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

Thursday, January 17, 2013

CJ :I am innocent , our security is in the hands of the people – thanks ; leaves official residence
(Lanka-e-News -16.Jan.2013, 11.30PM) A most shameful and repugnant situation was created at the official residence of the Chief justice located at Wijerama Mawatha when policemen intruded into it and stationed themselves from last morning even inside the rooms ,whereby the chief justice (CJ) was not allowed the right to privacy to change even her clothes. The CJ was unarmed but the regime was fully armed. In order to avert conflicts , the household goods in her official residence were removed by her in yesterday morning , and she left the premises in the evening at about 5.30

Though there were the local and international media expecting her to make a speech before she left , a police scoundrel Premalal Ranagala ordered the media to leave. The media then retorted that they were in the highway . When Ranagala pointed out that was a high security zone , and they must leave, the media questioned , how is that Ceylinco depositors were allowed to erect shelters and stay there in that zone recently for many days eating kiribath?

Ranagala alias Balugala who was nonplussed , tried to defend himself by claiming that Ms. Shiranee Bandaranaike is no longer the CJ . But the media insisted that they will wait until the new CJ arrived. 

When the CJ came out , Ranagala lived up to his name Balugala by behaving like a hooligan when dispersing the crowds that had converged. The vehicle to fetch the CJ was driven by her son . After the shutter was put down , the media wanted her to make a comment. 
“I am sorry I did not get an opportunity to thank any one. I will issue a communiqué .I performed my duties for the last 16 years with dedication and abiding by the laws. I always thought of the people. I shall be so in the future too. I am always with the people whom I love. I am innocent. I carried out my duties for the last 32 years without taking leave. I have never taken a vehicle permit. The security for the three of us is in the hands of the public. Thank you very much.” She made these comments to the media amidst much obstruction from Ranagala alias Balugala, the police scoundrel. (See the video - http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=_h9kLf1E15c)
During the demonstrations staged at Aluthkade this morning , Watagala , attorney at law explained , over 5000 students are going to the University and Rs. 50000 million in funds of lakhs of Samurdhi recipients had been protected owing to the CJ .Yet it is this same CJ who had been driven to the streets without the pension , he bemoaned.
This is the Status Report of the Lawyers Collective
ISSUED ON 15th January 2013: 9.00 p.m.
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On 14th January, around 7.00 pm the Secretary to the President and DIG Anura Senanyaka required the Registrar of the Supreme Court to pack all belongings of the Chief Justice (Dr. Bandarayaka) and send the same to her official residence. The Registrar had also been told that a new Chief Justice would arrive on the following day and everything must be cleared for him. In the night, on 14th January, a large number of Defence personnel had occupied the Superior Court Complex.

On 15th January, early hours the Supreme Court Complex was cordoned off and was fortified with riot squads, barricades and water cannons. All the vehicles including that of the lawyers were checked to see whether Chief Justice Bandaranayaka was entering the Court premises. Police officers openly said that they received orders not to permit the Chief Justice Bandaranayaka to enter Courts Complex. Around 9.45 am the road leading to Supreme Court Judges’ Entrance (Adhikarana Mawatha ) was sealed off. Armed police and STF personnel prevented people entering the Courts complex or its vicinity.

Around 10.30 am, approximately 200 people (including some goons) accompanied by Government politicians entered the cordoned off area, with active protection from the police. They stayed in one group opposite the main entrance to the Supreme Court Complex, shouting slogans (cheering the President, new Chief Justice, Wijedasa Rajapaksa-President BASL and BASL).

The Media was not permitted within the Courts premises. However, a large number of media personnel were present outside the main entrance to the Courts Complex. When two lawyers walked out of the Courts premises to talk to the media and to invite the media inside the Court Premises, the armed police and senior police officers prevented the two lawyers re-entering into the Courts premises. Several lawyers gathered and protested to the police for barricading the Courts and blocking the entrance. However, with the intervention of the lawyers, the two lawyers managed to re-enter. Around 12.00 noon, a large number of lawyers held a day light vigil (holding candles in broad day light) symbolizing the onset of darkness in the days to come.
Mr. Mohan Peiris PC was sworn in as a Chief Justice and arrived in the Courts complex around 1.30pm.

Lady Chief Justice’s residence was cordoned off and senior Police Officers were seen even within the premises. The Chief Justice was told by Police Officers that she cannot speak to the media in the official residence, as she is no longer the Chief Justice. The media gathered outside the residence was asked to leave by the police. They resisted and remained. The journalists reminded the Police of Golden Key depositors protests, who camped outside the official residence with the blessings of the Government and who had full media coverage, with police protection. When the Lady Chief Justice came out of the residence, she was prevented from speaking to the media freely but managed she managed to speak few words from the vehicle, stating that she and her family need protection. She thereafter issued a written statement in all three languages. (LeN published it on yesterday)

SRI LANKA: Unleashing a period of terror again

January 17, 2013
With the law, the legal institutions and the courts diminishing in value secret agencies are surfacing quite openly once again. The presence of the military and the police the night before Mohan Peiris was sworn in as chief justice and also during the day itself and the ferocious manner in which the Chief Justice, Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake, was escorted out of her official residence are images that were designed to terrorise the lawyers and citizens who were anxious and bewildered by what is taking place.  

However, yesterday another move was started. This was the sending of threatening letters by a group that identified themselves as a patriotic taskforce. They named lawyers who participated in the movement for the independence of the judiciary as traitors, bent on destroying what has been achieved with a great blood sacrifice. Any kind of protest is portrayed as a war against the great warrior who is now ruling Sri Lanka after gaining a victory at enormous sacrifice. Such was the message given to the lawyers. Not only were the lawyers named and identified as targets for their activities but also their spouses were also named. The wording of the letter states that this is the first warning. The warning of what exactly, they do not state. However, from past experience it is quite clear that these are warnings of assassination. 

Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake herself left her official premises and despite the fact that there was a blatant attempt to refuse her the opportunity of making a statement to the assembled press, among the things she said was, "Please look after the three of us". That is the kind of terror that is once again being unleashed and brought to the surface. When the law, the legal institutions and the courts diminish in value the vacuum has to be occupied by something else and that something else is terror! And the agency behind the terror is the Ministry of Defence. It has vast resources as well as trained personnel including the paramilitary forces which carry out the orders given by the Ministry which need not be justified in terms of any law or regulation. When the lawyers asked under what law the entrance to the Supreme Court was closed on the 15th there was no answer. When the media personnel were not allowed to enter the premises the lawyers protested to the police, who attended in force, stating that there was no law to prevent the journalists from entering the premises. However, the police simply ignored the question and continued to prevent the journalists from entering. 

Then when the media asked the Chief Justice to make a statement as she was leaving their questions were shouted down by a senior police officer and many others who virtually chased the car carrying Dr. Bandaranayake in order to ensure that she had no opportunity to make a statement. 

Now the lawyers and others who participated in these protests have to live in their houses in fear taking great precautions for their security. In one's own country the alienation of individuals has come to a point where it is only with the provision of security for himself and his family that he can live. Naturally, individual lawyers and others are not able to provide such security for themselves against the overwhelming power of large numbers of police, military and paramilitary forces that the intelligence services.

Threats of assassination to lawyers and their spouses

Three lawyers from Mannar have received the threatening letters as have several other lawyers from Colombo. In Mannar a few months ago a magistrate was threatened by a government minister and Magistrate's Court and High Court were attacked. There is a contempt of court action against Rishard Bathuidin and also criminal charges against him and several others. It is obvious that the threats against the Mannar lawyers are directed towards the withdrawal of these cases by way of threatening the lawyers and witnesses. 

In Colombo a petition challenging the appointment of Mohan Peiris as the chief justice is pending. Although in terms of the tradition this case should have been fixed for argument immediately, no date has been fixed for lawyers to support this case. Obviously, threats against the lawyers in Colombo are directed towards intimidating the lawyers who would support this petition or file other actions.

There is also some contempt of court cases filed against some media personnel whose utterances or writings have contained statements alleged to constitute contempt of court. Obviously, one of the purposes of the intimidation campaign that is going on now is to force the withdrawal of these cases.

Above all it has been the position of the lawyers that the Court of Appeal order in issuing the Writ of Certiori on the basis of the Supreme Court's interpretation of Article 107(3) of the Constitution invalidates all measures taken to remove Dr. Bandaranayake as the Chief Justice. On that basis they have stated that the appointment of Mohan Peiris lacks legitimacy. One of primary causes of the intimidation campaign is to stop lawyers raising objections on the basis of the absence of legitimacy against the actions of Mohan Peiris. 

Periods of terror
There have been periods of terror over and over again in Sri Lanka. Such a period has begun again. Behind the increase of this terror is the fear of the government that their actions do not appear to be legitimate. There is no political myth by which the people's loyalty might be guaranteed and the people are beginning to see some kind of rationale by which they can no longer justify the actions of the state in denying the elementary right to an honest and genuine enquiry into the charges made against the Chief Justice. Many others are not charged and others are punished without charges. The agencies that carry out the punishment are given secrecy to enable them to send threatening letters and of course the complaints about such threats are not investigated by anybody. There is no one to seek protection from and the courts are no longer places where the individuals can go to for protection. Instead at the top of the judiciary there now sits a person whose loyalty to his political master is so clear that no one will go into his presence in order to complain about the threats they are receiving. 

All voices for restraint ignored
The voices of the Mahanayakes and other religious leaders have also lost any kind of value to the point that anything they say is completely ignored. They themselves complain that what they say does not matter at all. The media is suppressed and not allowed to carry these messages to the public through print or in other forms. Instead, every morning begins with a Sinhalese or Tamil programme through the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation, which without any visible standard of decency creates the message of violence and indulges in character assassinations naming people as traitors, robbers and thieves and even openly cursing people, saying they are a menace to society. The programmes go on to ask that lightning should fall on these people. Thus, every morning begins with a terrorising programme to create psychological conditions of fear in anyone that has a dissenting voice. Indeed, every dissenting voice is identified as a traitor who is trying to fight against the great warrior who has protected the people by winning a great war. 

To be a reasonable thinking person in Sri Lanka is now an offense. It is a crime that could be punishable with death by secret agencies with enormous experiences in carrying out extrajudicial killings in large numbers. A tradition which goes back to 1971 remains where extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, abductions, torture, illegal treatment and every kind of terrorising is allowed. 

Such is Sri Lanka in January 2013. This is beginning of a period of terror which may be worse than any similar period in the past because the law and the courts are no longer there to protect the citizens of Sri Lanka. 

The voices of two women, one a prominent journalist who had to leave the country, Fredericka Jansz, stating that, "My children need a Mum and not a heroine" and the Chief Justice, Dr. Shirani Bandaranayaka, saying, "Please look after the three of us, are symbolic of the fear psychosis that prevails now. 

Govt. wanted to appoint one of its associates as CJ – SL

logoTHURSDAY, 17 JANUARY 2013 
The appointment of Mohan Peiris as the Chief justice indicates the real interest of the government of removing Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake from the post and appointing one of its associates to the position says Senior Lawyer S.L. Gunasekera.
He further states the step taken by the government to appoint Mr. Mohan Peiris as the CJ shows that it has no regard for the independence of the judiciary or regarding taking measures against fraud and corruption.
Mr. Gunasekera said Mr. Mohan Peiris, as a person who had been accused, should not have accepted the post if he had an iota of self respect.

President explains Mohan Peiris’ appointment

Wednesday, 16 January 2013 
Most of the President’s confidantes asked him not to appoint Mohan Peiris to the post of Chief Justice. Among those who opposed Peiris were the architect of the impeachment motion against the former Chief Justice, Minister Basil Rajapaksa and Sinhala Buddhist forces like Ministers Wimal Weerawansa and Champika Ranawaka. Even Attorney and Minister Vasudeva Nanayakkara who helped the breakdown of the judiciary had opposed Peiris’ appointment.
However, the President had explained the political importance of appointing Peiris to the post, which most of the persons who had opposed the appointment had failed to see.
Sources from Temple Trees said the President had explained to his closest advisors and others the reason for appointing Peiris as the Chief Justice.
The President had said several reasons for appointing Peiris and said that everyone would understand the importance in the appointment and that he could not have found any one more loyal than Peiris to the post.
Following are the reasons for appointing Peiris:
1.Peiris had only three years left for retirement.
2.Six Supreme Court judges are to retire next year after reaching the age of 65.
3.The government would not have to face any challenge from the judiciary for the next three years.
4.The interpretations of the new Chief Justice would be essential for issues related to the nest Presidential and other elections.
5.Opposition political parties are likely to file election petitions for the undemocratic acts that would have to be engaged in during the next elections for a government victory. In such an event, the decisions would be favourable to the government.
6.The inability to find someone as loyal as Peiris given his loyalties shows as the Cabinet advisor, founding Managing Director of Rakna Lanka under the Defence Secretary and Chairman of the Seylan Bank.

Wijedasa gives information about Mervyn to the President

Wednesday, 16 January 2013
Sources from temple Trees say that there’s a cold war brewing between the President and Public Affairs and Public relations Minister Mervyn Silva. Sources said that the persons involved in the murder of Kelaniya Pradeshiya Sabha member Hasitha Madawela had been captured by the police due to this reason.
The reason is the recent statement made by Mervyn on the ITN channel that Wijedasa Rajapakshe was a no good lawyer. The programme had been telecast on ITN on the night an unidentified gunman had shot at Rajapakshe’s residence. Mervyn had mad evarious derogatory statements about Rajapakshe throughout the programme.
The day after the programme was telecast, Mervyn had telephoned one of his key lackeys Ranjan Silva alias Kalu Ranja. Mervyn had said, “Machang, you and I are from the South, but I’m sad about what happened to you. I was given a programme on ITN to appear in. I was asked to hit at you, so I had to. Those are bosses orders and I have to carry them. Don’t take notice of what I said.”
It is a well known secret that Rajapakshe lends his monies to businessmen through Kalu Ranja.
A few days after the incident, President’s Counsel and Minister Faizer Musthapha had telephone Rajapakshe and told him that the President wanted him to contest again for the post of Bar Association President. A disgruntled Rajapakshe had told Musthapha about the entire telephone conversation that with Mervyn had taken place a few days earlier.
Rajapakshe had said he would not be contesting for the post in the Bar Association again.
Soon after the telephone call, Musthapha had gone to Temple Trees and informed the President of what Rajapakshe had said.
Our sources say that the President has now ordered an investigation into Mervyn’s actions, his statements and people whom he is associating.

BASL And Wijedasa Had Their Own Concerns?

By Vishvamithra -
Colombo TelegraphJanuary 16, 2013 
Until the ‘cordial meeting’ held with the President Rajapaksa on 14th Jan 2013, the Bar Association headWijedasa Rajapakshe, was firmly of the view that rule of law should prevail in the country and there cannot be two CJs (one legitimate another illegitimate). In short he was of the view that no one should be allowed to undermine the integrity of the judiciary and that all alike should respect the Court System and all determinations made by the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal.
Yet, when Mohan Peiris arrived at the Supreme Court premises the general membership of the bar observed something fishy and strange. The government supporters hailed both Wijedasa Rajapakshe and Mohan Peiris followed by a statement by the bar that it was willing to cooperate with the illegitimate CJ Mohan Peiris.
The membership of the bar, feels that the head of the Bar effectively deceived them. They sensed that both the general membership and the general public that opposed the oppressive, arrogant and lawless regime has been betrayed by Wijedasa Rajapakshe, the kind of total breakdown of the integrity eaten into the entire social fabric in this country.
As happened in Pakistan recently, when some members demanded the Association the total stoppage of work until the legitimate CJ is recalled and restored to the office, it was opposed by the Executive Committee, on the basis that 48 hour token stoppage of work is adequate to display the dissent of the Bar, which in any event the President Rajapakse would have appreciated, even 72 hours of stoppage of work. Effectively the Executive committee of the Bar disregarded the offer made by the JSA (Association of Magistrates and Judges in the District Courts) that they would fully standby any decision taken by the bar that would lead to restore the rule of law.
In this backdrop, the people of this country, indiscriminate battered by the deceptive leadership and helpless would only raise the question, as to the morale integrity of this so-called professional body, which some members of public referred as ‘black coats’ and about the false leadership it offered to the public, at a time there was a total breakdown of the law and order in the country.

President Mahinda Rajapakse is not merely impervious to foreign criticism — he thrives off it

SRI LANKA BRIEF

THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 2013

AFP /His sacking of Sri Lanka’s chief justice may have prompted new international condemnation, but analysts say President Mahinda Rajapakse is not merely impervious to foreign criticism — he thrives off it.
Already cold-shouldered by the West after the bloody end to an ethnic conflict, Rajapakse drew further flak this weekend by sealing the impeachment of Shirani Bandaranayake and then installing a government adviser in her place as the country’s most senior judge.

The US State Department said the impeachment “raises serious questions about the separation of powers in Sri Lanka, which is a fundamental tenet of a healthy democracy.”
The Commonwealth, the European Union and former colonial power Britain have also weighed in against Colombo.
But according to Gareth Price, a senior research fellow at the London-based Chatham House think-tank, Sri Lanka pays little heed to the chorus of disapproval from Western capitals as it continues to receive crucial support from China.
“Given that Western criticism of the army’s actions at the end of the civil war had little impact on the government, it is unlikely to worry about the response to the impeachment,” Price told AFP.
Tamil politician Dharmalingam Sithadthan said that far from weakening him, the president was strengthened by such criticism.
“He projects foreign powers as the new enemy of the state and he is fighting them,” Sithadthan told AFP. “All this international criticism helps him in a big way to increase his support locally.”
Colombo has rejected allegations that up to 40,000 civilians were killed by security forces in the final months of a no-holds-barred offensive that ended a 37-year Tamil separatist war that had claimed about 100,000 lives.
Despite being censured by the UN Human Rights Council, Rajapakse’s electoral showing has gone from strength to strength and his United People’s Freedom Alliance now has more than two-thirds of the seats in parliament.
It also runs more than 80 percent of the municipal and urban councils while even one-time opponents have struck coalition deals or crossed over to the UPFA.
With the political opposition now so weak, Rajapakse has been able to brush aside criticism from other institutions such as the clergy and judiciary.
Buddhist and Catholic leaders had pleaded with Rajapakse not to go ahead with Bandaranayake’s impeachment and a succession of court rulings deemed the whole process unconstitutional.
Rajapakse however insisted he was acting in line with the constitution.
Even the army, once one of the most powerful institutions in the country, has been effectively silenced since its former chief Sarath Fonseka landed himself behind bars after mounting a 2010 presidential challenge to Rajapakse.
“President Rajapakse and his government is like a bulldozer without brakes,” the author and political commentator Victor Ivan told AFP.
 

“It demolishes everything in its path.” 
The president’s dominance of the political scene is so absolute that he has installed three of his brothers in key posts.
His eldest brother Chamal is parliament speaker, Gotabhaya is defense secretary and his younger brother Basil is the economy minister.
 

The drive to impeach Bandaranayake began shortly after she ruled against transferring more powers to Basil’s ministry.
 

The president’s eldest son Namal is also a political player, serving as a lawmaker and heading up a government youth organization.
Price said while there was a danger of public opinion turning against the government, the opposition was deeply divided and unable to mount any credible challenge.
The government had also calculated that “Western governments have much higher priorities elsewhere at the moment,” Price added.
So far no government has suggested imposing sanctions on Sri Lanka or warning off its citizens from travelling to its sun-kissed beaches.
The number of tourists heading to Sri Lanka exceeded a million in 2012 and while the economy saw a slight slowdown, it still recorded an annual growth rate of 7.2 percent.
Tribune

The end game

 January 17, 2013 
“The world will know that free men stood against a tyrant, that few stood against many, and before this battle was over, even a god-king can bleed” – Leonidas, 300 (the movie)
On Friday, 11 January, moments after Speaker of Parliament Chamal Rajapaksa announced the results of a vote on the impeachment motion against Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake,
fireworks lit the night sky outside the Parliamentary Complex on the banks of the Diyawanna Oya where history had been made.
The beautiful Geoffery Bawa designed building comprises several balconies, terraces and foyers, with stunning water views across the lake. On a foyer of the second floor, a group of men in suits stood in a semi-circle watching the fireworks display across the water that had been arranged by the Sri Lanka Navy unit at Parliament.
In the centre of the circle, stood Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, flanked by several officials and Ministry secretaries and Director of the Media Centre for National Security, Lakshman Hulugalle. The Defence Secretary had arrived in Parliament at about 4 p.m. a few hours before the vote on the impeachment was to be taken. The high security arrival caused a stir in the Parliament Press Room on the third floor, which speculated that President Mahinda Rajapaksa had entered the building in a last minute attempt to sway reluctant UPFA legislators to vote for the impeachment motion.
In the end, such manoeuvres were unnecessary, with 155 members of the 225 seat legislature voting overwhelmingly to impeach the country’s fourth citizen. Notably, Minister D.E.W. Gunesekera and Prof. Tissa Vitarana abstained from voting, as per the dictates of their parties, while UPFA National List MP Rajiva Wijesinha, who has openly criticised the impeachment process, also refrained from casting his vote.
Opposition concerns raised during the debate about the ruling of the Supreme Court regarding the legality of the committee that probed 14 charges against Bandaranayake fell on deaf ears, with Government mouthpieces like Wimal Weerawansa and Rajitha Senaratne leading the charge on the Chief Justice’s alleged sins, misdemeanours, and treasonous agendas.
Even as the debate was ongoing, several hours before the vote was counted, the Secretary General of Parliament and several clerical officers were hard at work, cloistered in the Committee Office drafting the resolution of impeachment against Bandaranayake that was to be signed by Speaker Rajapaksa and handed over to his brother, the President, later the same night.
The eagerness with which the resolution was being drafted, however, was not reflected in the manner in which the Government went about its legislative business on that crucial day, with the UPFA having failed to include the vote on the resolution of impeachment in the Order Paper or Parliament agenda for the day, including in its stead the motion of impeachment against Bandaranayake that was tabled in Parliament and included in the order paper on 6 November.
One last attempt
Waiting for the last possible moment to strike, the combined Opposition – sans the JVP-led DNA, which boycotted the entire debate saying it was an unconstitutional farce – charged at 6:30 p.m. that a vote could not be taken because the resolution and vote was not part of the agenda for the day.
TNA MP M.A. Sumanthiran told the Speaker that if Parliament was debating on the motion of impeachment, the next thing on the agenda would be for the Speaker to once again appoint a select committee to probe the charges contained in the motion. The furore resulted in an exasperated Speaker suspending the session for 10 minutes at 7 p.m. in order to study precedents and give a ruling on the issue.
Irritated at the last minute hiccup, Speaker Rajapaksa asked senior UNP Parliamentarian and former Speaker Joseph Michael Perera why the Opposition had decided to bring this issue up at this late stage. Perera shot back that it was up to the Opposition to raise matters whenever they wished.
The suspension lasted longer than the prescribed 10 minutes, but the Speaker returned to the Chair at 7:30 p.m. with the inevitable ruling that the motion was sufficient notice on the agenda for the vote to be taken. Opposition legislators railed against the ruling later saying that the motion of impeachment contained 14 charges against Bandaranayake, whereas the Select Committee found her guilty only of three and a proper resolution of impeachment put up for voting would have contained all that information including the findings of the PSC.
But the UPFA majority Parliament had its way and the vote was taken, irrevocably relegating Shirani Bandaranayake to defeat, despite her consistent victories before the law, which found the process to be profoundly flawed and constitutionally unsound.
Pro-Government demonstrators flooded the streets outside Parliament, where they had been transported in dozens of buses from places as far off as Polonnaruwa. They had spent the day sightseeing around the Parliament grounds and waterways. SLFP insiders claimed that several Ministers had been upbraided by senior regime officials for not doing enough to mobilise people’s support for the Government’s latest scheme. The response was to haul masses of people to the capital in buses where they could sightsee and roam all day in exchange for putting on a raucous party at sundown when the impeachment was officially passed in Parliament.
Firecracker debris covered the asphalt on Parliament Road as the mob cheered the President and danced on the streets to celebrate the ‘people’s victory’. Outside the gates of the Chief Justice’s official residence at Wijerama Mawatha, crowds of jubilant protestors that had camped out there from morning demanding her resignation, cooked milk-rice and partook of their meal soon after the results of the vote was announced.
They lit firecrackers and partied late into the night, when Government Parliamentarians including PSC Chairman Anura Priyadarshana Yapa arrived on the scene to greet and address the crowds. Throughout all this hostile merry-making that took place outside her residence, Chief Justice Bandaranayake, her husband, and her son were inside the house that night, unable to leave the premises or venture outside, her lawyers said.
Last minute doubt
Under the circumstances, speculation was rife that the Presidential proclamation for Bandaranayake’s removal would be made on Friday night. Government circles were buzzing with the information that the letter of removal was ready and waiting for the President’s signature. But even at the eleventh hour, there were reservations in some quarters of the administration.
It was clear that the members of the ruling family had strived hard to keep from being associated with this dubious impeachment process, deliberately keeping their names out of the impeachment motion, the select committee process and even the impeachment debate. Designated propagandists had been provided the necessary ammunition instead to carry out a campaign to completely destroy Bandaranayake’s credibility.
It seemed that despite the major victory in Parliament, President Rajapaksa, being the shrewd politician he is, was loathe to sign the papers sacking her, no doubt aware of the international furore it would cause and the further erosion of legitimacy that it would cost his regime. It would have been preferable if she resigned in a dignified manner, Government sources explained, so the President would not have to sack her.
It is a hallmark of the Rajapaksa governance style that removals and recalls of officers are often delegated to lesser officials, the regime loyalists appointed to those high posts remained convinced that the President was in no way responsible for their dismissals.
And so throughout Saturday, the much-anticipated news of her sacking did not come. The Government leaked a story that Bandaranayake’s lawyers had asked the President to give her time till April, when she would resign of her own accord. The claim was vehemently denied in writing by the Chief Justice’s legal team. Sources close to Bandaranayake say that messages were sent to her through various emissaries, asking her to step down from office voluntarily and the Government would in turn ensure she received her pension.
Bandaranayake has been a member of the country’s apex court for 16 years, since she was appointed to the Supreme Court by President Chandrika Kumaratunge in 1996. The response was a firm and repeated ‘no’ and an irate President’s Office finally dispatched her letter of removal with a Presidential aide and a PSD officer on Sunday (13) morning. Bandaranayake immediately began packing up her official residence in Colombo 7 and was seen all weekend transferring personal belongings to her private home in Rajagiriya.
A successor
The Government meanwhile moved swiftly into gear, readying to appoint a new Chief Justice and have the dust settle on the ugly, costly impeachment struggle as soon as possible. There were three names in the mix – at least for appearance’s sake. Two were Supreme Court judges – one very senior and the other very junior – that the Government claimed they were considering for the position. But from the outset, the legal fraternity was convinced the choice would be none other than former Attorney General and Cabinet Legal Advisor, Mohan Peiris.
There was however necessity for the regime to at least make noises about the fact that there were several contenders for the position, since certain hints of assurances had been provided to some individuals who had recently become pundits for the regime-controlled State media regarding the legality of the impeachment process, the deficiency of the Supreme Court ruling on Article 107 (3) of the Constitution, and Bandaranayake’s alleged misdeeds.
Former Chief Justice Sarath N. Silva for instance was widely quoted in the weekend State-controlled press, that Bandaranayake’s successor should be a “senior judge” currently serving on the Supreme Court bench. But by Sunday evening, the writing was on the wall for Silva and other pro-impeachment voices when it was announced that the President’s recommendation for Chief Justice would be none other than Peiris. The name had been sent to the Parliamentary Council for ratification when the council convened on Tuesday.
While it had long been speculated, the fact that the regime had taken such a bold step to name a clear ally to the revered position as the head of the country’s Judiciary spoke volumes about how gravely wounded it had been by Bandaranayake’s assertion of independence in her latter months on the bench. Peiris was the firm choice of two powerful members of the ruling family, both of whom were insistent that the other Supreme Court judges be bypassed and the former AG appointed in order to ensure that it would never have to face another gruelling impeachment ordeal again.
Garrisoned
In anticipation of Peiris’ appointment on Tuesday, the security establishment moved armed STF personnel into the Supreme Court premises overnight on Monday. By early morning on Tuesday, the Superior Court Complex had turned garrison. Truck loads of STF personnel were offloaded on Hulftsdorp Hill outside the building in which the apex Court sits.
Police anti-riot squads and armoured vehicles lined Hulftsdorp Street. Yellow Police barricades had been set up outside the main entrance to the SC complex, with a ring of Police personnel in front of the metal, to reinforce the shield. Journalists were barred entry into the Complex and when the Lawyers Collective turned up and attempted to break down the barricade and allow the media personnel in, the Police stood their ground, refusing to let anyone pass. The lawyers held a daylight vigil, blowing out candles to symbolise ‘darkness at noon’ with the sacking of Bandaranayake and the appointment of Peiris to the high post, which they said marked the death of judicial independence.
                                 
Mohan Peiris took oaths at noon at Temple Trees on Tuesday, with Presidential Secretary Lalith Weeratunga and his family present. Soon afterwards, with the Government keen to establish the new regime at the Supreme Court as quickly as possible, Peiris journeyed to Hulftsdorp amid tight security, and entered the complex through Adikarana Mawatha that had been sealed off to the public since dawn by STF and Police personnel. Soon after the new Chief Justice had entered the premises, Police relaxed security. The barricades were removed and regular entry and exit procedures resumed.
On the fifth floor of the Superior Courts Complex, Peiris entered his chambers, where religious leaders evoked blessings upon him. A large group of lawyers – reportedly members of the SLFP Lawyers Association – were present to felicitate him. Before sitting down to tea with the lawyers, Peiris spoke warm words of greeting, asserting that he was ‘one of them’ and that he would uphold the rule of law during his time in office.
Police told journalists and lawyers openly that they had been instructed to ensure Shirani Bandaranayake did not attempt to enter the Supreme Court that day. Police went so far as to check the vehicles of lawyers and judges entering the premises on Tuesday, to ensure Bandaranayake was not travelling to Court with them.
The paranoia was palpable, senior lawyers said, with Supreme Court security being instructed by Police to verify the identification of every lawyer they did not recognise. Bandaranayake was expected to arrive in court on Tuesday morning – since she does not recognise her removal as being legitimate – but finally decided against it after it became clear that the regime would not hesitate to use force to prevent her entry. Sources close to Bandaranayake claimed that she had received repeated messages from the ruling administration to refrain from going to Court because Police and STF had been deployed to prevent her entry.
Dramatic exit
Despite this move to keep the impeached Chief Justice out of the limelight however, she continued to dominate the headlines after an aggressive attempt by the Police to prevent her speaking to journalists as she left her official residence on Tuesday evening.
SSP Premalal Ranagala, who had also been present on the scene at Hulftsdorp, was directing operations at Wijerama Mawatha where journalists stood opposite the official residence from 2 p.m. waiting for a glimpse of Bandaranayake since a brief statement had been promised to the press as she was departing.
The boisterously jovial SSP walked up to media personnel and informed them that they were waiting in vain, since the Chief Justice would not be permitted to speak to the media inside or near the official residence as she was now nothing more than a ‘civilian’. Journalists shot back that when crowds of demonstrators gave media briefings and cooked milk rice in front of the official residence, there had been no resistance from the Police.
They continued to keep vigil for three more hours on the lawn outside the British High Commission. Lawyers for Bandaranayake confirmed that Police had refused her permission to address the media from within the precincts of the official residence. SSP Ranagala was stationed outside with his team, to ensure that Bandaranayake would not be permitted an opportunity to speak even once she was no longer inside the official residence.
Finally, at 5:30 p.m. when Bandaranayake emerged in the backseat of a red KIA jeep driven by her son Shaveen with her husband Pradeep Kariyawasam in the front seat, journalists stormed the vehicle in an attempt to capture images of her and obtain a brief statement. SSP Ranagala and his team swung into high gear then, demanding that Shaveen Bandaranayake drive out of the residence and Wijerama Mawatha faster, wrestling media personnel out of the way and shouting themselves hoarse in increasingly aggressive tones.
Besieged by journalists and cameramen on either side of the vehicle, with several more in front, and screaming policemen insisting that he remove the vehicle from the area as soon as possible, an angry Shaveen Bandaranayake raised his hands in surrender and shouted back at the officers that he could not move as long as there were people directly in his path.
Hanging on the doors of the jeep, media personnel followed the vehicle’s progress. Footage emerged later that night of beleaguered Chief Justice Bandaranayake torn between giving journalists a statement and sick with worry that the Police would get violent towards her son for not driving away fast enough.
One video captured Bandaranayake interjecting during her own statement about standing up for the people to say “putha, ganna wasthuwa” (drive, precious son) and then urge her husband to ask Shaveen to drive on as aggressive Police officers bore down on the vehicle and media personnel refused to get out of the way.
The desperate attempt of the Police to ensure she was not provided an opportunity to speak became the story of the day, with most of the country’s mainstream media and international newswires present to witness the scenes. “I am innocent, I am innocent,” Bandaranayake cried through the car window before the vehicle drove on towards Rajagiriya where she and her family will now set up residence.
In a poignant statement issued soon after her departure, Bandaranayake asserted that she was still, lawfully, the Chief Justice of the republic. “In my country, where the rule of law is the underlying threshold upon which basic liberties exist, I still am the duly-appointed legitimate Chief Justice,” the statement said, echoing the fears and hopes of all those activists who rallied against her illegal removal.
Notably, the beleaguered Chief Justice and her family left the official residence largely alone. There was no Opposition present to protest the Police behaviour, no Bar Association to extend its solidarity. The main Opposition UNP has maintained relative silence since the impeachment resolution was passed in Parliament, barring a few isolated statements.
Jumbo concerns
Since the Parliament debate on the impeachment on Friday (11), UNP Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe is planning an inquiry against his Deputy Leader Sajith Premadasa who requested time from the TNA on Friday to speak at the impeachment debate, because his own party had not allocated time for him. The only UNPers to speak at the final day of debate were John Amaratunge, Joseph Michael Perera, Lakshman Kiriella, and Tissa Attanayake.
The TNA informed Opposition Whip Amaratunge that they would grant a portion of their time to Premadasa for a speech. This irked Wickremesinghe, who ensured on Friday that only the UNP old guard would be allocated time for speeches, despite the utter disappointment this caused to several backbenchers and more vociferous members of the party’s Parliamentary Group.
The impeachment saga has seriously eroded public confidence in Wickremesinghe, who adopted various mysterious stances on the issue, purporting to be a master strategist and finally failing to affect any kind of opposition in the face of a blatantly illegal and unconstitutional process.
Despite Wickremesinghe’s successive gag orders to his party members however, the UNP reacted instinctively to the injustice perpetrated on Bandaranayake during the trial by Parliament. UNP MPs Kiriella, Karu Jayasuriya, Mangala Samaraweera, Eran Wickremaratne, Harin Fernando, Harsha De Silva, and even relative newcomers like Sujeewa Senasinghe and Ajith Perera, took the impeachment issue head on, decrying it as a witch hunt and charging that Sri Lanka was well on its way to becoming a constitutional dictatorship.
Bewildered at the UNP Leader’s strange positions on the issue, several MPs considered fiercely loyal to Wickremesinghe even attended court on 3 January, to hear the Supreme Court ruling on the constitutionality of the PSC. A furious Wickremesinghe lashed out at the MPs who decided to attend Court. UNP insiders with insights into Wickremesinghe’s thinking claim that although it is perceived that the UNP Leader was somehow collaborating with the Rajapaksa regime, the fact of the matter was that this was far from the truth. Wickremesinghe was simply being cautious not to erode the powers of the presidency or Parliament because he continues to visualise himself in that chair, and when he assumes office, he is adamant to possess the same powers that President Rajapaksa now lays claim to.
This is precisely the thinking that is frustrating some UNP MPs who do not wish to oppose the leadership, but also are increasingly convinced that in years to come, Sri Lankans will have to contend with not one dictator, but two. True democrats within the UNP are losing hope that under Wickremesinghe’s reign there will be an end to an autocratic presidential system, since every executive president has consistently been worse than the last one.
Be that as it may, for the time being at least, it appears that the Rajapaksa administration has secured its latest victory – Bandaranayake is out, Peiris is in, and all is well with the world. That is until Sri Lanka faces the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, just over a month from now, with its reconciliation plans fallen by the wayside and following a devastating assault on the last remaining independent institution in democratic Sri Lanka.
International voices have already been raised against the unconstitutional removal of Bandaranayake from office. The US State Department Spokesman in a strongly-worded statement to the press corps in Washington, said it was time for Sri Lanka to “roll up its sleeves and work on,” safeguarding the future of democracy.
International credibility
The appointment of Peiris to the highest office in Sri Lanka’s judicial system is a further blow to the credibility of the impeachment process and the Government’s claim that it was sacking Bandaranayake in order “cleanse” the Upper Judiciary and preserve its independence. The new Chief Justice carries too much baggage to give this claim credence.
Peiris served on the boards of Lanka Logistics and Rakna Arakshaka Lanka Limited, both companies incorporated under the auspices of the Defence Ministry with the Defence Secretary at their helm. In an unprecedented move, the Attorney General’s Department was brought under the purview of the President during Peiris’ tenure as AG.
Until his appointment as Chief Justice on Tuesday, Peiris served as the Cabinet Legal Advisor and regularly travelled to Geneva to defend the country’s deteriorating human rights record. In November 2011, he famously told the UN Committee Against Torture in Geneva that his Government had information that journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda, who has been missing for three years this January, was alive and secretly living outside Sri Lanka. He claimed in a question and answer session before CAT that the campaign to win his release was a farce.
Seven months later, Peiris answered summons before the Homagama Magistrate, where a habeas corpus petition filed by Eknaligoda’s family in the Court of Appeal has been redirected for inquiry. There in open court, with Ekneligoda’s distraught wife in the room, Peiris rejected the statement he made in Geneva and claimed he could not remember the officer who informed him that the missing journalist was overseas. Adding insult to injury, the former State prosecutor told the court, that the Government knew nothing about Prageeth’s whereabouts and ‘only God knows’ what had become of him.
The appointment of Peiris as Chief Justice therefore, marks an epoch in Sri Lanka’s battle against an international war crimes inquiry about lingering questions in the final phase of the Government’s battle with the LTTE. For years since the war ended, the Government delegation’s one defence at the UNHRC with the international community pushing for an international mechanism to investigate violations of humanitarian law in the Sri Lankan military’s final push against the LTTE, has been that it has a vibrant and structured judicial system that is ‘fully capable’ of addressing accountability concerns and investigating and prosecuting those responsible for excesses during the conflict. It has relied on a battered but resilient judicial system to ward off international scrutiny and maintained a stoically, ‘we can take care of our own business,” attitude in Geneva. Come February, all those claims lose credence with the international community.
Sri Lanka’s Judiciary is now headed by the same legal expert who was part of successive Government delegations that told the international community Sri Lanka was ‘not guilty’ and insisted that the Sri Lankan military had not overstepped its limits. It would be impossible to perceive then, that any ‘home-grown’ judicial review of military excesses would be unprejudiced before the eyes of the international community. In terms of international pressure regarding the setting up of an international war crimes tribunal against Sri Lanka then, the Government has effectively shot itself in the foot.
Standing on the line
It is said about the battle of the Hot Gates, or Thermopylae in Greece in 480 BC, that the 300 valiant Spartans led by Leonidas holding the tiny pass against the might of the Persian Army led by Xerxes were doomed to die, right down to the last man. But a small group of men thousands of years ago ushered in the Golden Age of Greece by holding out against the Army of the King of Kings, preserving a civilisation whose influence resonates even today. Historians say that the Spartans bled the Persians so much, inflicted such wounds on that mighty armour, that the invading Army lost the will to fight, resulting in their defeat one year later. Doomed to die though the 300 were, by blocking the only road through which the Persian Army could pass for seven days, they heralded the eventual defeat of a mighty battalion.
The outcomes of some battles are written before the first stone is cast. Shirani Bandaranayake’s battle against the might of the ruling regime might have been one such. But the decision of some men and women to stand ‘right in the line of history’ can often inflict wounds on a juggernaut that prove fatal in time to come. Even the mighty grow battle-weary and vulnerable. Leonidas and his 300 men teach us that. History teaches us that. Perhaps Shirani Bandaranayake will too.

A CJ Is Impeached, Media Outraged

Colombo TelegraphBy Nupur Basu -January 17, 2013 
Nupur Basu
The first ever impeachment of a Chief Justice of the Sri Lankan Supreme Court by a ruling party on January 13 has thrown the island nation, already wracked by years of civil war, into a mega Constitutional crisis.
Three days after Sri Lanka’s first woman judge was unceremoniously removed from her post, Dr Shirani Bandaranayake wrote in an article titled I Stand Here Before You Today Having Been Unjustly Persecuted, Vilified And Condemned’ in the Colombo Telegraph on January 15:
“I am the 43rd Chief Justice of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka. I stand here before you today having been unjustly persecuted, vilified and condemned. The treatment meted out to me in the past few weeks, was an ordeal no citizen, let alone the Chief Justice of the Republic should be subjected to.
In the circumstances, in my country which is a democracy, where the rule of law is the underlying threshold upon which basic liberties exist, I still am the duly appointed legitimate Chief Justice. It is not only the office of Chief Justice, but also the very independence of the judiciary, that has been usurped. The very tenor of rule of law, natural justice and judicial abeyance has not only been ousted, but brutally mutilated. I have suffered because I stood for an independent judiciary and withstood the pressures. It is the People who are supreme and the Constitution of the Republic recognizes the rule of law and if that rule of law had prevailed, I would not have been punished unjustly.”
It is significant that her public defence comes in the form of an article in a leading newspaper in a country where the media has been shackled and persecuted for critiquing the government.
The Chief Justice of Sri Lanka was evicted from office by the government despite two superior court rulings against it. Along with the judiciary and the Bar Association that has opposed the impeachment, the Sri Lankan media which has been facing acute fire and censorship in recent years, has also rallied with the judiciary and critiqued the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime on this issue. Like the open letter that the ousted Chief Justice has written in the Colombo Telegraph, much of the commentary and reportage, ironically, is being carried out in the tightly regulated media in Sri Lanka.
It is said that since 2005, 12 journalists have been killed in the island nation while many more have had to flee the country for fear of being killed. Both media and judiciary, in a sense, have been the eyes and ears of the government, that  has come in for severe criticism for violations of human rights. The award-winning Channel 4 documentary Sri Lanka’s Killing Fields on the final weeks of the civil war and books like Still Counting the Dead by British journalist Frances Harrison have highlighted the gross violations to the world.
“I think there’s been a bit of a disconnect between those who follow the story blow by blow inside Sri Lanka and instinctively understand the political importance of a clash between the judiciary and the executive and its consequences for rule of law – with those outside who see the story at face value as an issue of whether or not the Chief Justice is guilty of corruption. It’s not an easy story to report because its quite dry and legalistic and complex and about procedures but also incredibly important. What few give a sense of is how this is a bit of a turning point for the worse for people in Colombo who had hoped things would improve after the end of the war in 2009. But to me it’s fascinating that the deaths of up to possibly 70,000 people in 5 months and the commission of crimes against humanity didn’t cause waves in the same way as the mistreatment of one woman. In a sense it shows a profound divide in mindsets that lives on long after the war.” Frances Harrison, author of Still Counting the Dead told the Hoot.
But many in Sri Lanka see this impeachment as the final straw.
”We have now crossed the divide from a flawed democracy to open dictatorship,” human rights lawyer and media columnist Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena told the Hoot from Colombo. In an opinion piece by Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena titled Democracy Mourns For Judgment Fled To Brutish Beasts in  the weekly Colombo-based Sunday Times author writes: ‘The whip of dictatorship has been cracked over the heads of all Sri Lankans. This is the final abandonment of decades of even dysfunctional democracy.”
Describing the impeachment as ‘the Government’s pyrrhic victory’ the author asks: “Henceforth, in what manner are Sri Lankan judges supposed to preside over their courtrooms with dignity? In what way can lawyers advocate the law with heads held high, what will law teachers be able to teach in the classroom and how will analysts in good conscience examine Sri Lanka’s conformity with the Rule of Law?”
According to Kishali Jayawardena, “the LTTE leader the late Velupillai Prabhakaran achieved in death through the monumental follies of ‘Dharmishta Sinhala’ leaders, what he could not accomplish in life.” “With the Commonwealth and the world staring in helpless bewilderment at the ruins of a once proud judicial system, we have proved our unfitness for democracy in no uncertain measure. Reports of commissions on lessons learnt and reconciliation may now firmly be relegated to the dustbin.”
Her final nail in the coffin came with the words: “This is the leadership which promotes political opportunism, thuggery and greed, exposing Sri Lanka to the world as lacking common decency, let alone conformity to law. This is the leadership that took root in our midst much like a monstrously destructive growth, first with the 18th Amendment and then with the spreading of tentacles into every area of government. Rather, full responsibility for the abyss that we have fallen into, lies fairly and squarely on the shoulders of the Mahinda Rajapaksa Presidency itself.”
Many other columnists echo Kishali’s sentiments and refer to the ‘suicidal leadership’ whose very accountability for mass killings of citizens and its clampdown on judiciary and the media have made it a target of attack by democratic forces in the world. The opposition United National Party has been totally ineffective and that is what has made the judiciary and the media, the only true critics and adversaries of the present Rajpaksa regime.
In another article titled ‘The Buck Stops Now With Mr President’, a journalist writes: “The incessant rains in many parts of the island and the resultant floods, deaths and destruction; the medieval execution of a young housemaid in Saudi Arabia; the assassination of a local level ruling party councillor and the suspicion revolving around a Government Minister in that murder; sand in your sugar purchased from a Government wholesale establishment; and the surreptitious passage of the controversial Divineguma Bill into law have all been overshadowed by the events surrounding the impeachment of the Chief Justice.
The writer elaborates: “Even in the Mother of Parliaments, the House of Commons in Britain, the supremacy of Parliament is not entirely absolute as it was in years gone by. Statutes on human rights, devolution and Europe have seen that supremacy decline. The blame for the seemingly unwarranted triggering of this constitutional crisis between the Judiciary and the Government must clearly be placed at the doorstep of the latter. The indecent hurry to get rid of the Chief Justice, throwing even any pretence of a proper inquiry against her to the winds, was a clumsy exercise that did Parliamentary democracy no favours.”
In an article titled ‘Crisis in Sri Lanka’, a journalist observes: “Colombo seems to be enacting a scene from Islamabad’s yesteryears. The sacking of a top judge in Sri Lanka has parallels with the Constitutional crisis that ripped Pakistan and resulted in chaos and misgovernance. Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake’s dismissal is being contested tooth and nail by the judicial community, and is likely to act as a source of political instability in the days and weeks to come. This is President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s second political assault after successfully sidelining his opponent and former chief of army staff, Sarath Fonseka, who underwent court martial on the charges of abuse of power and misconduct. It, however, remains to be seen what stance the deposed Chief Justice takes in due course of time and what impact it bears on the fragile political culture of Sri Lanka after decades of civil war, bloodshed and destruction.”
In a citizen journalism website Groundviews run by the Centre for Policy Alternatives in Colombo carried innumerable columns with headlines like: ‘Impeachment Misadventure and the Advent of Spring in Sri Lanka’, ‘A Legal Prime: The Impeachment of the Chief Justice in Sri Lanka’, ‘Can Anti-corruption Campaigners Justify Impeachment of the Chief Justice?’
The international media too has picked up the story well. But Fred Carver, Director, Sri Lanka Campaign, told the Hoot of the contradictions: “There has been some good coverage, notably in the New York Times, but often the media seem to miss the nub of the story: the clear political motivation behind the impeachment, the fact that executive and judiciary are at war over this, and the intimidation and assaults on judges and lawyers. It is also noticeable how the coverage does not join up. So the very same New York Times which wrote about the impeachment published a list of “the 46 places to go in 2013″ which included a tourist resort built by the Sri Lankan government after the military had forcibly cleared fishermen from the area.”
It is also not as if all media analyses has been critical of the government. The state media in Sri Lanka, which functions almost as an organ of the Information Ministry, celebrated the impeachment as the right step in the anti-corruption campaign and went to the extent of saying that “Sri Lanka can be proud of such an impeachment.”
On January 15, a former Attorney General, Mohan Peiris, who is known to be very close aide of Mahinda Rajapaksa, has been nominated as the new Chief Justice. “He has a shocking record as in the late 2011, when he blatantly lied to the United Nations Committee Against Torture (UNCAT) on the disappearance of web cartoonist Prageeth Ekneligoda. He had maintained that Prageeth had fled overseas as a refugee. Later, however, he was forced to admit that he had lied at the UNCAT when questioned at a later domestic inquiry” said a Sri Lankan journalist on condition of anonymity.
In a recently released report published by the International Commission of Jurists
‘Authority without Accountability: The Crisis of Impunity in Sri Lanka’, documents how, and why, it has become nearly impossible for people who have suffered serious violations of their human rights to receive justice in Sri Lanka. “Recent attacks on judicial officers and judges only highlight the systematic erosion of accountability mechanisms.”
It is the first in a series of national studies in South Asia examining ‘Authority without Accountability’ in South Asia. It calls on the government of Sri Lanka to respect its international obligations to investigate human rights violations; take appropriate measures in respect of perpetrators of such violations, bringing those responsible to justice for violations constituting crimes through prosecution and the imposition of penalties commensurate to the offence; provide victims with effective remedies and reparations for their injuries; ensure the inalienable right to know the truth; and take other necessary steps to prevent recurrence of violations.
Similarly, the Media Reform Lanka Initiative which is looking at the issue of media freedom and law in Sri Lanka work on media co-authored by Kishali Pinto-Jaywardena (http://mediareformlanka.com/) highlights the Restrictions on Freedom of Speech in Emergency Law ProvisionsIt urges that:
• Governments to refrain from including definitions of prohibited activities that are vague, ambiguous and imprecise in emergency laws which lead to a chilling of the freedom of expression and information. For example, the now lapsed Emergency Regulations 2006 created the offence of engaging in ‘terrorism’ or ‘acts of terrorism’ (Regulations 6 and 20) and criminalises certain activities, transactions and communications with persons or groups committing terrorist offences (Regulations 7, 8 and 9).
• Refraining from restricting freedom of expression in overbroad ways, such as the prohibition of possessing or distributing information ‘prejudicial to national security’ with the extent of that prohibition undefined, powers of prior censorship and the criminalisation of incitement to overthrow the government. Examples: as follows
  • Regulation 9 of the Emergency Regulations 2006 made it a criminal offence, punishable by up to 10 years imprisonment to ‘provide any information which is detrimental or prejudicial to national security’ to anyone engaged in ‘terrorism’ (as defined in Regulation 6).
  • Regulation 18 (1) (vi) of the EMPPR 2005 enabled the Secretary to the Minister of Defence to make an order imposing upon a person restrictions on association or communication, and in relation to ‘dissemination of news or the propagation of opinions’, to prevent that person acting ‘in any manner prejudicial’ to national security, public order or the maintenance of essential services.
And many similar provisions that tend to shackle media independence in Sri Lanka.
Addressing the Sri Lankan Parliament, Tamil National Alliance MP Mathiaparanan Abraham Sumanthiran warned the Rajapakse government: “I break from tradition and address the house in a black coat and black tie because it is a Black Day in Sri Lanka.We won’t allow you to let the judiciary ‘go to hell’… you are conspirator against the country and the government.’
There is, however, a thundering silence from the Indian government on this issue. There has already been criticism of this in the media in Sri Lanla. The Indian media too, barring a few newspapers, have ignored the developments in Sri Lanka, busy as it is with the Indo-Pak border skirmishes and the Pakistan Supreme Court’s directive to the Prime Minister to step down on charges of graft.
Whatever happens in the island nation in the coming weeks and months due to this impeachment, the debris is sure to fall on India.
*Nupur Basu is an independent journalist and award – winning documentary film maker. Courtsey; The Hoot