Rule Of Law Or The Rising Rule Of Power?
The approach of a presidential election and the reality of the UNHCRSessions in Geneva are driving this country to the frightening fantasies of both government and application of the law.
While the Mangala Budget does little to face development and growth needs of the country and people, the patterns emerging in our courts are leading to new concerns about the genuine independence of the judiciary, which the Supreme Court displayed with pride on the Constitutional Coup issue of October26; but is increasingly questioned by the behavior of both jurists and counsel in the Chambers of Justice today.
The Supreme Court decision on the petition by former Navy Commander Admiral Wasantha Karannagoda to prevent his arrest over the case involving the abduction and killing of 11 Tamil youth, and the courtroom circus by Gotabhaya Rajapaksa to prevent his arrests and hearing of the case involving alleged fraud in the construction of the mausoleum for his parents, are the shockers in trends in the play of law in the country.
What we see in governance is both farce and fantasy. President Sirisena has taken a step back from his ‘naadagam’ move of sending his own delegation to the UNHRC Sessions in Geneva. He must have heard the drumbeat of diplomacy in his ears, to have the Foreign Minister lead the official, government delegation. The real farce here is the unity of thinking among the Presidential and Prime Ministerial teams on the controversial UNHCR Resolution. What both Maithripala and Ranil will seek is to extend the term of the Resolution by two more years. Sirisena has to give into the realities of governance and diplomacy, whatever fanciful thinking he may have of kicking away the political basin he was elected from more than four years ago.
The spread of fantasy is the stuff of politics and governance today. Didn’t we hear and read Mahinda Rajapaksa say recently how the Mangala Budget 2019 would be defeated in parliament? What happened? He placed too much faith in the ‘naadagam’ politics of Sirisena. The pro-Sirisena SLFP team kept away, and the Budget was passed with a good majority. Mahinda’s ‘pohottuva’ team could not come anywhere near it.
Another piece of fantasy we are fed today is about the presidential candidacy for Sirisena, under an SLFP-SLPP alliance. The talks between the two parties are progressing, but the Rajapaksas are getting louder about a family figure in the run, with the heat on Gotabaya. Sirisena will have to do plenty of ‘naadagam’ performances if he faces the election, for which he will need much better drummers than the recent provincial governors he appointed. Their drum beats in several provinces go beyond a ‘naadagama’ to dances of political madness.
The leading light or gloom in the coming presidential candidacy, none other than Gotabaya Rajapaksa, is certainly engaged in a different ‘naadagama’ — ‘adhikarana naadagama’ – judicial theatrics. There seems to be no court he will avoid from the Magistrates to the Supreme, in his performances against being charged with fraud, corruption, and misuse of public funds, when he was Secretary/ Defence under the Rajapaksa Family Regime.
The decision to disallow to arrest of Admiral Karannagoda, and the courtroom trail of Gotabaya Rajapaksa makes us bother about trends in the judiciary. Was the system of justice that we got from the Dutch and British in any way planned for such delays in and twisting of Justice? The Attorney General and Senior Counsel, with Presidential tags too, have now become captains in this Mastery of Justice – Delay and Denial. It may not be far when the people will have to come out in public against this dance of madness in the chambers of justice in our country.