Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Friday, December 14, 2012


Statement by Liberal Leader Bob Rae on the Situation in Jaffna, Sri Lanka

http://www.liberal.ca/wp-content/themes/liberal-parent/images/mastheads/default.jpgDECEMBER 13, 2012
TORONTO- Liberal Leader Bob Rae made the following statement today on the situation in Jaffna, Sri Lanka:
“News is slowly emerging of an attack on the men’s and women’s dormitories at Jaffna University, with some fifty students being sent to hospital, and many arrested without warrants.
Sri Lanka’s civil peace is still under threat from its own government. The United States government has issued a call for a respect for civil liberties and pluralism. Canadians can hardly do less in the face of continuing attacks on journalists and others expressing their opinions.
I had the chance, nearly a decade ago, to give a couple of talks at Jaffna University, and as it was during a time of cease fire and efforts to create a different governing structure students were enthusiastic participants in discussions about federalism and pluralism. With the resumption of fighting, defeat of the Tamil Tigers and death of tens of thousands of innocent civilians, all has changed.
Canada’s vigilance in defence of free speech and an open society must continue. The government of Sri Lanka must be held accountable for these violations of human rights.”

New Zealand politicians, Peoples Forum mean action on Sri Lanka

TamilNet[TamilNet, Thursday, 13 December 2012, 10:13 GMT]
UN internal review report is clear on the failure of the UN. We will not lie low. We will press for full inquiry and suitable action on those who connived at the human disaster–a blot on the civilized world in the 21st century, said New Zealand’s Green Party parliamentarian, Ms Jan Logie, at the Universal Human Rights Day observations organized by Peoples Forum in Auckland. What is happening in Sri Lanka is akin to what is happening in Palestine. On CHOGM, we will do everything possible to see that countries respecting democracy do not attend, the MP further said adding that she would draw the attention of the NZ government through an adjournment motion in the parliament on the new wave of oppression on Tamil university students and youth. 

“The Government of Sri Lanka tried to cover up its actions by criminalizing the defensive role of the LTTE in cushioning the rigours of State terror. It is a cruelty not to take action against those UN Officials who connived and played this shameful role,” Ms Jan Logie observed.

Minto, Locke and Magie
John Minto, Keith Locke and Jan Logie
Speaking at the occasion, Mr John Minto, a respected human rights activist in New Zealand, said that people of New Zealand would organize an impressive demonstration early next year to press the NZ government to call for international inquiry on the crimes of Sri Lanka, including genocide. 

We will urge the only alternative left –the right to self-determination–to be exercised through a UN monitored referendum, he further said. 

Currently retired veteran parliamentarian, Mr. Keith Locke, observed that what happened in Sri Lanka is the same or even worse genocide than what had happened in Rwanda, Serbia and elsewhere. Attributing the UN failure to manipulation by big powers, and accusing the international media for criminalising the LTTE, Locke said things are changing now, media attitudes are changing and moves for justice will revive and thrive.

New Zealand would always support the Tamil demand for self-determination, he said.

A resolution passed by the Peoples Forum at the meeting urged the UN Secretary General to make arrangements for reporting on the manner of implementing the Petrie Panel report, and to submit the report within six weeks, so that something worthy could be done before the UNHRC sessions.

Citing the recent oppression committed on Tamil students by Sri Lanka, the resolution urged the UNSG to take immediate preventive measures, using the authority vested in him. The way Sri Lanka projects its oppression as prevention of international revival of the LTTE, is likely to bring in another dangerous situation in the island, they cautioned. 

The Peoples Forum meeting organized by Human Rights Organisations and activists in New Zealand to observe the Universal Human Rights Day on Monday was participated by representatives of the Tamil Action Front in NZ. 

Dr Siva Vasanthan, President of the New Zealand Tamil Society and Mr. A. Theva Rajan spoke at the gathering.


Travel ban on the CJ’s husband

Thursday, 13 December 2012
Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaka has ordered officials to check if there’s a possibility of imposing a travel ban on Chief Justice Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake’s husband, Pradeep Kariyawasam.
The minister has informed the Attorney General through his advisors to also check if there’s a possibility of arresting Kariyawasam either on the day of his case or before that. The President and the others in the government behind the impeachment motion were flummoxed by the Chief Justice’s strength to carry on with her official duties with a smiling face despite the pressure and harassment exerted on her.
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CJ’s Husband Was Our Man, We Quietly Covered It Up, But UNP Wanted Impeach CJ – MR

Liberator Becoming A Monster

At least now the Sinhalese Buddhists should understand the damage happening to our county under the present corrupt leadership.

HR Day event in Toronto brings Tamils closer to global progressive networks

TamilNet[TamilNet, Friday, 14 December 2012, 00:03 GMT]
More than twenty social, economic, and environmental justice groups in Canada that joined together in Toronto on the eve of International Human Rights Day to forge a common forum against military occupation, apartheid, genocide and political imprisonment, have voiced against the SL military detention of the students of the University of Jaffna. The event gains significance as the recently formed Coalition for Tamil Rights was invited to represent the perspectives of Eezham Tamils along with other progressive forces. On the occasion of the event, activists of socio-political organizations in Canada condemned the arrests and detentions of Tamil students of the University of Jaffna in the SL military occupied country of Eezham Tamils. The activists demanded immediate release of the students and called for an end to the Sri Lankan military occupation of the Tamil homeland. 
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The solidarity event of activist communities from across Toronto took place at United Steel Workers Hall in Toronto on Sunday, 09 December. 

“We call on the Sri Lankan government to immediately end its occupation of the Tamil homeland, vacate Jaffna University campus, and release the student leaders,” Peter Hogarth of the International Socialists told TamilNet adding that the International Socialists extends its solidarity to the students who have been locked up in this politically motivated move by the Sri Lankan state.

Sid Lacombe of Canadian Peace Alliance (CPA), Canada’s largest peace coalition group and is a partner of the Coalition for Tamil Rights, said: “Sri Lanka’s so-called reconciliation process is based on nothing more than militarization and genocide. We will be closely monitoring and bringing to light to our fellow Canadians the real nature of Sri Lanka's reconciliation process.”

“We demand the immediate release of the Jaffna student leaders and support their right to resist,” Mr Lacombe said. 

Torontonians engaged in film screenings, a human rights fair, songs and spoken word poetry performances. The event culminated with a panel discussion on specific human rights struggles being organized in Toronto. 

Monira Kitmitto from the Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid described the historical dispossession of the Palestinian people and their globally supported strategy of Boycotts, Divestments and Sanctions (BDS) to end Apartheid in Israel. 

Ms Kitmitto explained that the global movement for a campaign of Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions against Israel is to force it to comply with international law. The campaign aims to end the occupation of Palestine and dismantle the apartheid wall, protect and promote the right of return for all Palestinian refugees, and ensure equal rights for all Palestinians living with Israel. 

“BDS is a strategy that allows people of conscience to play an effective role in the Palestinian struggle for justice,” she said. 

Ilian Burbano spoke on behalf of the Latin American Caribbean Solidarity Network, a non-profit umbrella organization, which brings together organizations that carry out work in solidarity with the progressive and democratic transformation processes taking place in Latin America and the Caribbean. 

Mr Burbano described in detail the anti mining, indigenous sovereignty and environmental justice struggles happening throughout Latin America and the Caribbean. 

Alex Filipe, an organizer with Bayan (Canada), a network of Filipino organizations linked to the national liberation struggle in the Philippines, said that the danger of the so-called liberal agenda which only seeks to deal with individual's rights violations while ignoring the violations of group rights, should be exposed. 

Mr Filipe touched on the similarities between what he called as the “US-Marcos fascist regime” and the “US-backed Arroyo regime”, both scheming to stay in power while perpetrating some of the worst human rights violations in the history of the Philippines. 

Krisna Saranamuttu, representing the Coalition for Tamil Rights, addressing the audience at the event said that the Sri Lankan state was seeking to complete its project of dismantling the nationhood of the Eezham Tamils in their territorial homeland through military occupation, colonization, and the denial of fundamental political and civil liberties.

Countering the ‘reconciliation’ myth, he told the packed audience that the political imprisonment of the Jaffna student leaders and their persecution by the Sri Lankan military is part of its terror campaign against civilians even after militarily crushing the Tamils resistance movement through a genocidal war three years ago. 

Mr Saravanamuttu, who is a second-generation Eezham Tamil activist and recipient of the British Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Award, talking to TamilNet after the event said: “We must build a genuine global struggle based on human justice and freedom that exposes the complicity of the International Community of Establishments in our nation’s genocide. In the post Mu'l'livaaykkaal era, the Tamil liberation struggle requires a nuanced and mature political strategy that no longer begs for justice from the same powerful governments and institutions that are aiding and abetting our nation's genocide.”

The Coalition for Tamil Rights consists of workers, students, academics and activists from across the Canadian civil society to support the Tamil struggle for self-determination and to voice for the immediate end of the military occupation and colonization of the Tamil homeland. 

Canadian Senator Hon. Hugh Segal on impeachment of Chief Justice in Sri Lanka

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Image courtesy Flickr-14 Dec, 2012
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1st Session, 41st Parliament,
Volume 148, Issue 130

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Hon. Hugh Segal: Honourable senators, the recent and further steps by the Government of Sri Lanka to impeach their Chief Justice should concern all Commonwealth citizens and governments. Clear Commonwealth values around the rule of law and democracy as expressed in the Harare Declaration and the Latimer House Principles embraced by all Commonwealth heads of government in 1991 and 2003 are being violated by this present and unconstitutional impeachment effort.
Commonwealth Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma was in contact with the Sri Lankan Foreign Minister on this issue on December 10. We appreciate that contact very much.
Today, President Rajapaksa announced that he would appoint an independent panel to review the findings of the parliamentary report. There is much to review in terms of the questionable way in which the investigation was handled, the lack of time for defence preparation by Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake and the total disregard for the international norms of trying a judge for alleged corruption.
Sri Lanka is the designated host of the upcoming 2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting. In the lead-up to CHOGM, the initiation by Sri Lanka of a credible accountability process for the civil war ending in 2009 will be vital. The present situation regarding the Chief Justice does not inspire confidence that transparency, openness and accountability are abundant in Sri Lanka.
The Commonwealth Lawyers Association, the Commonwealth Legal Education Association, and the Commonwealth Magistrates and Judges Association put out a joint statement, which read, in part:
By virtue of its membership of the Commonwealth, Sri Lanka is committed to the shared fundamental values and principles, at the core of which is a shared belief in and adherence to democratic principles including an independent and partial judiciary.
In the end, every member state of the Commonwealth makes its own sovereign decisions, but membership in the Commonwealth is not permanent or unconditional for any member. It is tied to a basic respect for the core Commonwealth principles and values. The consistent and serious violation of these could well result in a country’s membership being questioned.
Justice C.G. Weeramantry, former Senior Vice-President of the International Court of Justice in The Hague and the senior retired judge in Sri Lanka, said yesterday:
There can be no democracy in a country unless the rule of law prevails at every level, from the humblest to the most exalted citizen.
My good friend and former President of the International Commission of Jurists, the Honourable Michael Kirby, from Australia, said:
A judge without independence is a charade wrapped in a farce inside an oppression.
It is not appropriate for any Commonwealth body to ever look the other way. The impeachment of a chief justice for political reasons is a deeply serious matter that requires careful and diligent review by Commonwealth bodies well before Commonwealth heads of government meet in Sri Lanka next year. Responding to the rule of law is not a “wouldn’t-it-be-nice” aspirational goal. It is, along with democracy, human rights and development, fundamental to what membership in the Commonwealth is about.
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Hugh Segal, CM (born October 13, 1950) is a Canadian senator, political strategist, author, and commentator. He was chief of staff to Ontario premier Bill Davis and Canadian prime minister Brian Mulroney.

SRI LANKA: An overview of the state of human rights in Sri Lanka in 2012

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December 14, 2012
SRI LANKA: An overview of the state of human rights in Sri Lanka in 2012
The full report will be available for download athttp://www.humanrights.asia/resources/hrreport/2012/ahrc-spr-011-2012.pdf/view

In previous annual reports, the Asian Human Rights Commission has documented Sri Lanka's rapid fall into a dictatorship under the executive presidential system. This process has now been completed. There are violations written into the basic structure of its constitution, which was initially based on Sri Lanka being a republic and a democracy, recognizing the separation of powers between the executive, a legislature and judiciary, with the rule of law as its foundation and made on the basis of sovereignty of the people; now the legislature and the judiciary have been subjugated to the executive, through the 1972 and 1978 Constitutions. The executive president has now taken control of the legislature and the judiciary, and thereby reduced these two formerly independent branches of government into branches of the executive. This transformation is so complete that the principles of separation of powers and the rule of law can no longer be operated in any rational manner. The executive president is the sole and the direct controller of every aspect of governance, and all institutions are now expected to operate under his direction and according to his wishes.

The direct result of this transformation is that now no justice is possible in Sri Lanka. Under the structure of governance, functioning under the direction of the executive president, there is no protection for the dignity and liberty of individuals. Individual freedoms are completely suppressed and there is no institutional structure for the protection of such liberties.

Citizenship in Sri Lanka now only refers to one without any of the human rights. Individuals are being made into digits of a system in which the controller is the executive president. No one is outside the arbitrary control of the executive president, including the Chief Justice of Sri Lanka herself. All judges in the time to come will be under the total control of the executive president. The only permissible decisions that the judges of Sri Lanka will be able to make will be those that the executive president allows them to make. Anyone who even slightly deviates from this path is likely to be removed from his or her position immediately, the same way that chief justice is being dealt with now. Under these circumstances, fundamental human rights, though enshrined in the constitution, are without any effective protection. The protections that arise from Sri Lanka being signatory to international conventions in human rights have now lost significance.

The people of Sri Lanka have been watching these transformations helplessly. The international community is totally oblivious to these transformations. For many decades, the UN Agencies, the powerful countries, and the international community at large, thought the sole problem in Sri Lanka was the ethnic conflict, or the minority issue, and failed to recognize the terrible constitutional crisis that the political system as a whole was facing since 1978. There were those who pointed out this situation in a fuller picture, and this included the Asian Human Rights Commission. However, such warnings were not taken seriously. Now, when the collapse is becoming obvious, there are some expressions of concern, but these have come too late, and even now the recognition of the total transformation of Sri Lanka into a dictatorship is not being grasped at all. The consequence is that the people of Sri Lanka now have to face this situation alone and even someone in as high a position as the Chief Justice of Sri Lanka has no choice but to face the consequences of the total absence of respect for rules. It will be said in the future that at the point when Sri Lankan democracy sank like the Titanic no one came to her rescue.

The most frightening spectacle is the rise of the Ministry of Defense as the total controller of the lives of Sri Lankan citizens. The para-military forces, such as the Special Task Force (STF), the intelligence services, and the military are now intervening into the lives of people in the North and East as well as the people of the South. Not even the prisoners are outside their control and direct intervention. All these forces work outside the law and enjoy total impunity.

The possibility of any credible investigation into violations of rights has come to an end. In the absence of such investigations, the possibility of prosecutions does not exist and, in any case, the prosecutor - that is, the Attorney General's Department - is under the control of the new administration of the executive president. The judiciary has ceased to be a separate branch of governance and is now under the control of the executive president. When even the Chief Justice is without legal protection, there is hardly any need to speculate on the fate of ordinary folk.

Forced disappearances, extrajudicial killings, rampant torture, denial of protection from illegal arrest and illegal detention, the denial of fair trial, the suppression of freedom of expression, publication, and association, are all entrenched, and electing a government by a free and fair election is no longer a possibility. In short, all the rights enshrined under the UN International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) are being violated and there is no effective remedy, as required under Article 2 of that Covenant, for any of the rights.

The final culminating issue is the government initiative to impeach the chief justice. This was a direct retaliation to judgments relating to the Divinaguma Bill, which the three judges of a bench presided over by the Chief Justice had held to be in contravention of the constitution. After threats of impeachment, 117 members filed an impeachment motion containing 14 charges, all of which the Chief Justice denied. Later, 11 members, of whom 7 are from the government, have been appointed to be the Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC).

The impeachment procedure is contained in article 107 and select committee resolutions are found in article 78. Many authorities have pointed out that this procedure does not provide for impartial investigation of a tribunal, and therefore violates the basic principles relating to an impeachment of a judge.

Despite such challenges, the impeachment proceedings are continuing. The government approach appears to be that legality or illegality of the impeachment is irrelevant. The executive can request the parliament to commit an act which may be illegal, and on that request, parliament must oblige. The core argument is that whatever the executive orders has effect of law. This is the same position that Otto Adolf Eichmann took about the orders of Hitler.

The full report will be available for download athttp://www.humanrights.asia/resources/hrreport/2012/ahrc-spr-011-2012.pdf/view

As A Member Of Commonwealth, Follow Its Values’ Urge Commonwealth Judges, Magistrates And Lawyers

By Colombo Telegraph -December 13, 2012 
Colombo Telegraph“The Associations urge the Government and Parliament of Sri Lanka to respect the independence of the judiciary and in particular to comply with its constitutional safeguards and the Commonwealth Latimer House Principles and international standards.” says Commonwealth Judges, Magistrates And Lawyers associations.
Chief Justice Bandaranayake
“Sri Lanka, as a member of the Commonwealth, is expected to adhere to the fundamental values and principles of the Commonwealth which includes the provision of an independent and impartial judiciary that can only be removed by proper process on grounds of incapacity or gross misconduct.” issuing a statement they further say.
We publish below the full text of the statement;
Statement on the Motion to Impeach the Chief Justice of Sri Lanka Further to our statement of 19 November 2012, the Commonwealth Lawyers Association (CLA), the Commonwealth Legal Education Association (CLEA) and the Commonwealth Magistrates’ and Judges’ Association (CMJA) are concerned about the developments surrounding the impeachment of the Sri Lankan Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake.
Sri Lanka, as a member of the Commonwealth, is expected to adhere to the fundamental values and principles of the Commonwealth which includes the provision of an independent and impartial judiciary that can only be removed by proper process on grounds of incapacity or gross misconduct.
In monitoring reports of the impeachment proceedings the Associations are very concerned that The Commonwealth (Latimer House) Principles on the Accountability of and the Relationship between the Three Branches of Government (2003), have been ignored and that as a result the judiciary and the Rule of Law have been severely damaged.
We endorse the Statement made by the International Commission of Jurists on 6 December 2012 and have
made representations to the Commonwealth Secretariat General on this issue as well as the UN Special
Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges and Lawyers and note the Commonwealth Secretary General’s
statement of 12 December 2012.
The President of the CMJA stated that: “The independence of the judiciary is a fundamental principle supporting the rule of law. By its arbitrary actions, and its failure to follow even its own constitutional safeguards for the removal of judges, the Sri Lankan Parliament has seriously undermined that principle and called into question its adherence to the shared values of the Commonwealth.”
The Associations urge the Government and Parliament of Sri Lanka to respect the independence of the
judiciary and in particular to comply with its constitutional safeguards and the Commonwealth Latimer
House Principles and international standards.
Commonwealth Lawyers Association (CLA)
Commonwealth Legal Education Association (CLEA)
Commonwealth Magistrates’ and Judges’ Association (CMJA)
Read the original text here
Related posts;

Impeaching a chief justice, Sri Lankan style

Return to frontpage MACAN-MARKAR-December 14, 2012
There are questions whether the parliamentary select committee observed due process in its inquiry of the charges against Shirani Bandaranayake
NOT PAKISTAN: The number of supporters on Shirani Bandaranayake’s side is still very few and far from the required critical mass for a movement to defend the independence of the judiciary. File Photo
NOT PAKISTAN: The number of supporters on Shirani Bandaranayake’s side is still very few and far from the required critical mass for a movement to defend the independence of the judiciary. File Photo
There has been an air of inevitability in the current showdown between the administration of President Mahinda Rajapaksa and its latest bête noire, Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake. Her fall from grace shows that the Rajapaksa juggernaut does not warm up to dissent easily, even if, as in this case, it measures up to the expected norms of checks and balances in a self-described democracy.
The Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC), inquiring into the 14 charges of professional and financial impropriety listed the impeachment motion against her, rushed to bring its proceedings to an end last Saturday. Undeterred by the walkout by four Opposition parliamentarians, the PSC ruled that Bandaranayake was guilty of three charges of misconduct. Parliament, where President Rajapaksa’s party has more than two-thirds majority, is expected to vote on the committee’s findings in January.
Just 19 months after Bandaranayake was appointed with much fanfare as the first female to head Sri Lanka’s judiciary, the fate of the 43rd Chief Justice appeared to have been sealed following a ruling a she gave to a Bill introduced in Parliament by the Economic Development Minister, Basil Rajapaksa, one of the many presidential siblings controlling the levers of power. The Supreme Court ruled that the Bill, which wanted to empower the Central government to control a $614-million development budget, violated the constitution. The court added that it had to be first approved by nine provincial councils.
In early November, when 117 government parliamentarians handed over an impeachment motion against the Chief Justice to the Speaker of the legislature (Chamal Rajapaksa, another sibling), the process that followed affirmed how heavy the odds were stacked against Bandaranayake. The Sri Lankan constitution has ensured that the President and his ruling party hold all the cards in filing an impeachment motion, conducting a parliamentary inquiry and voting in the House to unseat the holder of such a hallowed seat as the Chief Justice.
An inquiry or inquisition?
But last Thursday, a dramatic twist was added to a predictable plot. After four hours of its third sitting, the Chief Justice and her legal team walked out of the government-dominated, 11-member PSC. Her lawyers said their client had “no faith” in the PSC and that it violated the rules of natural justice.
The walkout underscored the question on many minds: was the PSC an inquiry or an inquisition? The question stemmed from what Bandaranayake was subjected to that day. Not only was a procedure for the inquiry still to be spelled out, but the accused was given close to 1,000 pages of documents to respond to in a day, no witnesses were listed, no oral evidence would be permitted, cross-examinations would be denied and two government parliamentarians on the PSC heckled the beleaguered Chief Justice during the proceedings, calling her a pissu geni (“a mad woman,” in Sinhala).
Making bank accounts public
Such has been the haste to get rid of Bandaranayake that due process and legal consistency have both been given the go-by. In a now familiar political tactic of the regime, the government-controlled media held its own trial to vilify the latest enemy of the state. The state’s media have, for instance, repeatedly made public Ms Bandaranayake’s private bank accounts — a brazen violation of banking secrecy protected by law.
The state-run Daily News has been in the vanguard. Commentaries and reports in its pages have carried details of the alleged accounts Bandaranayake had and supposed amounts and transactions in each. Her private finances feature in two of the 14 charges in the impeachment motion (which implies that the 117 legislators who signed it have seen the bank accounts).
Such a display of impunity on a vital feature of the economy was not used even in the 30 years that Sri Lanka fought the Tamil Tigers. When government investigators wanted to follow the financial trail of Tamil Tiger operatives, a court order was often sought to access bank accounts, despite the Emergency laws in operation then and the Prevention of Terrorism Act.
Pakistan parallel
Given such political mud she has been dragged through, it is no surprise that Bandaranayake has won support from a broad constituency of jurists, lawyers, academics, activists and religious leaders. Some have now begun to draw parallels between her quest to defend the independence of the judiciary against an all-powerful President and the epic struggle between the Pakistan Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry and the country’s then military President, General Pervez Musharraf.
Chaudhary’s sacking triggered a protest led by lawyers that fast drew in others; he was eventually reinstated, and the movement was one of the factors that saw off Musharraf.
Unfortunately for Bandaranayake, such parallels are only in the realm of ideas. The number of supporters on her side is still very few and far from the required critical mass for a movement to defend the independence of the judiciary. Muscle and power on the streets are still controlled by the well-oiled Rajapaksa political machine.
If the inevitable occurs, and she is impeached early next year, Bandaranayake’s plight would affirm who the real winners are in a post-war country trying to promote itself internationally as a “Wonder of Asia.” It would clearly not be those who think that the judiciary has a legitimate role in reining in unbridled political power through a system of prescribed checks and balances. Bandaranayake’s successor is sure to be acutely aware of the political sword dangling over his head.
(Marwaan Macan-Markar is a Sri Lankan journalist covering South Asia and Southeast Asia for an international news agency.)

Impeachment Of CJ – Dumping A “Kleptocracy” On Sinhala South, Not Forgetting Tamils & Muslims

By Kusal Perera -December 14, 2012 
Kusal Perera
Colombo TelegraphPresident Rajapaksa keeps every one guessing, though few would want to believe him now. But that’s good enough for him. He used the stage of theInstitute of Charted Accountants of Sri Lanka on Tuesday 11 December (2012) to tell the urban middle class and its professionals, that he was not for impeaching the Chief Justice.
President was quoted as saying, “How did this all start ? The opposition went and submitted a complaint with the Commissioner of Bribery and Corruption without even our knowledge. The opposition then said that punishing the husband (Chairman, NSB – Pradeep Gamini Suraj Kariyawasam) will not suffice because his wife (CJ – Shirani Bandaranayake) holds a high post. Therefore they said that justice won’t be meted. I wasn’t the one who did it. All government MP’s were completely silent on the matter. They were the people who went to the bribery commissioner and told the media that they would initiate an impeachment motion first.” [DM on line - Wednesday, 12 December 2012 05:09]
But they, the Opposition, did not impeach her. It was 117 government MPs who signed the motion impeaching her and handed it over to the Speaker. It is not necessary the Speaker should immediately accept the impeachment motion and appoint a Parliamentary Select Committee. IF, let me stress this, IF the President did not want to impeach the CJ, then he could have easily stopped his elder brother, Chamal Rajapaksa as Speaker of the House, from pursuing on that motion. But he did not.
This whole brawl between the CJ and the Executive started in the open, grabbing media attention in September. The Secretary to the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) issued a statement to the media on 18 September, as instructed by the Commission, with carefully nuanced mention of pressure brought on the CJ and the judiciary on decisions the JSC made by the highest in government. Every one knew who, it meant. Reaction to this statement by the President who met a collective of editors on 28 September at Temple Trees over morning tea, implied there was going to be a malicious and a ruthless backlash on the highest echelons of the judiciary and was soon proved so, in open daylight with Secretary JSC, going under a goon attack. Rest is recent history.
The impeachment process started off with the Rajapaksa regime deciding it would control all proceedings to have their decision imposed, the way they want. The Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) was constituted with a 07 to 04 composition between government and opposition Members, respectively. It began investigations into the 14 charges listed in the motion, without any witnesses or documents available, or called upon. It continued without any agreed procedure for investigation and without any reasonable time given for the defence. It was seen and was without doubt, in a mighty hurry to conclude the investigation(s).
Nothing more and nothing different could be expected from this regime. What nevertheless remains to be seen, expected and therefore discussed is the outcome of this single episode tragi – comedy, scripted and directed by this Rajapaksa family regime. Apart from all the political blundering by the parliamentary opposition including the TNA and the JVP by compromising on the PSC the Wickramasinghe way, the impeachment defined the next logical extension to the 18th Amendment to the Constitution.
The flat argument put forward by Wickramasinghe that supremacy and sovereignty of this parliament is sacrosanct, is a total lie. Parliament is now a body of elected men and women, representing the Executive and not the people, with cross-overs and buy-overs holding even ministerial positions. President Jayawardne‘s 1978 Constitution that made the Executive the Head of State, also made the Head of State the authoritarian leader of the ruling political party. Ever since then, the legislature, the parliament lost its democratic essence and supremacy. After Sarath N. Silva‘s determinations as CJ on cross overs, the parliament has no validity and no credibility as a representative body of the people. The parliament today reflects the optimal decay and degeneration any elected body that is alien to representing the people could have. The conceptual difference between an “elected” parliament and a “representative” parliament of the people, is too wide and contradictory to be even compared.
The will and the sovereignty of the people is therefore being expressed outside parliament, in the form of continuous protests and agitations, pickets and work stoppages on most everything; from high cost of living, wage increases, arbitrary arrests, involuntary disappearances, serial killings, sexual abuse and rape, break down of law and order, unconstitutional bills brought to parliament  to even this present impeachment motion. People’s response to governance mobilised outside parliament can not be substituted through Standing Orders and legal jargon in a parliament that only decides according to the dictates of the Executive. Wickramasinghe’s argument on the supremacy of parliament, thus gave the right to a discredited lot to sit on judgement, over the highest in the judiciary, in the “name of the people”. Her innocence or guilt being another matter after an investigation by a constitutional mechanism with independence for serious and impartial investigations.
His next argument, Sri Lanka would lose its Commonwealth membership unless there is an impartial impeachment process after it was allowed to conclude investigations by participating in it, is as good as Rajapaksa saying he was not for the impeachment of the CJ. But what relevance has the Commonwealth ? That has not been and will not be worth a hoot, in Sri Lankan politics. There was NO Commonwealth during the pre conflict period that cared to intervene on SL democracy and decency of rights. There was NO Commonwealth in sight during the armed conflict period when there were numerous attempts at negotiating a decent, democratic conclusion to the national conflict. No Commonwealth even during the human tragedy called “war against LTTE terrorists” that now debates numbers in thousands after a massive human massacre. The Commonwealth is not even now interested in any of it, when it’s Heads of Government Meeting is scheduled in Colombo for 2013 November, hosted by the Rajapaksa government. So why bother about a Commonwealth, which is only ceremonial and a few political elites from post colonial countries meet once every two years to spend millions from tax payers money ? (The 2011 CWHOG in Perth, Western Australia was estimated to cost USD 69,449,169)
The impeachment has other and more serious issues for Sri Lanka than the Commonwealth membership. While the 18 Amendment allowed for the repeal of the 17 Amendment, it also allows Rajapaksa to continue contesting presidential elections one after another, if he can win. That plainly says, the Rajapaksas are working to stay long in power, as a closely knit family dynasty. Such a dynastical family rule can not allow those they consider “aliens” to its regime to question its authority. It therefore needs enormous power that would remove every space the people could have in challenging the regime. The necessity for such usurping of unquestionable power comes logically with enormous accumulation of unaccounted wealth by undeclared means. In short, the whole constitutional governing process is being revamped and refurbished to remain as a constitutionally unaccountable and unchallenged system of governance.
For the Sinhala South and the Tamil and Muslim people, the usurping of power is about abolishing of the 13 Amendment. It is about further accumulation and centralising of power necessary with the regime. The Sinhala society for now would take it as “good punishment” for Tamils who wanted a “separate State”. They little realise that its not just Tamils being denied their political and democratic rights, but the right of the Sinhala South that for over 60 years lost its right to develop economically, rid poverty and live a modern, democratic society. Centralising of power in Colombo had denied them of any decent development in the provinces and would now rake in their wealth to Colombo too. It has over 60 years left economic poverty, social dependency and absence of cultural life, the legacy of refusing to have devolved power in the provinces. And,Weerawansa‘s NFF of the UPFA is given the license to keep the anti devolution campaign going, while the impeachment against the CJ is being manipulated.
Its not just Weerawansa who is kicking off a campaign in justifying further centralising of power. This regime, lives on Sinhala-Buddhist frenzy in the South, in accumulating and usurping power, by way of illegal and criminal campaigns like the rampaging “Bodhu Bala Sena” (literally translated to English as ‘Army of Buddhist Power’). This gangster type group led by saffron clad men, who break into government family health clinics, into Christian churches and even storm police stations to have law in their hands, are never arrested and produced in Courts by the police. Nor are they taken into custody and detained, for breach of peace, racial and or religious amity. Never even baton charged as they do with other “rights based” picketing or protesting civil groups and organisations. This Rajapaksa regime would certainly not want to even hear, this Buddhist mobster gang is vandalising public life and property. They need such Hitler’s “Brown Shirts” types to keep the South intimidated, to go along with more usurping of power.
Such is in practise in the North and East with heavy security operations used against especially youth that accounts for disappearances, arbitrary arrests and detentions. A reason for the government to propose amends to the Criminal Procedure Code to allow the police to detain a suspect in their custody for 48 hours, instead of 24 hours, for now. That with the UNP parliamentarian Wijeydasa Rajapaksa as President BASL, accepting extended time as necessary with a heavy increase of crimes, as he said. A sorry interpretation of politics in understanding the total breakdown of law and order, corruption in law enforcement and the total consent in the regime to allow such politicised anarchy in enforcing law.
We thus have a legislature under the total control and dictates of the Executive and a regime now decided to take over the remaining third segment of governance, the judiciary, under its firm control to complete a “Constitutional Kleptocracy” (klepto = compulsion to steal + autocracy = complete one man rule). The irony remains, the Opposition is in no mood to leave aside its timid, compromising, conservatism in giving the people a political direction for a better future. That responsibility too is left with Citizen groups in debating, discussing a programme to move forward.
*Written on invitation for Sri Lankan Tamil magazine “Samakaalam” – 2012 December, 16 – 31 issue