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, March 28, 2013


Museum stairway collapses

A wooden stairway inside the Colombo National Museum collapsed today injuring some students, teachers and parents who were on a visit to the Museum. Pix by Nisal Baduge   -THURSDAY, 28 MARCH 2013 



A slaughter was executed in the afternoon similar to a scene from a movie yesterday.

Reports states, a gang chased a person splashed acid and have slashed one of his arm.

This carnage incident stunned the entire Jaffna town yesterday. The severely wounded person from this incident was immediately rushed to the Jaffna Teaching hospital and died yesterday as treatment did not turn successful.

 The incident took place yesterday afternoon at the Jaffna 5th junction. The deceased was identified as Abudl Cader Nawaz aged 56 years a resident of Jaffna Osmani Yaak College Road. He is a father of five children.

The deceased brother said concerning this incident, the deceased son's wife got married to son's friend some weeks back. Regarding this an inquiry is carried out in the courts. In this situation, this incident had occurred yesterday.

Three masked men, riding motor bikes have chased the deceased Nawaz through ottumadam junction. At the Jaffna 5th junction, acid and waste oil was splashed against Nawaz. Later with sharp weapons in hand they have cut Nawaz in several places in his body, and when he fell to the ground they had chopped his hand.

Immediately the wounded was taken to the Jaffna Teaching hospital in an unconscious state. This incident occurred due to conflicts existing between both sectors was said by the brother of the deceased.

Nawaz after admission to hospital was admitted to the emergency unit even though he was given oxygen and other medication, the doctors could not save his life. After some hours he died. The body is lying in the hospital said deceased brother.

Police informed investigation is carrying out regarding this incident, but none had been arrested.
Thursday , 28 March 2013

Wednesday, March 27, 2013



Call For Muslim Parliamentarians To Resign From The Government


By Latheef Farook -March 27, 2013 
Latheef Farook
Colombo TelegraphThe speech of Ven. Galagodatte  Gnanasara Thera at a public meeting in Kandy on March 17 shamed the nation and sent shudders over the spines of the island’s Muslim community.
Addressing the gathering Bodu Bala Sena Secretary Ven. Galagodatte Gnanasara Thera  asked the Sinhalese to rise against the island’s Muslims, whom he described in very derogatory terms not worthy of a monk, besides accusing Muslims of converting Buddhists into Islam and treating Sinhalese girls and boys in their establishments as slaves.
Inciting them he also asked all Sinhalese girls working for Muslim owned establishments to leave. However he had conveniently forgotten to ask Sinhalese working in the Gulf to return home!
The manner in which he expressed his hatred in his drive to provoke the Sinhalese against Muslims made one to ask whether we are living in the medieval era or in the globalized era in 2013. The irony is that this hate campaign is taking place in a country where Buddhist civilization, known for its teaching of peace, harmony and tolerance, flourished for more than 2550 years.
The tragedy is that this fascism is unfolding four years after ending the thirty year ethnic carnage which was the direct outcome of the racist policies of misguided politicians of the two major communities- Sinhalese and Tamils. Although the Muslims were not direct parties to the conflict they too suffered as a result of the war which was the direct outcome of racist policies.
It was  against these very same  Muslims the Jathika Hela Uruma, Bodu Bala Sena, Sinhala Ravaya, JHU-BBS-SR BBS, combine started inciting Sinhalese not realizing the inherent dangers involved to the whole country.
The disgusting state of affairs was such that Muslims in and around Kandy remained in doors on March 17 and most of them observed a day long fast. Realizing the seriousness of this unwarranted provocation by a small but very well organized heavily funded and government backed group of few hundreds, large number of Sinhalese met their Muslim neighbors and friends in and around Kandy to assure them that they have nothing to do with the BBS. Some even said that “BBS which appeared from nowhere has become a source of embarrassment to Sinhalese”.
Today Muslims living in small numbers amidst predominantly Sinhalese areas spend sleepless nights fearing a July 1983 type attack on them. The deafening silence among the Sinhalese and the government’s refusal to bring these lawless elements to book is deeply disturbing and frightening.
All what the Muslims are asking the government is to stop this hooliganism and stop poisoning the minds of innocent people including children. However the government has been silent which was exploited by the JHU-BBS-SR combine to carry out  their destructive campaign.
Under such circumstance inevitably the mood among the Muslim community is that of gloom with many young families asking “where are we heading and what is the future of our children?
The JHU-BBS-SR threat remains the common topic of discussions at every Muslim gathering including funerals. With one voice they criticize Muslim politicians for their failure to raise this issue. Muslims now openly call their politicians to either stop this rising fascism which could set ablaze the nation or resign from the government.
Muslim community has lost  confidence in their parliamentarians long before the JHU-BBS SR hate Muslim campaign began in view of their failure to stand up to Muslim rights on many issues. However today the mood is nothing but anger.
Muslims fear that the present hate campaign is a conspiracy to provoke them to react to justify a violent attack on them to commemorate the centenary of 1915 Sinhala- Muslim riot perhaps also to please their suspected Israeli-Norwegian masters .
They are least bothered about the harm they are causing to the image of the Sinhala community and the destruction to their own country. As rightly pointed out by Ven Dhambara Amila Thero, Senior Lecturer at Sri Jayawardanapura University,” these people think that the world is inside Sri Lanka though Sri Lanka is part of the world
This fear is justified by the manner in which the JHU-BBS SR combine had taken the law into their hands and become a government within government committing actions in violation of the very same Buddhist principles which they claim to profess and protect.
They openly attack mosques, destroy shrines, go on street demonstrations with posters of pigs with the Arabic word Allah on its face, posters of Holy Ka’ba with a dog on it ,doctors trying to sterilize women who went for delivery, attacking girls wearing hijab and abaya and many more. Muslim minister of justice cannot ensure justice to his own community and the country has descended to such low ebb that a Muslim woman cannot walk freely without the fear of being attacked.
This hooliganism was perpetrated under the watchful eyes of the police which refuses to arrest them stating that THERE ARE “orders from the top not to interfere”.
In this dark hour the disturbed Muslim community was given a clear message by the government. The message was that they are not wanted when state patronage was given to the inaugural ceremony of a cultural center at Galle gifted to BBS by a German, alleged to be a Jew. Perhaps the Jewish methods of saying “thank you” to BBS for successfully pitting the Sinhalese against Muslims
This reminds the country of late President J.R.Jayawardene’s arrogant dismissal of Muslims   when he said “Muslim can stay or leave the government” when he brought the Israelis to fight the LTTE. However it didn’t take long for the country to realize that the very Israelis brought to fight LTTE trained the very same LTTE while training Sri Lankan soldiers too.
Perhaps no lessons learnt yet.
The outcome of Jayewardene’s arrogance was the emergence of Sri Lanka Muslim Congress which further divided the communities and contributed to where the country is today though the mistake was realized later and the National Unity Alliance was formed. Time alone will tell the political implications of the current government’s policy towards Israelis, turning blind eye to BBS hooliganism, overall Sinhalisation and the systematic sidelining of Muslims.
In fact the current unfolding disaster is not something unexpected especially with the presence of Israelis who, many suspect, have picked up the JHU-BBS-SR combine to do their dirty job of pitting Sinhalese against Muslims in Sri Lanka
Right now the Muslim community feels that it was abandoned by the government and betrayed by their own politicians. Their appeal to the government is to contain this ethno religious fascism to avert any potential disaster which the country can ill afford. Their appeal to Muslim parliamentarians is to leave the government and stop humiliating the Muslim community.
What the JHU-BBS-SR combine refuse to understand is that the world, especially Muslims worldwide, is watching us.

How Many Tamil (Muslim) Players in Sri Lankan Cricket Team ? Chauvinism at its worst


Murali says ‘not end of the world’


WEDNESDAY, 27 MARCH 2013
The city of Chennai, in many ways, has been a second home for Muttiah Muralitharan. Besides being a Tamil, the former Sri Lankan off-spinner is married to an Indian who belongs to the city. Moreover, Muralitharan represented the Chennai Super Kings during the first three seasons of the Indian Premier League (IPL).

But with the Tamil Nadu government having declared the state capital a ‘no-Sri-Lankan-zone’, Muralitharan will in all likelihood be forced to give Chennai a miss during the sixth edition of IPL starting next month.

And the 40-year-old Sri Lankan spin legend expressed his disappointment at the unsavoury developments.

“It’s sad that the Tamil Nadu government doesn’t want us there. It’s always unfortunate when people in power start mixing politics with sports. So if they don’t want me in Chennai then I won’t go. I can’t do anything else about it,” Muralitharan told The Indian Express on Tuesday.

Muralitharan, who now represents Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB), however, confirmed his participation in IPL-6 and said that he will be very much a part of RCB’s campaign.

“The IPL is a great tournament. And I love being a part of it. I now play for Bangalore and I’m sure our fans there will be looking forward to seeing us in action. So what if Chennai doesn’t want us. It’s not the end of the world. I’ll still be a part of the team in all other cities and enjoy their support,” he added.

In the aftermath of the TN government’s move, many former Sri Lankan cricketers such as Arjuna Ranatunga have asked the 13 Sri Lankan players, including Muralitharan, to boycott IPL-6 as a whole. But Muralitharan urged his compatriots to take a more pragmatic stand.

“It’s disappointing for sure but we are entertainers after all and should not get involved with the politics. Our job is to go out there and perform. The worst case is that we will be left out of the team for that one match. Eventually the decision will be left to the individual but I’m sure the IPL as a whole will not be affected by this,” said Muralitharan.
Muralitharan with his wife Madhimalar Ramamurthy

Muralitharan added that the ban also affected him at a personal level considering the deep-rooted links he shares with Chennai. And also because he is a Tamil.

“I am a Tamil. But I’m a Sri Lankan first. And the ban means, I’m not wanted there either. I can assure you that there has been immense peace all around Sri Lanka since the war ended and the Tamils are living very happily here. They are treated equally well,” he explained. (Source: Indian Express)

Anti-Muslim Posters Campaign In Kandy

Colombo Telegraph March 16, 2013 

An increase in the emergence fresh anti-Muslim posters in the Kandy district has left Muslim community in deep sorrow, Tamil language website Jaffnamuslim.com reports.

The fresh posters whipping up racism such as “Remove slaughterhouse from the Kandy town”, “Kandy will not be allowed to be turned into another Akuressa” and “Don’t purchase things from Muslim shops” have created a fear psychosis among the Muslim people in the area, not knowing what is in store for them.  

STOP CALLING SRI LANKA A FRIENDLY NATION DEMANDS TAMIL NADU

March 27, 2013 

Stop calling Sri Lanka a friendly nation demands Tamil NaduStepping up pressure on the UPA government on the Sri Lankan Tamils issue, Tamil Nadu today demanded that India move a resolution in the UN security council for a referendum for separate Tamil Eelam and stop calling Colombo a friendly nation.
The Tamil Nadu assembly unanimously adopted a resolution urging the Centre to slap economic embargo on Colombo till the “suppression” of Tamils was stopped and those responsible for “genocide and war crimes” faced an international probe.
Moving the resolution, chief minister Jayalalithaa said the ongoing students protest was reflective of her government’s initiate on the Sri Lankan issue even as she requested them to withdraw the stir and resume classes.
Launching a tirade against the Centre and DMK, she alleged that both had “failed” to ensure ceasefire in 2009 when hostilities were at the peak in Sri Lanka.
She charged DMK supremo Karunanidhi with adopting “duplicity” on the issue and said people were aware of it. Her remarks drew vociferous protests from DMK members.
Speaker P Dhanapal ordered for eviction of agitated DMK members when his plea for restoration of order in the House went unheeded. (PTI)

Chauvinism at its worst


Return to frontpage
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa did more than give her stamp of approval to calls for protests against the participation of Sri Lankan players in the Indian Premier League. By declaring that the State government will permit the matches to be held in Chennai only if the organisers provided an undertaking that no Sri Lankan players, umpires, officials or support staff would participate in these matches, she effectively endorsed chauvinism and discrimination in sport and politics. But the IPL governing council did more harm than Ms Jayalalithaa. Its decision to keep the Sri Lankan players out of the matches in Chennai after talking to the team owners will have larger, long-term repercussions for not only cricket, but also India’s international relations. Protesting against atrocities by the Sri Lankan military is one thing, preventing cricket matches involving Sri Lankan players is entirely another. For a person entrusted with the task of ensuring law and order, Ms Jayalalithaa, in her letter to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, appeared too eager to surrender her responsibilities. Far from extending assurances on the law and order front, she voiced her apprehension that the participation of Sri Lankan players “will aggravate an already surcharged atmosphere and further offend the sentiments of the people” of Tamil Nadu. To drop the Sri Lankan players on this ground is to blatantly discriminate on the basis of nationality and ethnic identity.
If the IPL is to be open to foreign players, it must be open to all foreign players. For a government to decide who should or should not be in the playing XI, and withhold permission to host the matches on this count, is plain wrong. The IPL organisers evidently took the easy way out. Taking the matches out of Chennai would have involved greater costs than keeping the Sri Lankan players out of the city. Not too long ago, when India’s relations with Pakistan were at an all-time low, the cricketing authorities worked behind the scenes and prevailed upon team owners not to bid for any Pakistani player. But now, the IPL governing council does not have even this fig-leaf. The arm-twisting is in the open. It is not just cricketing logic that is at stake here. That dropping some players and selecting some others will distort the game is the least of the problems. True, teams had bid for and taken players at huge costs, and those who put their money on Sri Lankan stars are at a huge disadvantage. But worse, sport, which brings peoples together, has now been turned into a vehicle of jingoism and ethnic affinities. The effects of such divisive politics will surely be felt beyond the realms of cricket, and for far longer than will be obvious immediately.

Rs.4000 allocation for universities slashed down to Rs.500 million – SB

logoWEDNESDAY, 27 MARCH 2013 
It is revealed that despite Rs.4000 million had been allocated for education from the last budget, only Rs.500 million is provided by the Treasury. This has been stated by the Minister of Higher Education S.B. Dissanayake. Minister Dissanayake accused the Secretary to the Ministry of Finance P.B. Jayasundra of slashing Rs.3500 million from allocations for education.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa is the Minister of Finance and Mr. P.B. Jayasundra is the secretary of his ministry.
Minister Dissanayake made the statement regarding allocutions for education participating at a ceremony held to declare open a new building for Wayamba University of Sri Lanka.

Constitutional amendments ready

by W. Siri Ananda -2013-03-27
Recommendations for the amendments to the existing Constitution of 1978 have been drafted by a panel of experts and would soon be presented to President Mahinda Rajapaksa, Opposition Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe and other political party leaders, Convener of the National Movement for Social Justice (NMSJ) and Chief Incumbent of Naga Viharaya, Kotte, Ven. Maduluwawe Sobitha Thera said.

“The recommendations will seek to reintroduce a parliamentary system, which gives power to the people, as well as a people’s elected Prime Minister,” he added.

The recommendations call for the abolishment of the appointment of parliamentarians according to the proportional representation and preferential vote system and propose the reintroduction of the first-past-the-post system, which existed before 1978.

The recommendations were drafted by a Committee headed by well-known Constitutional Lawyer and Former Senior Consultant at the Constitutional Affairs Ministry, Jayampathi Wickremaratne.

Ven. Sobitha Thera said, “All political leaders, including President Rajapaksa, former President Chandrika Kumaratunga and leaders of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP) and the Communist Party, have pledged in the past in their election manifestos that they would introduce a new Constitution to replace the existing one.”


Sinhala military takes over UN demining following Geneva resolution

[TamilNet, Wednesday, 27 March 2013, 07:10 GMT]
TamilNetOne of the immediate results of the US-resolution at Geneva “welcoming and acknowledging the progress” of genocidal Sri Lanka in various avenues, including in demining the country of Tamils, is the UN entirely handing over demining and supervision of demining to the occupying Sinhala military. This will pave way for the genocidal SL military to make money, Sinhalicize even demining and to come out with excuses for years in handing back lands, news sources in Jaffna said. The last international organisation involved in demining the country of Eezham Tamils and has an office in Jaffna, i.e., a UN outfit of Tamil staff that was supervising, monitoring and issuing certificates on demining, will be closed down in June. The work will be handed over to the SL military and its Sinhala staff. 

Instead of Sri Lanka receiving the UN agencies, the US resolution has paved way for even the remaining UN agencies, that too involved in demining, to quit and to be replaced by the genocidal Sinhala military, the news sources in Jaffna said, addressing to the ‘lobbyists’ in the diaspora.

The outcome of the US resolution such as this may provide job for the OHCHR to ‘count trees’ for the next year’s session and may provide opportunities of paid tours for diplomats of the West, Australia and Japan to visit the island and give certificates absolving Sri Lanka, but the whole process would only facilitate another irreversible stage in the structural genocide of Eezham Tamils, the news sources said.

The Jaffna news sources made a particular note on the Japanese delegations whose primary aim was ‘patching up’ genocidal Sri Lanka with the West. They unfairly escape the diaspora radar of scrutiny, the news sources said.

The treachery of the UN and agencies like the IOM in the winding up of the IDP camps and the plight of the Keappaa-pulavu people were in the highlight last year, but peruse the net outcome and the statements of the visiting diplomats from the USA, UK, Canada, Australia, India and Japan, the news sources cited.

Unless the ultimate culprit the USA is not addressed against the absurd resolutions it brings out, the genocide of Eezham Tamils could never be stopped, the news sources in Jaffna were telling it as a priority to the activists in the diaspora who see ‘something progressive’ in the US resolution. 

The part of the US resolution “Welcoming and acknowledging the progress made by the Government of Sri Lanka in rebuilding infrastructure, demining, resettling the majority of internally displaced persons,” was added in the third draft, perhaps by the prodding of India, but the USA is ultimately responsible for the larger framework and the bandwagon, alternative political activists in Jaffna commented.

* * 
Several international agencies were engaged in demining in the country of Eezham Tamils. They all had Tamil staff. All these agencies were winded up in the recent times, replaced by Sri Lanka’s occupying Sinhala military that has taken up the job for itself.

The UN agency is the last of the international agencies that has an office in Jaffna. In the recent months it was engaged only in supervising and monitoring the work and in issuing clearance certificates.

Even this office will be closed in June. The agency will continue for the next six months, until December, at the SL Government Agent’s Office in Jaffna just to handover the work to Sri Lanka’s military.

The local Tamil staff members, who now work with the UN agency, are given with contract only up to December.

The Tamil staff members are now instructed to ‘train’ the occupying Sinhala military or ex-Sinhala military personnel who are recruited to succeed the work of the UN agency.

Most of the Tamil staff has decided to quit the job when the UN leaves, as it would be impossible to work with the succeeding Sinhala military, informed circles told TamilNet.

Already hundreds of Tamil staff members who were earlier working with the other international demining agencies were out of job, as the Sinhala military had taken over the programme.

Demining is a lucrative area to channel international aid to the benefit of the genocidal Sinhala military patronized by criminal Establishments of the world; to give lucrative jobs and to station the Sinhala units in ‘civil’ among the Tamil population, and to manipulate demining to the requirements of the occupying military, alternative Tamil political activists in Vanni told TamilNet.

Demining, denied of authority or participation to the affected people and carried out by the very culprits, is indispensable in shielding the crimes and in passing the blame on the very affected people. Earlier, the staff that found evidence for cluster bombs and revealed that evidence were ‘penalised’ in Ki’linochchi for that ‘crime,’ news sources in Vanni said.

Meanwhile, the occupying Sri Lanka military has already claimed that it would take 10 years to clear the mines in some areas like the High Security Zone, which the military fast converts into Sinhala Military Zone.

The international assessment on the nature and process of demining in the country of Eezham Tamils, appreciation for the genocidal State on the demining and the policy of withdrawing international supervision are fundamentally faulty and scheming, leading to licensing irreversible structural genocide of a people, political activists in Vanni said.
* * *
News sources in the North and East of the island, reporting to TamilNet on such issues insist on ‘views’ preceding ‘news,’ challenging the so-called ‘media conventions’.

“Engineering the release of news to time agendas and interpretation of it are only their prerogatives, while the struggling people in the ground should only supply news for their polity – think the masters and their English-speaking followers in the diaspora.”

“Our news is always silenced, manipulated, suppressed and then when needed for their interests, anonymously ‘leaked’ in international reports and media. This is the so-called media convention we experience in practice. That’s why we want our views to be heard first, at least for the attention and edification of our diaspora misled by the forces of imperialism,” commented a veteran journalist in Jaffna.

Time for a rebellion for democracy


WEDNESDAY, 27 MARCH 2013 
The US resolution on accountability and reconciliation, which was moved at the UNHRC, remains a threat directed at the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime.

But many Tamils feel that it falls far short of their expectations. It is naïve of them to believe that global powers will go against a regime that has won the heart of the IMF.

Despite the theatrics by Minister Wimal Weerawansa, the President follows the path laid down by the global capitalist masters; he has also satisfied the conditions placed by the IMF with regard to the path of development. Already steps have been taken to place the burden of repayments on the shoulders of the proletariat and the plebian masses of all communities.

The resolution has only called on the government to implement the recommendations of its very own Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC). The opposition has also been saying the same thing since the LLRC report was released nearly a year ago. But the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime had avoided implementing the recommendations while promising an action plan to those who were eager to raise the issue. At the same time, vociferous sections of the government claimed that only traitors to the country are insisting that the LLRC recommendations be implemented. However with the second successive US Resolution adopted with the support of a majority of UNHRC members, the pressure to implement LLRC recommendations has increased. Failure to act urgently could lead to strictures and even sanctions, as India and other global powers are being heavily criticised for soft-peddling the issue. However such action would ultimately affect the people of all communities, but not the ruling party politicians and the new rich bourgeoisie.

The latter are living in luxury wasting resources without any care for the suffering people. Despite the anti-imperialist rhetoric of our old comrade Wimal and various Ministers,  the fact remains that the US and EU are not only Lanka’s largest importers, but also have a majority shareholding in most of the investments that had come into the country. On the other hand the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime is heavily indebted to the Global marketplace. Hence the “patriotic” government is in the clutches of the imperialist masters.

Despite protests the opposition is willing to participate in implementing the LLRC recommendations, even now, if the government is prepared to go into action. In that case some of the ministers who are totally opposed to the LLRC may leave the government. The President has to decide whether to continue with lies and distortions or to take resolute action to arrive at reconciliation with the Tamil-speaking people.

The UN Human Rights Council Resolution calling for progress on Lanka’s long outstanding reconciliation and accountability issues in relation to the Tamil people is merely asking the Government to deliver on promises made to the international community since 2009. If the President could break out of the chauvinist stand and is prepared to work with the opposition including the TNA to implement reconciliation measures, then he can avoid further international censure. The President has to break out from the path of broken promises. In the past the Government had consistently broken its promises to the world on political devolution, the full implementation of the 17th Amendment and an inquiry into alleged human rights violations during the final stages of the war. At Geneva the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime behaved ludicrously.  While the world was crying out for demilitarisation, autonomy to the Tamil homeland, an independent inquiry, greater freedom of movement and media freedom in the North, the Government explained to the council with precise technical detail, how many roads and bridges had been built in the North.

The stupid government delegation did not realise that the UNHRC is not the forum that calls on states to explain their obligations on road and bridge building!
All patriotic people who sincerely desire to avoid this kind of resolutions on Lanka should press the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime to act seriously because what the resolution demands today is that the Government keeps the promises it had made to the international community.It is the recommendations of the Government’s own Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission report that the resolution is urging the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime to implement.

However an opposition that accepts the LLRC recommendations must come out to mobilise all democratic forces to press for its implementation. We need a rebellion for democracy and freedom because the dictatorship is in crisis. We must combine the demands for the eradication of poverty, corruption and misery with that for the implementation of the LLRC recommendations.

Rule Of Law Or Law Of The Jungle – A Systemic Crisis!

By Elmore Perera -March 27, 2013 
Elmore Perera
Colombo TelegraphLaw is the essential foundation of stability and order both within societies and in international relations. There can be no democracy in a country unless the Rule of Law prevails at every level from the humblest to the most exalted citizen.
“Now this is the Law of the Jungle – as old and as true as the sky;
And the Wolf that shall keep it may prosper, but the wolf that shall break it must die.
As the creeper that girdles the tree-trunk the law runneth forward and back –
For the strength of the Pack is the Wolf, and the strength of the Wolf is the Pack,
In all that the law leaveth open, the word of your Head Wolf is Law.
Now these are the laws of the Jungle, and many and mighty are they;
But the head and the hoof of the Law and the haunch and the hump is – Obey!”
When Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936) penned these words of wisdom, his intent was clear-    “Let the Rule of Law prevail over the Rule of Men”. The Rule of Men could well degenerate into the Law of the Jungle but the Rule of Law cannot! What then is the Rule of Law? Rule of Law is intimately linked with our sense of Justice. It is an unarticulated perception within each of us from our youngest days. As children, there was nothing so clearly perceived and felt, as ‘injustice’. Our reasoning must be backed by a keen perception of “fairness’ inside each of us. If not, whether lawyer, legislator, Judge or member of an important Committee, dabbling with laws, rules and processes becomes a meaningless exercise.
Certain “values” or standards associated with the Rule of Law are inseparable from, and vitally important to, the concept. Different names such as Due Process, Rules of Natural Justice or Minimal procedures are assigned to them. As a benchmark, Rule of Law is not restricted to the legal Profession. It is as much a demand of every citizen in his daily life as it is a lofty principle of law. It is also about how we relate to one another and treat each other with dignity, respect and basic politeness. Wherever assigned power is exercised, whether it be within families, associations of friends, temples, churches, clubs, committees or companies to which we belong, there must be acknowledged standards expected from all of us for conduct of relationships in an orderly/fair fashion. Sometimes two opposing views need to be subjected to reasonable process, and somebody has to reason it out. When judging between 2 opposing positions which affect the rights of people, the process must be free from extraneous considerations and backed by a sense of Justice. The process must be trustworthy. That is why a judicial process must necessarily be independent and not interfered with by anyone, however high or low. The Rule of Law is needed because with the Law of the Jungle aforementioned or the Rule of the Fish Pond where the bigger fish swallow the smaller, the Jungle or the pond appears tranquil for that reason alone.
Impinging on the independence of the Judicial process in Sri Lanka started pretty early after Independence. In the 1962 coup case, the Minister was authorised to select the Judges. The response of the Judges was a remarkable high-water mark of Judicial Independence. The Judges dissolved themselves because the constitution of the Bench to hear the case was a matter for the CJ as a Judicial Act and it was not an Executive Act – “Justice must not only be done, it must also be seen to be done”, the   judges declared in bold letters, Fifty years ago, as a Nation we hailed this obvious but important principle as an important guide for the future. Tragically however, the Judiciary COULD NOT HOLD ON TO THAT HIGH GROUND. It is noteworthy that the spoilers of yesterday are the protestors of to-day, and that the collaborators of to-day could well be the victims of tomorrow.
A remarkable characteristic of President Rajapaksa is that he is quick to assert that, as a Senior Attorney himself, he respects and upholds the traditions of the legal profession, particularly the respect for the ‘Independence of the Judiciary’ and the “indispensability of the Rule of Law”. However, he readily admits that he seeks, receives and acts in terms of advice of more eminent Legal personalities. For instance he had, in good time, assured himself of seemingly unimpeachable legal advice by appointing a former Attorney GeneralMohan Peiris as Legal Adviser to the Cabinet and, as if that was insufficient, he appointed the former Chief Justice Asoka Silva as his Senior Legal Adviser. In an assessment of what he described as the “Systemic Crisis” facing Sri Lanka  Sumanasiri Liyanage described as a “somewhat hilarious occurrence” the ‘farce’ of promoting a legal adviser to the Cabinet as Chief Justice consequent to the “tragedy” of appointing a retired CJ  as legal adviser to the President.  He stated that in this “system”, making a CJ political after retirement has been replaced by considering political training as a prerequisite for appointment as CJ.
It was in this setting that certain members of Parliament initiated proceedings to impeach   the Chief Justice. The Speaker and the Star Chamber of Seven eminent Government Jurists appointed to the Parliamentary Select Committee to inquire into the conduct of CJ Bandaranayake seem to have seen it as an inquiry into an International level conspiracy! However, mindful of Orwell’s warning that “in a time of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act”, and also that it was mandatory for their survival that “In all that the Law leaveth open, the word of your Head Wolf is Law”, they acted diligently, decisively and expeditiously to do the bidding of their Head.
Judge Weeramantry opined that the Executive, Legislature and Judiciary rest upon the bedrock concept of the Rule of Law. On any matter affecting his or her rights every citizen, from the lowest to the highest, has the right to defend himself or herself before a patently impartial tribunal with full knowledge of the evidence against him or her and with a full opportunity of scrutinising and refuting it. He emphatically stated that, when the issues involved are as grave as misconduct of a Chief Justice, these general principles need to be applied with the greatest strictness possible and it is the duty of the inquiring authority to ensure these basic safeguards which human rights demand.
Confronted with vociferous demands of 155 M.Ps for their pound of flesh, the “persuasive” opinion of a former CJ that the Supreme Court had failed to take into account his view that the Constitution provides for an alternative procedure for the removal of a Judge, and the Counsel of his own Senior legal adviser and the legal adviser of the Cabinet of Ministers the   President did nothing to save “his good friend Shirani”. He disregarded the views of religious and Civil Society leaders such as the Mahanayakas, Prof. Bellanwila Wimalaratne Thero, Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, Bishop Dulip de Chickera, Judge Christy Weeramantry and Dr. Jayantha Dhanapala as if they were also part of an International conspiracy.
In Sri Lanka, as in India, admittedly, no Court shall have jurisdiction over the (legitimate) internal proceedings of the Legislature. Indisputably, however, the decision as to whether certain proceedings are legitimate (i.e. in accordance with the powers assigned to the Legislature by the Constitution) or not can be authoritatively made only by the Supreme Court – in terms of Article 125(1). In clear disregard of this, Parliament is, with gay abandon, passing Bills pending decision by the Supreme Court as to their constitutionality.
Mr. Liyanage opined further that, “in Sri Lanka, the state of exception prevailing to-day is not an exceptional state but a normal situation and the normalisation process is still in progress. Since this state of exception has been established by Constitutional means it has to be supported by a system of bribes and promotingSinhala Buddhist ideology”. In such a situation, where many things have been done either by following existing law, introducing new laws or amending existing laws, he stated that the liberal slogan re “establishment of the Rule of Law is totally meaningless”. He states further that although it appears that everything is hunky dory, the continuous eruption of crises and the presence of conflicts on a regular basis shows that “the system” prevails not because it can amicably resolve conflicts it encounters, but because of the weakness of oppositional forces. How and where the next systemic eruption will occur, he says, is difficult to answer, but why it will, is obvious.
Speaking at a seminar on “The Rule of Law in future Sri Lanka”  Mr. Sumanasiri Liyanage admitted that he was not a great fan of Rule of Law, Good governance and Independence of the Judiciary and raised the all-important question  “whether the Rule of Law is worth defending?” Having stated that Rule of Law, Good governance and Independence of the Judiciary are very valuable and should be defended unconditionally in ‘normal situations’, he opined that even though the need to ensure that the Rule of Law prevails is based on the premise that all laws generate justice, as a matter of fact there are unjust laws and their number is increasing. The state of exception tends increasingly to appear as the dominant feature of government in present day politics. The transformation of an exceptional measure, introduced provisionally, into a regular technique of government, threatens to radically alter the traditional distinction between constitutional forms of government. This state of exception appears to be the threshold between democracy and absolutism.
With the termination of the armed conflict which had contributed immensely to de-democratisation, as stated by Mr. Liyanage President Rajapaksa had ample space to reverse the process and restore democracy. On the contrary he adopted measures that quickened the process of de-democratisation. Reversing the process which was entrenched in the system was not easy, but any reversal would have adversely affected the interests of the ruling clique. As a result the state of exception has now been established. It is evident, he said, that the state of exception is now being enforced as a normal situation and unless this situation is changed, all laws, rules and regulations will be interpreted and where necessary amended, to the advantage of the ruling clique and not of the country as a whole.
Having had very little control over the acts of commission or omission during the leadership of the three Silva Chief Justices, that permitted and even encouraged the normalisation of this sad state of exception, CJ Bandaranayake purposefully acted to prevent any further normalisation of the state of exception by acting strictly in terms of the Just Laws that had not been repealed or amended as yet. In upholding strictly the Rule of Law she was seen as a “threat” to the normalisation of the pathetic state of exception, and this “threat” could be removed expeditiously only by acting in blatant disregard of the Rule of Law. The Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal, after due and exhaustive judicial deliberation, unequivocally  held that the purported findings of guilt of the Chief Justice by the Select Committee, were of no force or avail in law and therefore void ab initio. Asserting a “right” to do so, the Executive and the Legislature co-operated to shake the foundations of the Rule of Law by a clearly vindictive, unfair and unlawful purported impeachment.
The Chief Justice stated that “The Rule of Law to which she had devoted her whole life had been shattered. She would not resign in order to save her pension, but she could not resist the power of the State to remove her physically from the Court”. For a nation that purports to uphold the Rule of Law this was a calamity which paved the way to sack an inconvenient judge and hold the rest in fear of being impeached if they displease their political masters. The Rule of Law was undermined to such an extent that the country suffered the loss of that independent power which is essential to make democracy work.
The orchestrated “Demonstrations” that followed clearly indicates our failure as a nation to grasp that “There is a big difference between what we have a RIGHT to do and what is right to do”. More than 200 years ago Edmund Burke, speaking in Parliament on the impeachment of Warren Hastings said “An event has happened upon which it is difficult to speak, and impossible to be silent….. Whatever the constitutional arrangements are, there can be no discussion about the standards of conduct and the values applicable to the process. It is a part of the law – whatever the forum, wherever it is and whoever composes it….. This obligation to use the right standards, and to conduct the process strictly according to those standards, is quite independent of the question of enforcement. It remains a PROPER LEGAL OBLIGATION”.
The extent, if any, to which the Independence of the Judiciary has survived this crisis will become clear when the Supreme Court purports to review its own judgment and that of the Court of Appeal. One of the most serious charges against the Chief Justice was that she failed to resign as soon as her spouse was charged in the Magistrates Court for some alleged offence. The defacto Chief Justice is reported to have recused himself from hearing a case against a fellow political appointee, who was and still is a close associate of his. Was he not obliged to uphold the Rule of Law and the independence of a judiciary which has been a great pride to the country and has been highly esteemed both domestically and internationally, by recusing himself from accepting appointment to a post still held by a de jure appointee particularly in view of the fact that these were cases pending against him in respect of his own allegedly fraudulent conduct, in the very Court he was appointed to as its defacto head”
*Elmore Perera, Attorney-at-Law, Founder CIMOGG, Past President OPA