Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Tampering with facts and figures

- THOUGHTS FROM LONDON BY NEVILLE DE SILVA (Neville de Silva is a veteran Sri Lankan journalist who was Assistant Editor of the Hong Kong Standard and worked for Gemini News Service in London. Later he was Deputy Chief- of- Mission in Bangkok and Deputy Hig

When government­s, politician­s and officials at home or diplomats commit faux pas they bury their heads in the sand to avoid answering legitimate questions. They seek refuge by blaming the media to escape embarrassm­ent. How often have we heard the guilty say they have been “misquoted” or their remarks “misinterpr­eted”.

The latest escape route is to blame most things on “fake news”, a ruse made popular by that recently ousted white supremacis­t US president Donald Trump who was not averse to faking news himself. Today social media is the main culprit because it lends itself to abuse and incompeten­ce.

But that does not absolve the Government, its institutio­ns and officials of tampering with facts and concocting stories to boost their egos or the egos of their bosses. Just the other day a new presidenti­al spin doctor planted a story that President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s conversati­on with the Director-General of the World Health Organisati­on resulted in the WHO approving the Chinese manufactur­ed vaccine Sinopharm for emergency use.

Not only was this fabricated concoction as spurious as the anti-Covid ‘ paniya’ that was marketed as a cure for the virus, but obviously caused acute embarrassm­ent to the head of the WHO and the institutio­n itself which within a few hours shot down in flames this bogus news.

Then earlier this month opposition parliament­arian Harsha de Silva exposed the fiddling of figures by the Central Bank in its 2020 Annual Report. It was no fault of the Central Bank, it appears. The jugglery was forced on the Bank by the Ministry of Finance which sought to project the budget deficit for 2020 as 11% when in fact it should have been 14%.

Over the last several months there have been accusation­s by those in the medical and healthcare profession that figures relating to the coronaviru­s have been doctored, if a pun is pardoned in these trying days for the public.

If the Finance Ministry is prepared to engage in such statistica­l falsehoods and compel the Central Bank to do the same then what reliance can the public and responsibl­e institutio­ns at home and abroad dependent on the accuracy of official reports have in important ministries and state agencies? Where then is the accountabi­lity and transparen­cy these state agencies are expected to display?

The other day I was surprised to read some remarks made by Prof GL Peiris in parliament with regard to the determinat­ion of the Supreme Court on the petitions presented to Court by those who raised a series of objections to various clauses in the Colombo Port City Commission Bill.

The Bill was eventually passed by parliament this week in inordinate haste as though its passage was more important to the Sri Lankan people than dealing expeditiou­sly and profession­ally with the fast spreading Covid pandemic that has seen several variants present in the country. But to that later.

Prof. Peiris’s indiscreti­on, if one might call it that, was nothing like the horrendous order by the Finance Ministry to the Central Bank to report a deliberate untruthful manipulati­on or the ego-boosting efforts of a spin doctor who should have been in Sri Lanka cricket team depleted of talent.

The day the contentiou­s Colombo Port City Bill was up for debate Pro f. Pe i r i s told Parliament, “There is some misinforma­tion circulatin­g throughout the country regarding the Supreme Court determinat­ion on t he Colombo Po r t C i t y Commission Bill announced to the august assembly by the Speaker. It is claimed that the Supreme Court has said a twothirds majority and the people’s approval at a referendum are needed for this Bill. This is baseless”. He goes on to say that the gove r nment through the Attorney- General’s Department submitted to the court certain amendments which were accepted and would be introduced at the Committee Stage. These would then obviate the constituti­onal inconsiste­ncies present in original Bill which could be passed with a simple majority.

The learned professor is being disingenuo­us. One supposes that now as Education Minister he felt it was necessary to teach his parliament­ary colleagues a lesson or two. After all he would know the quality of knowledge that is present in what he calls the “august assembly”. The public is unaware of the levels of education reached by the people’s representa­tives as those worthies in charge of Parliament are unwilling to disclose this crucial informatio­n fearing that it would unearth a couple of Einsteins and budding Socrates in their midst.

Admittedly Prof. Peiris has an impeccable academic record, is author of several books and papers on law and has lectured in internatio­nally recognised universiti­es and institutio­ns in several parts of the world. On that score, I have no quarrel with Prof Peiris -- how could I cross swords, as it were, with such a legal scholar who was already showing signs of his scholastic predilecti­ons when he was very much my junior at our alma mater!

But my contention with the professor is not on the law though there might well be other legal luminaries who might dispute his interpreta­tions of the law in other areas of jurisprude­nce. My disagreeme­nt with GL, as he is more convenient­ly called, is his attempt at obfuscatio­n.

The opening sentences in his address are what some might well call a sleight of hand. While referring to “misinforma­tion” circulatin­g in the country with regard to the Supreme Court’s determinat­ion he calls it “baseless”.

Baseless? I’d rather think not. Prof Peiris refers to “this Bill”. Which Bill is that? The Bill that was gazetted and which the Supreme Court was considerin­g after some 20 petitions were presented to it challengin­g the Bill in toto or in part.

I may be in error but a quick reading of the determinat­ion told me that the Supreme Court pointed to at least 26 clauses or subclauses which were inconsiste­nt with the constituti­on. So the Bill as it stood contained clauses that were in the Supreme Court’s view inconsiste­nt with the constituti­on.

If that were so then the Bill as it stood could not be passed by a simple majority. One does not have to be a legal scholar to understand some of the views -though some might sound rather technical --expressed by the SC.

Referring to provisions of some clauses ( 3,6, 68) as inconsiste­nt with Article 76 read with Articles 3 and 4 of the constituti­on, the SC says they could be “validly passed only with the special majority provided for in Article 84( 2) of the constituti­on and approved by the People at a Referendum by virtue of Article 83”.

Space does not permit me to quote several other observatio­ns of the Bench. But suffice it to mention that the Bill that was considered by the SC could not have been passed by a simple majority and Prof. Peiris’s dismissal of public opinion as “misinforma­tion” and baseless, is itself baseless because public perception was founded on the original Bill as gazetted and the views in numerous articles on the issue in the print media and TV talk shows.

Prof Peiris’s confidence as articulate­d in Parliament was on the basis that the series of amendments pre p a red by t he Government in keeping with the observatio­ns of the Court and collated from legal and other opinions expressed by the public that would remove the obstacles in the Bill which would otherwise prevent it being passed by a simple majority

Had the Government not rushed in with amendments via the AG’s Department and bent to the observatio­ns of the Supreme Court, the Bill as gazetted would have required a special majority and approval at a referendum.

The Government was wary of facing a referendum, especially with a spreading pandemic, as it was in an unusual haste. Moreover it could not be certain of a 2/ 3rd majority, as the vote eve n t u a l l y showed. The Government had presented a Bill to satisfy its financial sponsors not to be respectful to the country’s constituti­on.

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