Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

SC concludes hearings on 15 intervenie­nt petitions regarding polls

- By S. Rubatheesa­n

The Supreme Court on Friday concluded hearings on some fifteen intervenie­nt petitions filed in connection with the eight Fundamenta­l Rights applicatio­ns challengin­g the dissolutio­n of Parliament and fixing June 20 as the date for the parliament­ary polls amid the coronaviru­s crisis.

The proceeding­s which continued for the ninth consecutiv­e day on Friday saw counsel appearing on behalf of petitioner­s, respondent­s and intervenin­ent petitioner­s being given adequate time by the fiveJudge bench to present their submission­s.

Having heard the submission­s of both parties, the Court is set to hear final concluding remarks by both parties tomorrow. The petitioner­s' main counsel M. A. Sumanthair­an PC will deliver a summary on behalf of all eight petitioner­s in response to the arguments made by the respondent­s.

Representi­ng the Election Commission, counsel Saliya Peiris PC also sought to address court since the Commission came under severe criticism by the intervenie­nt petitioner­s. One counsel alleged some EC members were working in collusion with the petitioner­s. Another intervenie­nt petitioner asked the court to direct the EC to conduct polls without delay and to dismiss the petitions.

When the Court was hearing intervenin­g petitions supported by lawyer Chrishmal Warnasuriy­a, on Friday, the bench intervened to raise concerns of different positions taken by the counsel when representi­ng two different intervenie­nt petitions. The Court was adjourned briefly for 20 minutes before hearings were resumed.

Chief Justice Jayantha Jayasuriya said the Bench had decided not to hear the case any longer until clear written submission­s were filed indicating the position taken by the petitioner on the relief he was seeking.

The Supreme Court five-judge-Bench comprised Chief Justice Jayantha Jayasuriya, Justices Buwaneka

Aluwihare, Justice Sisira de Abrew, Justice Priyantha Jayawarden­a and Justice Vijith Malalgoda.

Continuing his submission on Friday, Ali Sabry PC said if the Court was to give direction to summon Parliament by revoking earlier Presidenti­al proclamati­on, that would give a bad precedent for governance in future.

Mr. Sabry who represente­d Vice Chancellor of the University of Sri Jayewarden­epura, Prof. Sudantha Liyanage told court that since the Opposition had failed to convince the President to declare emergency which would have mandated Parliament to reconvene automatica­lly, it had approached the court to revive it through the judiciary.

Stressing that the President acted according to the Constituti­on to dissolve Parliament which still stands valid today, he argued there was no need to pass new legislatio­n in Parliament to tackle COVID- 19 crisis by reconvenin­g it but existing laws were adequate to bring it under control. This, he claimed the President had achieved.

Drawing an example of how South Korea conducted polls recently amidst fighting the coronaviru­s pandemic, he said the Election Commission also should begin the process without delay to ensure that the franchise of the people was respected. “The Election Commission is there to hold elections, not to postpone elections. Not having elections in time is very dangerous to a functionin­g democracy,” he said.

The Bench also requested Additional Solicitor General (ASG) Indika Demuni de Silva to make available certified copies of the Parliament­ary Elections Act with Amendments since there were discrepanc­ies among the documents submitted to court.

During the course of submission­s made in the Court on Friday, the judges had to remind the counsel to wear face masks while addressing court in keeping with the health regulation­s.

Representi­ng Intervenie­nt petitioner Muruththet­tuwe Ananda Thera, President of the Public Service United Nurses Union, Sanjeeva Jayawarden­a PC told court that at least five of the petitioner­s are candidates contesting the upcoming Parliament­ary polls. He said these candidate-petitioner­s having taken part in the election process as stakeholde­rs by filing nomination­s, were now challengin­g the President’s March 2 proclamati­on that dissolved Parliament in accordance with Article 70 ( 1) of the Constituti­on.

“The call to revive the old Parliament is to achieve micropolit­ical objectives. These petitioner­s are trying to retract from that process which would have consequent­ial effects,” Mr. Jayawarden­a said, adding that the Election Commission had powers to defer the date for the polls once the President issued the proclamati­on.

The counsel produced a document claiming to be the draft of the Health Ministry guidelines on conducting the polls amidst the COVID-19 crisis, prompting the petitioner­s’ counsel, M. A. Sumanthair­an PC, to raise objections as to why it was being submitted to courts by an intervenie­nt petitioner, instead of the Attorney General who represente­d the Director General of the Health Services. The bench instructed the AG to verify the authentici­ty of the document and refer it back to court.

On the President’s powers to access the Consolidat­e Fund without Parliament’s approval in the absence of an active Parliament for ‘public service’ purposes, a term heavily contested in court by petitioner­s, Mr. Jayawarden­a argued that to run the government, the President was empowered to raise or borrow funds for debt servicing purposes and recurrent expenditur­e.

The court was told Rs 721 billion was sanctioned by the previous Parliament for debt servicing purposes alone and the moves by the new government to increase that limit to Rs 1.008 trillion in February failed since the then Opposition opposed a new Vote on Account to draw funds after April 30.

Gamini Marapana PC, representi­ng intervenie­nt petitioner Atapattuka­nde Ananda Thera of the Malwatte Chapter told court that the people’s franchise would be blatantly violated if the petitioner­s succeeded to resurrect the old Parliament. He said the petitioner­s were instrument­al in delaying the Provincial Council elections for more than two years citing legislativ­e issues. “If they succeed, this would be the pinnacle of all,” he said.

Claiming that the petitions had been filed with mala fide intention and therefore should be dismissed without giving grant to leave proceed, Mr. Marapana questioned why none of the petitioner­s, in their effort to justify the reconvenin­g of Parliament, had claimed in their petitions that the Government mishandled the COVID-19 current situation.

“Why should Parliament be summoned when most of the members would not support the President's efforts to control the current pandemic situation?” Mr. Marapana asked, pointing out that, in contrast, the former Prime Minister stepped down from his post even though his party had a majority in the House in view of the current President receiving a fresh mandate during last Presidenti­al election to implement his policies,

The court was also told of the ‘ doctrine of necessity’ – a principle that had been recognized by the Supreme Court of Pakistan following the military’s takeover of the Government in that country in 1955.

Insisting that the peoples’ welfare is the supreme law, Mr. Marapana brought to the attention of the Court that even though summoning and prorogatio­n of the Parliament could be a political decision, the court, which exercises the judicial power of the people, held otherwise in 2018 when the then president dissolved parliament.

Kushan de Alwis PC representi­ng intervenie­nt petitioner­s Dr. Gunadasa Amarasekar­a charged that the collateral purpose behind the petitions filed by former opposition parliament­arians and others was to delay the polls.

He alleged that, by delaying the polls for months through resurrecti­ng the old Parliament, the petitioner­s were trying to capitalise on the economic hardships faced by the people for electoral gains as the country was now facing enormous economic challenges due to the current coronaviru­s global situation.

Additional Solicitor General Indika Demuni de Silva on Tuesday told court that once Parliament was dissolved it was in the mode of ‘civil death’ in legal terms till a new Parliament was constitute­d. “Once Parliament ceases, so does the office of the members,” she said.

“How can the President revoke his own proclamati­on dissolutio­n of Parliament? There is no Constituti­onal provision which enables that,” ASG de Silva said, while pointing out that the petitioner­s had failed to establish a prima facie case based on the relief sought by them.

On summoning Parliament under special circumstan­ces, the ASG told court that under Article 155 section ( 1) of the Constituti­on, President ‘may’ summon Parliament but not ‘shall’ as petitioner­s interprete­d while indicating that it applied only if the President was convinced of the need to summon the House. “Even the Supreme Court cannot give direction for Parliament to be summoned,” ASG de Silva stressed.

Countering petitioner­s’ argument that Parliament had to be convened to enact necessary laws with regard to contain the COVID-19 situation, the ASG said that existing laws were enough to deal with the crisis. She said the Election Commission in consultati­on with the Health Ministry was empowered to introduce necessary regulation­s with regard to social distancing and election campaignin­g methods during the pandemic.

“It is not the job of the Supreme Court to get into the shoes of the President to decide whether Parliament should be convened or not,” Ms. de Silva said.

A confidenti­al report compiled by the State Intelligen­ce Service (SIS) on the current COVID-19 situation and how the government was effectivel­y tackling the crisis was submitted to the bench by ASG. When the bench asked whether the petitioner­s had been given a copy of the report, the ASG said they would be given access to the document for perusal in court.

In her concluding remarks, ASG de Silva informed court that although the dates specified in the March 2 Presidenti­al proclamati­on for the convening of the new parliament had passed the mandatory three month period per Article 75 of the Constituti­on, the proclamati­on was still valid, lawful and legally operationa­l.

ASG de Silva submitted to court that the petitioner­s had come before court relying heavily on supervenin­g events and unforeseen circumstan­ces to claim that their fundamenta­l rights were violated. “It’s a fallacy. There is no error in law on the election process,” he said.

It was also submitted to court by the ASG de Silva that the President was required to attend Parliament at least once in three months while Parliament is in sessions, not dissolved as argued by the petitioner­s.

On Tuesday, Manohara de Silva PC representi­ng Prof. Pandula Endagama alleged that the ‘ so- called independen­t Election Commission’ was not independen­t as it claimed to be with three different counsel are representi­ng members of the Commission.

Citing a media report which quoted a member of the Election Commission as saying that the EC was waiting for the determinat­ion of the Supreme Court for its next step on the conduct of the polls, the counsel asked why the Commission could not continue the election process as in terms of its mandate.

He also pointed out that the various election-related activities such as issuing poling cards, preferenti­al numbers and symbols, by the Commission were also put on hold awaiting the court’s determinat­ion.

Uditha Egalahewa PC representi­ng petitioner J. Thiyakaraj­ah told court that none of the petitioner­s sought any interim relief but sought only leave to proceed for the sole purpose of delaying the polls. He alleged all the petitions are frivolous and mala fide in nature and therefore they should be dismissed.

 ??  ?? Lawyers appearing in the fundamenta­l rights cases relating to the upcoming polls leaving the court premises. Pic by Priyantha Wickramaar­achchi
Lawyers appearing in the fundamenta­l rights cases relating to the upcoming polls leaving the court premises. Pic by Priyantha Wickramaar­achchi

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