Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Covid 19 and Sri Lanka’s anti-democracy virus

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Much like the covid- 19 virus which attacks the respirator­y systems of victims with lethal force and has brought the global North virtually to its knees, Sri Lanka is being invaded by an ‘anti-democracy’ virus. We are told that, democracy leads to bickering, that a ‘ strong man’ is needed to rule with a rod of iron, that civil liberties do not matter and that constituti­onal amendments that fetter the powers of rulers are a nuisance.

A deadly familiar cry

That chant is drummed into our ears as Parliament­ary elections approach in a backdrop of underminin­g whatever little democratic checks and balances left. Re- installing authoritar­ianism cloaked in the thin garb of ‘decisive rule to benefit the country’ has reached feverpitch. The Pohottuwa cry to ‘give us a two-thirds majority in the Parliament so that we can re p e a l the 19th Amendment and restore stability to the country’ is disingenuo­us if not contemptib­le for that very reason.

Indeed, this cry would be amusing if it was not so deadly familiar. This is exactly how politician­s commandeer­ed the country for their ruinous purposes in the past. This ranged from leftist politician­s who dismantled Sri Lanka’s judiciary and the public service to become subservien­t handmaids of the political establishm­ent in the early seventies to the Jayewarden­e installing of a monarchic Exe c u t ive Presidency. The Rajapaksa decade of enthroning one-family rule underlined by brute thuggery and overt racism for political gain was an organic developmen­t in that background.

Inbetween, the Kumaratung­a Presidency epitomised huge promise of democratic gain at the start, much like the ‘yahapalana­ya’ face of 2015, which was soon undermined by coercion, confusion and most chillingly of all, the politicisa­tion of the Supreme Court from which the Court has never quite recovered, even two decades hence. Yet even with all that unhappy history, what faces this country at this juncture is markedly different.

Legal charades and the Rule of Law

The 2019 Presidenti­al victory of Pohottuwa backed candidate, former President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s brother, Gotabaya Rajapaksa was made possible by bumbling idiocies and criminal failures of the Sirisena- Wickremesi­nghe combine during 2015- 2019. Even after that victory, lessons have not been lear n t . Poisonous squabbling between the leader of the United Nat i o n a l Par ty Ranil Wickremesi­nghe and his deputy Sajith Premadasa has left the Opposition in disarray. The UNP-led Wickremesi­nghe and the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP)-led Maithripal­a Sirisena have both placed themselves firmly beyond the pale of being considered as credible national leaders.

The brave front put up by the Premadasa led alliance, including minority parties will not suffice to cover the credibilit­y gap. Consequent­ly astrologer­s need not be called upon to prophesy the result in the upcoming Parliament­ary elections though many may argue that a two-thirds victory in parliament­ary seats for the Pohottuwa will be far fetched. Even so, there is little doubt that the path will be left wide open for the Rajapaksa- led Pohottuwa. So what will that lead to? For months, we have looked on dumbfounde­d as a peculiar charade is conducted before our eyes as arrest warrants issued by court on many a ‘missing’ state personage are disregarde­d with ease by law enforcemen­t officers even while these personages frolic at state events.

First it was a ‘ missing’ Admiral of the Fleet, who is still ‘missing’ in court despite repeated warrants being issued. Government politician­s defend this atrocious flouting of the Rule of Law by inferring that the fact finding Presidenti­al Commission of Inquiry ( COI) into political victimisat­ion could basically take over the judicial function of determinin­g if the prosecutio­n in issue was proper or not. Let us not forget also that the case in which the warrant had been issued relates to one of the most shameful abuses in Sri Lanka’s history during the Rajapaksa ( the First) Presidency when innocent individual­s including teenagers were abducted for money with the connivance of state agents and then ‘disappeare­d.’

Underminin­g of the Court

Then we had perhaps for the very first time in Sri Lanka’s chequered history, a Secretary of this COI being summoned befo re the Permanent High Court Trialat-Bar through an arrest warrant. This was to enforce the court directive to hand over files pertaining to a case of illegal elephant possession by politicall­y protected individual­s, being heard before it. That extraordin­ary move was as a result of her avoidance of the court directive.

This week, a former Minister of Finance implicated in the infamous Central Bank bond scam who went ‘ missing’ after an arrest warrant was issued, presented himself before the Magistrate’s Court with relief writ all over his face only after the Court of Appeal ordered this week that the Magistrate’s Court should not proceed to take any action against him until the matter was decided in the appellate court. The Court ruling was in response to an applicatio­n filed by the former Minister arguing that the warrant to arrest him was illegal.

These are not isolated occurrence­s, as strange and as bizarre as they may seem even to those long used to the tortuous convulsion­s of law and politics in Sri Lanka. The unequivoca­l refusal of the Attorney General to halt ongoing prosecutio­ns in court on a direction of the COI is just another facet of this same problem. Simply put, when arrest warrants issued by courts are disregarde­d, it is the Rule of Law that is mocked at.

Frightenin­g pointers to the future

And as frequently observed in these column spaces, there can never be a ‘ clash’ between a COI and a Court for the law places each in separate categories of functionin­g. In fact, even though there has been many instances where a particular case has been concurre n t ly inquired into by a COI and a court in the past such as the case of the disappeara­nces of sch o o l c h i l d re n in Embilipiti­ya during the second youth insurrecti­on in Sri Lanka, an unseemly tug- ofwar over files between both would have been unthinkabl­e. The fact that this is now happening speaks to the degradatio­n of our systems, nothing more, nothing less.

So for those who are still too blind to read the signs, these are frightenin­g pointers to the future. It is too soon meanwhile to say if the best laid plans of mice, men and Sri Lankan politician­s to get rid of bothersome constituti­onal obstacles and annoying judges will go astray if the forthcomin­g elections are impacted by the spread of the covid- 19 virus. Regardless, what must be kept in mind is that replacing oftentimes chaotic democratic governance with authoritar­ianism only results in a nation being unable to breathe with its respirator­y systems of protest and dissent becoming choked off. It does not lead to ‘things working properly.’ Those who protest to the contrary are fools, to put the matter mildly.

But have we not learnt this lesson many times, each time surrenderi­ng hard won democratic victories in the face of state repression? Are we doomed to relive past agonies of those many evils over and over again, as if this land is inflicted with a strange and lingering curse?

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