Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

GSP plus, the PTA and Sri Lanka’s painful contortion­s

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The Supreme Court ’ s Determinat­ion on amendments to Sri Lanka’s Prevention of Terrorism Act ( PTA, 1979) announced by the Speaker in the House on Tuesday 8th March 2022 is largely predictabl­e, some would mutter sotto voce, pedestrian even.

Not timorous amendments but solid revisions needed

Undoubtedl­y the Court itself was limited by the patent lack of imaginatio­n if not foresight by the Government in presenting amendments of such a tepid nature in the first place. If the intention was to placate critical comments in Geneva and Brussels, than that exercise badly backfired. Strategica­lly speaking, if this package of uninspirin­g amendments had been bolstered by at least one strong revision of the law which would have signified commitment to recognisin­g the tsunami of injustices that the PTA had resulted in through the decades, one might have been a little more forgiving.

As such, the lament of Sri Lanka ’s Minister of Foreign Affairs in

Geneva that this is only the

‘ first step’ and is an improvemen­t on what existed, evokes little sympathy. Equally, the President’s directive to the police not to misuse the PTA is like telling crabs not to walk sideways. It is the nature of policing in Sri Lanka that harsh laws will be misused, indeed, Sri Lanka’s law enforcemen­t is famous for not even needing laws to abuse. Our law books reflect the plethora of cases where even judicial reprimands to the police not to torture have had no impact.

The remedy here is not in executive directives or timorous amendments but solid revisions to a law that has terrorised the country since its enactment. Clause 2 of the Bill had proposed to reduce the time period of detention of persons assessed by the Minister of Defence to be engaging in ‘unlawful activity,’ from eighteen months to twelve months. Holding this to be constituti­onal, the Bench very clearly articulate­d the position that, while it could look into procedural matters such as, for example, time periods of detention, it could not review the substantiv­e provision itself for constituti­onality.

Unconstitu­tional laws must be judicially reviewed

In other words, the Court shook off the (overly) optimistic plea by the petitioner­s that Section 9 of the PTA could be assessed in regard to the substantiv­e powers that it confers on the Minister to issue detention orders. Such an argument was destined for obvious dismissal. But the fact that this was even made speaks to the desperate need for serious overhaul of the PTA. It illustrate­s a major paucity in our constituti­onal framework which does not allow the Court to review enacted law for unconstitu­tionality.

Enthusiast­ic ‘ yahapalana­ya-ites’ (2015-2019) may have been better served in insisting on the substantiv­e incorporat­ion of judicial review into the Constituti­on in line with our regional neighbours. That at least, would have earned the sincere well wishes of many and would have been difficult to reverse even with the political upsets in 2019 and 2020. But what we had were the indulging if not colluding in political power games between Prime Ministers, ( past and present) and Presidents, (past and present).

Section 9 Detention Orders had long been the bitter core of the P TA . Under all Government­s. That power had been abused to the extent that hundreds of persons died in detention without knowing why they had been detained. However, the nation’s apex court cannot examine the constituti­onal validity of the exercise of such powers. Of course for that, even if the powers exist, we need independen­t and strong judges. That is a vigorous discussion which merits a different space. The point is that bad laws, including the PTA, will remain on our statute books notwithsta­nding the affront that this constitute­s to the country’s legal order.

Sops thrown by the Government to PTA reformists

That has always been the case. The best opportunit­y to rectify this would have been the slim governance moment that dawned in 2015. But that was not to be. That said, returning to the Court’s Determinat­ion, the judges jibbed at examining the constituti­onal validity of Section 9 on the basis that, what a court is prohibited from doing directly, cannot be done indirectly. Of some import is the Bench’s recommenda­tion that Clause 10 of the Bill relating to the granting of bail to PTA detainees be further amended.

In instances where a trial of a PTA detainee has not commenced even after twelve months, along with the Court of Appeal being enabled to release the person on bail, the High Court was conferred the power, ‘in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces’ to exercise that power, subject to such conditions that the Court thinks fit. Where the trial against an accused whose indictment has been forwarded to the High Court has not commenced for twelve months, here too, the High Court ‘ may’ consider to release such person on bail. Other interventi­ons were unremarkab­le.

Sops t hrown by t he Government to those agitating for change of the PTA, allowing detained persons to have access to lawyers and to their relatives were held to be constituti­onal. Section 9 Detention Orders were recommende­d to be subject to challenges under habeas corpus as well as fundamenta­l rights and writ jurisdicti­ons of the superior courts. Copies of the Orders were ruled as needing to be served on magistrate­s not within a ‘reasonable period’ but forthwith and in any event, not later than forty-eight hours from their issuance. That change was emphasized in order to enable magistrate­s to visit places of detention speedily.

‘Karapincha’ leaves treatment of reform movements

The judges also ruled that the specific authority responsibl­e for serving copies of Detention Orders on magistrate­s must be named. The magistrate was enabled to order a ‘change in a place of detention’ when he/she forms an opinion on the report of the Judicial Medical Officer (JMO) that the suspect may have been tortured. Aside from the welcome use of gender neutral language in judicial orders, it is positive that an amendment was directed to mandatoril­y require magistrate­s to direct the Inspector General of Police (IGP) to commence an investigat­ion in such instances of torture.

That said, there are thousands of cases where, the IGP has not proceeded to conduct such inquiries even when the Supreme Court itself has found evidence of torture. This is the result of decades long political underminin­g of legal systems and courts of law. Rectifying a grievously systemic subversion of the Rule of Law needs far more than merely tinkering with the PTA. Again this was an opportunit­y missed in 2015-2019 which merely resulted in a Counter Terror draft that was ( unforgivab­ly) cut and pasted from the US Patriot Act and in some respects, far worse than the PTA.

Indeed, the manner in which Sri Lanka’s miserable politician­s collective­ly pulled the good governance rug from under the feet of its supporters in this and other contexts, is a repeat of history. That is unsurprisi­ng, of course. Politician­s have periodical­ly used civil society for legitimacy and then discarded them, much like ‘karapincha’ leaves. But we never learn from history, as they say. The bitter repercussi­ons of that colossal failure of governance still haunts this land.

Yet the same faces dominate our public spaces, the same games of musical chairs are played with the same actors. Is it any wonder that the State of Sri Lanka faces an existentia­l crisis today?

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