees to the Protocol to the ICCPR, the Committee also considers individual complaints submitted to it by aggrieved citizens. Sri Lanka had acceded to both these processes some time ago.

It is under the periodic reporting procedure that Sri Lanka's report was consid- ered last month. First, the Committee situated the repeal of the 18th Amendment and ensuring the independen­ce of the judicial institutio­n fairly and squarely at the core of Sri Lanka's dysfunctio­n. Crucially it recommende­d that Sri Lanka ensure a transparen­t and impartial process for appointmen­ts to the judiciary and other independen­t bodies. It asked that concrete measures be taken to ensure that judges are protected from improper influences, inducement­s, pressures, threats or interferen­ces exerted by the executive and/or legislatur­e. Secondly, it refused to believe that the withdrawal of the Emergency Regulation­s had resulted in an improved human rights climate given that the Prevention of Terrorism Act continues to be in place. Exasperati­on with the Government's lack of good faith

Thirdly, the Committee was unimpresse­d by the disingenuo­us if not facile explanatio­n by state representa­tives that the Singarasa Case (2006, per ex-Chief Justice Sarath Silva's ruing on the unconstitu­tionality of the Optional Protocol's individual complaint procedure) was being 'reviewed' by the Supreme Court. There is a particular context to this issue. Individual communicat­ions had been filed by Sri Lankans from about 2000 onwards complainin­g that not only the law but also judicial action had violated rights.

The Government was asked by the Committee in response, to ensure that persons be tried without undue delay, that confession­s of tortured detainees should not be used against them and that atrocities be properly investigat­ed. Sri Lanka was also asked to enact a Contempt of Court law which would not allow for judicial abuse. Even by the most ludicrous stretch of the imaginatio­n, these were not recommenda­tions that endangered the safety and security of the State. Rather, they enhanced the rights of citizens and put the judiciary on notice. But the views were pushed aside or glossed over.

And clearly piqued by being called to order, the Supreme Court declared in the Singarasa Case that Sri Lanka's very act of accession itself to the Protocol was unconstitu­tional. Thus, the Committee's exasperati­on at the lack of good faith on the part of the Government in remaining within the ambit of the treaty body procedure whilst violating it in spirit and substance was marked. The slow building up of adverse pressure

The Government may scoff at these findings which it would see as not having any direct enforceabl­e force. But this week's Concluding Observatio­ns will contribute substantia­lly to the body of critical opinion that is being steadily formed.

Notably, those who observed the Committee sessions would have seen that its Asian jurists were insistent questioner­s of the integrity of Sri Lanka's constituti­onal process. Full implementa­tion of the recommenda­tions of the Lessons Learnt and Reconcilia­tion Commission (LLRC) was emphasized. These are pointers to the fact that this Government's best loved strategy of lies and bluster is no longer working.

The 18th Amendment which set the seal on a monarchic Executive President managed by one political family holding the reins of government and needless to say, the finances must be repealed. The Committee's call in that regard must be welcomed. The slow restoratio­n of constituti­onal equilibriu­m can only begin thereafter. For enlightene­d Sri Lankans, this bare minimum must surely be self-evident, without a doubt.

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