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

Sunday, January 13, 2013


Statement on the execution of Rizana Nafeek

Sunday, 13 January 2013 
We, the undersigned, condemn in the strongest terms the beheading of Rizana Nafeek – the Sri Lankan domestic migrant worker convicted aged 17 in 2005, for the accidental death of an infant – in Saudi Arabia on the morning of 09 January 2013.
We are shocked at the decision of Saudi Arabia’s Interior Ministry, under Prince Mohammed bin Nayef bin Abdul Aziz, to expedite and carry out Nafeek’s execution despite repeated appeals by the Government of Sri Lanka, local civil society, the international human rights community, and members of her family.
We express our sincere condolences to the family of Rizana Nafeek in this time of national grief, and call upon the Government of Sri Lanka to swiftly extend them assistance in dealing with the aftermath of this tragedy.
We deplore the inadequacy of the Sri Lankan embassy in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and the lethargy of relevant state authorities including, but not limited to, the Ministry of External Affairs, the Ministry of Foreign Employment Promotion and Welfare, and the Sri Lanka Bureau of Foreign Employment, to assist Rizana Nafeek during the process of arrest, detention and court trial which she underwent without suitable legal counsel and proper interpretation; and the anaemic efforts of the authorities to obtain her release and safe return to Sri Lanka during her seven years on death row.
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1996 which categorically states that no child shall be subjected to torture and that neither capital punishment nor life imprisonment without possibility of release can be imposed for offences committed by persons below eighteen years of age.
We denounce the Government of Saudi Arabia for reneging its duties and commitment under the Child Rights Convention to protect all children under its jurisdiction without discrimination on any grounds and for sentencing a child of 17 years to death. We consider Rizana’s seven years of imprisonment, prior to execution, as ongoing psychological torture.
The Convention on the Rights of the Child also guarantees that any child accused of committing an offence is guaranteed legal or other appropriate assistance in the preparation and presentation of their defence, not be compelled to confess guilt, and to have the free assistance of an interpreter if the child cannot understand or speak the language used.
We call to account the Saudi Arabian police authorities which failed to provide the underage Rizana Nafeek with legal assistance and interpretation facilities when obtaining a confession and during Nafeek’s first appearance in Court when she was warned to repeat the confession, which she later withdrew as having been made under duress.
We demand that the Sri Lankan government enact and implement laws and policies on international labour migration which ensure the adequate protection of all migrant workers, especially women domestic migrant workers, as set out in the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and their Families which Sri Lanka ratified in 1995. All agreements signed with host country governments should be legally binding and include the human and labour rights of all migrant workers in keeping with the provisions, obligations, and spirit of the Migrant Workers Convention.
We demand changes in law and policy on human trafficking to strengthen the regulatory framework of foreign employment agencies, expand the definition of trafficking, and impose severe penalties on all those who engage in this heinous trade.
The Government of Sri Lanka should immediately summon the Ambassador of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in Colombo to formally protest the death of Rizana Nafeek; it should ban labour migration to Saudi Arabia and other countries which do not adhere to international human rights and labour standards, and are not willing to enter into legally binding agreements regarding the protection of migrant workers, and incorporate those rights in their domestic legal system.
At least now, late as it is, the Government of Sri Lanka should proactively resolve the situation of Sri Lankan migrant workers languishing in detention camps and prisons across all host countries, including in Saudi Arabia, some of whom are also under sentence of death.
We urge local and international stakeholders in the labour migration process including governments, private employment agencies, national human rights institutions, and civil society organisations, to combine their efforts to protect the rights of migrant workers, ensure their equal and humane treatment, and stop trafficking, to avert future miscarriages of justice such as the judicial killing of Rizana Nafeek on 9 January 2013.
Endorsed By:
Bishop Kumara Illangasinghe
Rev. Dr. Jayasiri Peiris
Fr. Samuel J Ponniah
Abdullah Muhsin                            Read more.  


Sri Lanka at the crossroads

Gulf News
The world cannot continue to tolerate the oppression and terror activities directed at minorities and Sri Lanka is no exception
By Tariq A. Al Maeena, Special to Gulf News-January 13, 2013

When Sri Lanka overcame the rebellious movement of the Tamil Tigers back in 2009, there was hope that the island nation would finally emerge stronger and more united.
The scars of the three-decade struggle by the Tamils had hurt the image of the country both politically and economically, as charges of unrestrained brutality and ethnic cleansing were levelled at the ruling party at the time.
The Tamil movement had led more than 150,000 Tamil Lankans to flee their country and seek refuge in other countries. Thousands of others — estimated between 80,000 to a 100,000 — lost their lives in the prolonged struggle, with some 40,000 casualties alone in the last days before the civil war was finally declared over.
With such deep wounds scarring the country, there were initial efforts by the government to forge reconciliation between the majority Buddhist Sinhalese and the minority Tamil Hindus and the Muslim population of the island.
Events lately suggest that all is not well in that country. There are signs that chasms are appearing, often in the form of violence against minorities. The island’s Muslim community is being targeted by race-inciting Sinhalese Buddhists, while the government appears to be condoning such attacks with their inaction.
Some opposition political figures charge that President Mahinda Rajapakse’s government “is again giving tacit support to communal provocations against Sri Lanka’s minorities in a bid to divide working people amid the country’s deepening economic and social crisis”.
In that the victims happen to be the minority sects in Sri Lanka, the political price of winning favour among the Sinhalese Buddhist majority far outweighs the peace and tranquillity that has once again deserted the island’s minority communities.
The Buddhist Power Force, better known as Bodu Bala Sena, is accused of being the leading terror group, inciting and organising violence against Muslims in all corners of the country.
Allied with the JHU party in the ruling coalition, this terror group is now claiming that the island’s Muslims are a threat to Buddhism and their way of life. They also assert that they will “strengthen and defend the Buddhist religion and its heritage,” using all options.
Their obvious aim is, in fear of an uprising, to ensure the continued suppression of the Muslim minority. However, they should not be in fear as in truth the two million Muslim minorities in Sri Lanka, who make up 10 per cent of the population, have been sidelined for decades.
Muslim Sri Lankans are rarely recruited in the armed forces, police or offered equal opportunities and perks in government departments and other state institutions. In the commercial and trade sectors, Muslims have also been marginalised by their exclusion from government contracts, tenders and all such lucrative economic activities.
There is also the obvious indifference displayed by the government towards the 130,000 Muslim refugees from the north who were caught in the crossfire of the civil war and today continue to languish in refugee camps in appalling conditions three and-a-half-years after the end of the conflict. No substantial government effort is being taken to address their plight.
Meanwhile, the Bodu Bala Sena began a series of provocations recently against Muslims in the central province at Buwelikada, a small town about 15km from Kandy. The town’s predominantly Muslim population is mostly small shop owners and vendors.
According to eyewitness accounts, “a group of Sinhalese youth travelling in a bus began a quarrel with Muslims, claiming that a van had obstructed the road. Several Muslims injured in the clash were hospitalised. The government immediately deployed units of the notorious police special task force (STF), whose members did not arrest the culprits, but instead were sympathetic towards the thugs”.
Muslims charge that such acts of vandalism and terror are orchestrated to poison the minds of mainstream Sinhalese against Muslims “by a small but well organised group demonising Islam and Muslims through 19 Sinhalese and English language websites”.
They point to the recent destruction of a 400-year-old Muslim shrine in Anuradhapura, followed by the disgraceful attack on Dambulla Mosque by a mob of Buddhist vandals led by the chief Buddhist priest of the area.
Ironically, the inaction on the part of the government led to this incident being recorded as the first time in the history of the country that a frenzied mob prevented Muslims from performing their obligatory Friday prayers and since then there have been attacks on a number of small mosques all over the country. However, a blind eye has been turned towards these atrocities by the authorities and the perpetrators have not been brought to justice.
The island country is at a crossroads today. If it continues to yield to the few terror-crazed Sinhalese Buddhists, who want to rid their country of all minorities and turn the countryside into killing fields, then it may well open up fresh wounds and begin another long journey into internal conflict and unrest.
The world cannot continue to tolerate the oppression and terror activities directed at minorities and Sri Lanka is no exception. It cannot distort facts to disguise ethnic hatred and violence. The island state will not escape reprisal for its failure to preserve the rights of its minority citizens.
Tariq A. Al Maeena is a Saudi socio-political commentator. He lives in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

Six men arrested in new Indian 'bus rape'


BBCThe suspects were shown hooded alongside Indian police

Police in India have arrested six men after they allegedly gang-raped a woman on a bus, just weeks after a similar attack shocked the nation.
The latest assault is said to have taken place in the northern state of Punjab. The police are searching for a seventh suspected attacker.
Last month, a 23-year-old student died of her injuries after being raped in the capital Delhi.
Five men have been charged with her murder and are facing trial.
If convicted, they face the death penalty.
A sixth suspect, who is thought to be 17, will be tried separately in a youth court if it is confirmed he is a minor.
The Delhi attack prompted mass protests which prompted the government to set up special fast-track courts to exclusively deal with rape cases and also consider strengthening sexual assault laws, the BBC's Sanjoy Majumder reports.
Night attack
Police officials say that the latest victim was a 29-year-old woman.
mapShe is believed to have been travelling on a bus back to her village on Friday night.
The driver and conductor allegedly refused to stop at her village, instead taking her to a desolate location not far from the city of Amritsar.
The two men are then believed to have been joined by five others and taken turns raping the woman throughout the night.
The victim was then dropped off near her village, where she was able to tell her relatives about the attack.
The extent of the woman's injuries were not immediately known.

President sacks Chief Justice

Termination letter delivered, her reaction unknown


January 13, 2013
Chief Justice Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake was served with a letter of dismissal, signed by President Mahinda Rajapaksa, yesterday.

The letter, dismissing her from office immediately, was hand delivered to the Chief Justice, at her official residence situated at the corner of Wijerama Mawatha and Bauddhaloka Mawatha before noon yesterday, according to government sources.

A presidential Secretariat media release said that the measure was taken "in accordance with the resolution passed by parliament on January 11, 2013".

"The President has said in his order that he was in agreement with the request for the removal of Chief Justice from office made in the said address of parliament," it said.

According to those who were watching the Chief Justice’s movements since the delivery of the letter, she had left her official residence in the afternoon in a red jeep of KIA make. It is believed that she was on her way to consult some judges and lawyers. Her official vehicle, was however parked underneath the front porch of her official residence.

Up to the eleventh hour, President Rajapaksa had been offering the CJ the opportunity to resign with all benefits due to such a high official, including the pension.

There was speculation that she might go for a constitutional showdown by refusing to quit, on the basis of the interpretation given by the Supreme Court, which stated that Standing Orders were not law. A three-Judge Bench also ruled that a parliamentary Select Committee had no legal power or authority to make a finding adversely affecting the legal rights of a judge. The Court of Appeal issued a writ of certiorari quashing the findings of the Parliamentary Select Committee that probed the charges levelled against her by the government.

On Saturday the president met all the Supreme Court judges, except the CJ, at the Presidential Secretariat and explained the events that led to the standoff between the executive and the legislature on the one hand and the judiciary on the other.

He had disclosed to the judges that the Chief Justice Bandaranayake had sought an extension till April with certain conditions, but he was not in favour of it.

13 Jan, 2013 -The 1978 Constitution Is Fulfilled

By Basil Fernando -January 13, 2013 |
Basil Fernando
Colombo TelegraphToday, with the President of Sri Lanka signing the removal notice of the Chief Justice of Sri Lanka, Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake, the 1978 constitution came to be fulfilled.
The 1978 constitution is a representation of the conflict between the rule of law and the absolute power of the executive president. The historical circumstances in 1978 were not right for the fulfillment of this constitution. 34 years later, with the progressive deterioration of all the positive factors of the previous period, the final fulfillment of the 1978 constitution has come. Now the rule of law as a logical system has no ground to stand on as the two basic principles, the separation of powers and the independence of the judiciary, can no longer be practically implemented.
In 1978, despite of the weakening of the system by the 1972 constitution, there were still many forces which were vigorously supportive of the rule of law system. First of all, and above all, there was the sentiment among the people that was formed by long enduring practices of respect for the rule of law. The British introduced the law as the organizational principle of the Sri Lankan society. They introduced laws to almost all aspects of life and these laws constituted the railroads on which all the institutions of Sri Lanka ran.
Over a period of 34 years, Sri Lankans witnessed the collapse of all the basic institutions in their society. The collapse of these institutions means that the basic principles of law on which these institutions were organized and operated have been seriously disturbed. Among the institutions which so collapsed were Sri Lanka’s policing system, the public service commission, the election commission, the system of controlling bribery and corruption, and the department of the Attorney General. The collapse of those institutions were recognized by the Sri Lankan parliament when they made a limited  attempt to give some life back to these institutions by way of the 17th amendment. When the 18th amendment was passed, that rescue attempt was abandoned and the very possibility of the survival of the multiparty system and the possibility of a genuinely elected legislature was brought to an end.
In 1978, there was also the necessary critical intellect that could support the rule of law system. The judges were still those of ‘the good old tradition,’ and so were the lawyers. However, during the last 34 years, there has been the deliberate undermining of the judiciary in many ways, which are well documented and commented on by many authors. As the judiciary was undermined, the lawyers experienced the nature of earthquake that was taking place and those who still wanted to survive had to adjust to the new environment.
However, the factor that undermined the judiciary and the legal practice more than any other was the active cooperation of President Chandrika Kumaranatunge and the then Chief Justice Sarath Nanda Silva to undermine the legal system in favor of the arbitrary power of the executive president. S N De Silva dealt the death blow to the whole system by unscrupulously manipulating every aspect of the judicial practice in Sri Lanka. He ignored the procedural aspect of law in a diabolical manner, and the rule of law rests as much on the procedural aspect as on the substantive aspect of law. All the nuts and bolts were loosened so that the system could not run anymore.
However, officially, lip service was done to the principle of the independence of judiciary and, while the internal system was in great jeopardy, a façade of respect for the system remained.
With the impeachment and then manner of its conduct, this screen was lifted. Belatedly realizing that the final hour has come, the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal, in what will remain as historical judgments, made an attempt to come to the rescue of the system.
The lawyers and judges also rallied with the kind of solidarity that has never been witnessed before. It was as if all relatives were gathering together on realizing that one of their dear ones was now critically ill. They tried to make a proverbial last minute intervention.
However, those who wanted the system to be dead wanted it to be dead sooner than later. The same hand that crushed the rescue operation by way of the 17th amendment has now decisively signed the declaration of death of the independence of judiciary and the rule of law.
What the Sri Lankans will face now is a completely new situation. In previous statements and articles we have tried to sketch what is waiting for the Sri Lankan society as whole, in all Sri Lankan institutions.
The question that will remain to be answered is as to how the people of Sri Lanka will find their way to a living under a system of law that will protect their liberties.
The system that was based on the ideas of John Locke, Baron de Montesquieu, Jean-Jaques Rousseau and others, which were the basis of French, British, American and all the best constitutional traditions of liberty, has come to an end today.
The experimentation of authoritarianism, which also has traditional foundations from around the world, will be what Sri Lanka experiences now.
The way out is for the present and future generations of Sri Lankans to work out if they are to enjoy the protection of their liberties by the state again.
However imperfect ‘the good old tradition’ was, it was one based on the global tradition of liberty. What is to come will be the opposite of that tradition.
Perhaps a source for hope could be Tolstoy’s short story, “What Men Live By”, which is a good read for an occasion such as this.
For an extensive discussion on 1978 constitution, kindly read Gyges’ Ring – The 1978 Constitution of Sri Lanka, which is available on the internet.

An unprecedented constitutional crisis in Sri Lanka elicits a yawn

13 Jan, 2013
 Lanka’s Parliament debated the impeachment of the country’s Chief Justice over two days last week.
In the course of these debates, and akin to the critical submissions by him during the equally chaotic and pivotal debate on the 18th Amendment in September 2010, Tamil National Alliance MP M.A. Sumanthiran delivered one of the most widely quoted speeches against the impeachment and in particular, the Icarean stance of the President and members of the ruling party that Parliament was above and beyond the purview of the Courts.
After announcing that it would be Sumanthiran’s turn to speak, and in the midst of mindless shouting and general chaos in the Chambers, presiding over one of the most important debates in Parliament ever, what does the Deputy Speaker do?
He yawns.
And in that precise moment, moments before Sumanthiran’s submission that was, as in 2010 – frequently and rudely interrupted – one saw the Rajapaksa regime’s real interest in, and capacity to engage with constitutional governance.
A video of the MP’s submission can be viewed below in the quality it was recorded and sent toGroundviews.

Dr. Bandaranayake remains the CJ- Lawyers Collective

SUNDAY, 13 JANUARY 2013
The Lawyers Collective in a statement categorically reiterated that Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake remains the Chief Justice, notwithstanding being unconstitutionally removed.

It also said that “We salute her for her courage, leadership and steadfastness in facing one of the most unreasonable and irrational inquiries ever faced by a person holding such an exalted office of the Head of Judiciary in a democratic country.”

The full statement:

"We salute the Chief Justice for her courage & She remains the Chief Justice"

H.E President Mahinda Rajapaksa's purported letter of removal has been received by the Chief Justice. The Lawyers Collective states that this removal affects the very foundation of independence of the Judiciary, the Rule of Law and all basic norms of a working democracy.  The politically motivated process of removal of the Chief Justice was nothing but   a misuse and abuse of Constitutional provisions and Standing Orders.

The Executive and Legislature deliberately ignored the constitutional interpretation by the Supreme Court and the decision of the Court of Appeal quashing the decision of the impeachment report by the Government Members of the Select Committee of Parliament. With this impeachment, the Government of Sri Lanka has demonstrated that it will not respect the Constitution and the Judiciary. The manner in which the impeachment process was conducted, in and outside parliament, by the government, the state media and the government-sponsored goons leaves the country with unforgettable memories of a horror period in our history.

The conscience of the nation and the BAR is disturbed & is in anguish-and will never accept the illegal &unconstitutional removal of the Chief Justice.  We have no doubt that in the annals of history, Chief Justice Bandaranayake would be remembered as a judge who did not succumb to pressure and who held the scale of justice without fear or favour. We salute her for her courage, leadership and steadfastness in facing one of the most unreasonable and irrational inquiries ever faced by a person holding such an exalted office of the Head of Judiciary in a democratic country.  The Lawyers Collective categorically reiterates that Hon. Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake remains the Chief Justice, notwithstanding being unconstitutionally removed.

Sri Lanka president sacks chief justice Bandaranayake

BBCShirani Bandaranayake denies all the allegations
Chief Justice Shirani BandaranayakeSri Lanka's president has dismissed Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake by ratifying parliament's recent vote to impeach her, officials say.
They say the letter signed by President Mahinda Rajapakse was delivered to Dr Bandaranayake's office.
The parliament, dominated by Mr Rajapakse's supporters, impeached her on suspicion of corruption - an allegation she denies.
However, recent court rulings said the process was unconstitutional.
'Frightening' behaviour
Dr Bandaranayake, 54, faced an 11-member parliamentary committee in November which investigated 14 charges of financial and official misconduct against her.
She was found guilty of professional misconduct the following month.
Lawyers close to the country's first woman chief justice confirmed that she had received the presidential notice, but Dr Bandaranayake has so far not commented on the latest development.
There is now a possibility that she may refuse to quit, as Sri Lanka's highest courts - the Supreme Court and the Appeal Court - last month quashed the impeachment process as irregular and illegal, the BBC's Charles Haviland in Colombo reports.
Sri Lanka's opposition says Colombo turned against the judge it once favoured because she made court rulings that did not suit the president - the authorities deny this.
The government has repeatedly brought thousands of its supporters to the streets declaring Dr Bandaranayake corrupt - a message echoed by the obedient state media, our correspondent says.
But he adds that the government's disregard for the Supreme Court has triggered international and domestic dismay.
The usually cautious Sunday Times newspaper has described its behaviour as "frightening".
And a prominent Sri Lankan diplomat, Dayan Jayatilleka, said he was "appalled" at the parliament's non-adherence to the rulings of the judiciary.
Sri Lankan analysts have also warned that the sacking could trigger a constitutional crisis and leave the courts paralysed.
Lawyers have already been boycotting court proceeding, protesting against the impeachment process.
They have also warned they will not recognise Dr Bandaranayake's replacement who is expected to be appointed by the president.



Constitutional La-la Land: Only In Sri Lanka, Nowhere Else In The World!

Colombo TelegraphBy Rajan Philips -January 12, 2013 
Rajan Philips
“Extraordinary things are taking place right now in Sri Lanka – things which could not be found in anywhere else in the world.” -  President Rajapaksa, at the ‘Swarna Purawara’ ceremony, Temple Trees, 9 January
In a famous exchange between GK Chesterton and Bernard Shaw, GK poked fun at Shaw that if visitors to Britain were to see Mr. Shaw they would think there was famine in Britain.  “And when they see you”, Shaw shot back, “they will know why.”  For young readers not familiar with the two English literary figures of the early-mid 20th century, GKC was very portly and Shaw was very skinny.
So when the President of Sri Lanka says that “Extraordinary things are taking place right now in Sri Lanka – things which could not be found in anywhere else in the world,” we know that the President and his government are the reason why such things are happening in the land.  Not just us, even the President has only to look into a mirror to see why extraordinary things are happening.  If he is not satisfied with the mirror image, he can look at his brothers to see why they are happening.  On his watch, parliament has just done the most extraordinary thing in Sri Lanka’s constitutional history.  The President himself is set to follow suit and issue an extraordinary order to remove Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayakefrom office.
Almost for the first time after decades of internal and external manipulations, the Supreme Court found its voice to give a ruling to protect the rights of the subject against the power of the rulers.  The Court did not deal with the question of supremacy, it adroitly sidestepped the issue of separation of powers under Article 4 of the Constitution, and it addressed the only issue that matters: whether it is fair or just for parliament to make, investigate and rule on allegations against a judge under procedural standing orders without providing for it by law.  The Court concluded that “in a state ruled by a constitution based on the rule of law” the impeachment process can be sanctioned “only by law and by law only” and not by Standing Orders. How could anyone quibble with this?
Willful undermining of the Judiciary
The government opted to answer with the muscle of a two-thirds majority in parliament and the force of goon squads on the streets of Colombo.  The Speaker in his wisdom chose not to issue another baseless broadside against the courts.  And the task of attacking the courts fell to other hired guns.  Leading the pack was former Chief Justice Sarath Silva who caviled at the ruling for not taking “any notice of the words ‘by Standing Orders’ in Article 107-3 of the Constitution which reads, “Parliament shall by law or by Standing Orders provide for all matters relating to an impeachment”.  It is funny he should say that, for in his day the former Chief Justice appeared to  many as if he was not taking any notice of either spirit or the letter of the “law” in dealing with the rights of others.   In contrast, the three judges of the present Supreme Court who ruled on the impeachment question took notice of both ‘by law’ and ‘by standing orders’ and determined that law and law alone, and not Standing Orders, that should govern the impeachment process inasmuch as it involves the rights of a citizen.
The state media seemed to pull a fast one to discredit the court rulings.  On Friday, the Daily News carried a news item and an article to announce that a “brilliant legal luminary”, LJM Cooray, has concluded that the impeachment was “full in order” and that the “PSC has fulfilled all requirements.”  But Cooray’s long article is sandwich scholarship: between seven or eight introductory paragraphs and the final citation paragraph of Cooray’s impressive credentials, is sandwiched, in its entirety and with due attribution, the Sunday Island political column article that appeared on December 23, 2012.  In fairness, only the first part of Cooray’s article appeared last Friday and the rest including Cooray’s “analysis” is to come next week.  In the meantime, we could reflect on what Ludwig Wittgenstein said of a false news story in a newspaper: the story will not become true if people buy fifty copies of the newspapers and read the same story.  Nor will it become true, we might add, if it is reproduced in other newspapers.
That said, Dr. Cooray observes in his article that there is no perfect constitution in the world, that in Sri Lanka each constitution was progressively made more imperfect, and that “the source of our problems today around the independence of the judiciary is the two immediately prior Constitutions. The 1948 Constitution was neutral and British conventions relating to independence of the judiciary were observed. The following Constitutions willfully undermined the independence of the judiciary.” Without waiting for further analysis, we could rhetorically ask the question, has there ever been an instance in Sri Lanka when the independence of the judiciary was more willfully undermined than at the present time with the impeachment of the Chief Justice?
Dr. NM Perera, in his Critical Analysis of the 1978 Constitution, insightfully observed that “institutional perfection is no antidote for human imperfections and perversities.” NM was referring to the transgressions ofFelix Dias Bandaranaike against the judiciary during the 1970-77 period.  Felix, NM asserted, was acting in spite of the 1972 constitution and not in conformity with it.  So did JR Jayewardene in undermining the judiciary in spite of his own constitution and the solemn assurances to protect the independence of the judiciary.  JRJ and Felix Dias were third generation lawyers from leading lawyer families, and yet they became embodiments of imperfection and perversity in undermining the judiciary.  What they started has now descended to its worst depths under a regime that has too little to show by way of forensic pedigrees, and too much to offer by way of perversity, dishonesty and the lack of attributes that are fundamental to good governance.
Constitutional la-la land
“The Supreme Court judgment is not worth the paper it is written on,” External Affairs Minister GL Peiris is reported to have scoffed during the impeachment debate in parliament.  That is an assertion and not an argument, unworthy of the Minister’s stellar reputation as a law professor but in keeping with his spineless record as a politician.  Never known for making legal arguments, Vasudeva Nanayakkara resorted to cursing that the “Supreme Court could go to hell if it did not change its course.”  It is not the court that is going to hell, but it is the country that is heading to constitutional la-la land.
The President and the government may or may not have a problem in finding someone who is thick skinned enough to accept appointment as the new Chief Justice, acting or permanent.  But even if they were to find one, the present incumbent could challenge that appointment in court.  There will then be two Chief Justices – a legal CJ and a political CJ; but neither will be functional, so no CJ for a while.  Although Shirani Bandaranayake could challenge through the courts her removal and the appointment of her successor, she will not be able to function as CJ.  The government will make sure that she will not be able to function.
At the same time, a new Chief Justice, the political CJ, will have difficulty in getting full acceptance and cooperation among the associate justices of the Supreme Court and the judges of the Court of Appeal.  It would be morally and professionally impossible for the three justices, Gamini Amaratunga, K. Sripavan, and Privasath Dep, who made the historic ruling on New Year’s Day – through the mode of objective inquiry and in faithful fulfillment of their oaths of office, to accept the appointment of a new Chief Justice and work with that person.  The government would of course like to see the three Supreme Court judges and their counterparts in the Court of Appeal resign, but they will likely not resign.  Why should they?  They could instead leave it to the government to fire them if it wants to. By being fired, they could claim compensation for lost career and let the government take further political heat for monkeying with the judiciary.  The government would of course like to pack the judiciary with puppets and have the recent impeachment rulings overturned. The more likely scenario, however, would be an unhealthy stalemate in the superior courts.
The government will try to manage, or ‘shape’, in the midst of protests without overly antagonizing the lower echelons of the judiciary and the legal profession, and by playing favours among them.  The system is so rotten that it is more advantageous for individuals to politically fall in line than to push back and fight.  The lower courts may go back to normal business but there will be chaos if the courts’ rulings are not accepted at one level or another.  If the government can disobey the Supreme Court ruling, why cannot somebody else disobey the rulings of other courts?  The government could direct law enforcement officers to enforce the lower court rulings, but enforcement would become selective in an environment that is corrupt overall.  Some court rulings may turn out to be more important than others.  If parliament can punish the Chief Justice under standing orders, what is there to prevent subsidiary legislative bodies – from the Provincial Councils to Pradeshiya Sabhas – to have their own by-laws and procedures to punish their enemies, and acquit their family and friends from normal court proceedings?
The chaotic situation that the Court of Appeal warned earlier is about to unfold. But as I wrote two weeks ago, this government likes chaos, because in a chaotic situation it can do what it wants with no questions asked and no one to answer to. The government would be happy to have a stalemated Supreme Court as long as possible because it can avoid constitutional challenges to legislative and executive actions affecting people’s rights.  But the government’s undoing will be its arrogance, arbitrary entitlements, and overreaching.  It has been pushing the limits of political and social tolerance in one instance after another.  Alas, at every stage, as in the case of the current impeachment crisis, the government has been able to avoid a decisive political challenge thanks to the political impotence of the Opposition UNP Party and its leader.

Sri Lanka faces constitutional crisis as president sacks chief justice

The Independent
SUNDAY 13 JANUARY 2013
Sri Lanka is facing a deepening constitutional crisis after President Mahinda Rajapaksa went ahead and sacked its most senior judge – a move that critics say undermines the independence of the country’s judiciary.
In step many have claimed was inspired by a desire to remove someone who had blocked several government bills, Mr Rajapaksa on Sunday ratified a vote by the parliament to remove chief justice Shirani Bandaranayake.
“President Mahinda Rajapaksa signed this morning the order removing chief justice Dr Shirani Bandaranayake from office with immediate effect in accordance with the resolution passed by Parliament on January 11, 2013,” said a statement issued by the president’s office. “The removal order was delivered this morning to the official residence of Ms Bandaranayake.”
The move follows months of stand-off between Mr Rajapaksa and his supporters and an increasingly vocal judiciary and legal community which has claimed the moves are undermining the independence of one of the few institutions in Sri Lanka not under the pervasive influence of the government.
Critics say that since 2009, when the government defeated Tamil rebels, Mr Rajapaksa has squandered opportunities for reconciliation and instead intimidated and jailed his opponents and silenced much of the media. One critic, former general Sanath Fonseka, who led the war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam but later challenged Mr Rajapaksa in a a presidential election, was jailed for three years.
Ms Bandaranayake, 54, has declined to make any public statement since the crisis began in November, when the government began proceedings to remove her.
But her lawyer, Saliya Peiris, told The Independent, the chief justice had not recognised the legitimacy of the directive given to her by Mr Rajapaksa. “She has received the letter from the president and as far as she is concerned she is not going to recognise the legality of her ouster,” he said. “But as far as her next step, I cannot tell you at this stage.”
The decision to act against the chief justice has been widely condemned by Sri Lanka’s legal community as well as international bodies. Lawyers have boycotted the courts since last week’s vote by parliament to impeach Ms Bandaranayake and the Bar Association of Sri Lanka has urged the legal community not to recognise any new chief justice appointed by the president.
 “The association strongly, unequivocally and with no reservations whatsoever condemns the decision to take up for debate the impeachment motion against...the chief justice,” it said in a statement,
Members of Mr Rajapaksa’s United People’s Freedom Alliance ruling coalition started efforts to impeach Ms Bandaranayake last year amid claims she had acted unconstitutionally. A panel set up by the parliament found her guilty of involving herself in a case focussing on a company from which her sister had bought an apartment.
Ms Bandaranayake said she did not receive a fair hearing and left the committee’s session. A Supreme Court bench subsequently found the panel had no legal jurisdiction to investigate the allegations levelled at the chief justice and another senior court said parliament could take no further action against her. In proceeding with a vote last Friday, the parliament has ignored the rulings of the courts.
“There has been a judgement, and the parliament has decided the judgement was wrong and has acted to ignore it,” said one lawyer, Manjuka Fernandopulle.
One leading opposition politician, Mangala Samaraweera, said the move underscored the “dictatorial nature” of the government.
 “This is something we have been talking about for a long time. I think this impeachment has finally exposed the true face of the administration,” he said. “And this is something the international community should take note of, especially since the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting is due to take place in Sri Lanka later this year.”
Many observers believe the government moved against the chief justice after she stalled a series of government bills she claimed were unconstitutional. Among them was the so-called Divineguma bill, a piece of legislation that would have devolved certain powers held by the provincial authorities and handed greater political and financial power to Mr Rajapaksa’s youngest brother Basil, who is the economic development minister.
No-one from the president’s office could immediately be contacted for comment. However, Mohan Samaranayake, a spokesman for the Mr Rajapaksa, told the AFP that he had acted constitutionally after 155 of parliament’s 225 members voted to go ahead with the impeachment of the chief justice. He added: “The letter was hand-delivered to her by a secretary accompanied by presidential security staff.”