Peace for the World

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

Sunday, November 18, 2018

SRI LANKA PM WICKREMESINGHE MOURNS FATE OF DEMOCRACY


Image: Sri Lanka police shielding speaker Karu Jayasuriya from the attack of Rajapaksa loyalists MPs, 16th Noc 2018. ( Photo AP)

Warns public confidence in parliamentarians at an all-time low;Insists world is watching, damage to Sri Lanka’s democratic reputation on the line .

Sri Lanka Brief17/11/2018

A deeply moved MP Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday lamented over what he termed as the ‘destruction of Sri Lanka’s democracy’ by parliamentarians loyal to MP Mahinda Rajapaksa and condemned their actions while pledging to restore democracy.

“This is a blow to democracy; it is a blow to all of us who are voters in Sri Lanka in whom the sovereignty lies,” Wickremesinghe told reporters after Parliament was adjourned.

“This disgraceful incident – the incident that shamed the whole nation – must be condemned in the harshest possible terms. The people of this country did not give us their vote to behave like this. We will work to restore democracy and order,” he added.

Wickremesinghe pointed out that the behaviour of parliamentarians are recorded in history and the part they play in preserving or destroying the democracy of a country could be noted around the world.

“There was one incident in Spain when a group in the Spanish army surrounded the Parliament, but then the Parliament convened and the King intervened and ordered the army to disperse. Because the majority of the army supported the Government, they dispersed. But after that, this is the only other incident. Remember that. That is how the world will remember this. This group will go down in world history.”

Wickremesinghe, who appeared deeply shocked by the incidents in Parliament, warned that such displays would severely undermine public faith in both the institution and its representatives. Such a deterioration in confidence could hollow out a longstanding system of governance and lay the foundation to chaos, he said.

“These are the people we have voted in. Who will be responsible for this? What will the citizens think if this is how they behave in the Parliament? Who will approve of such behaviour? If this is how they will behave in Parliament, what will the people think of the Parliament and democracy?

That is what was damaged today. The wounds of Jayawickrama Perera, Vijitha Herath and Malik Samarawickrama will heal, but what about the damage to the country?” he questioned.

“Thanks to the decision taken by the Speaker today (Friday), we were able convene. According to convention, the Speaker can convene Parliament whenever he wants,” he said, insisting that Speaker Karu Jayasuriya had discharged his duties within the mandate that was given to him under the legal framework of Sri Lanka.

“If we behave like this, what is the fate of this democracy?”

Daily FT . By Chathuri Dissanayake

Brawl in Parliament Shows Sri Lanka Descending Into Chaos

Parliament passed a no-confidence motion against Rajapaksa 
Former leader Wickremesinghe calls new government ‘illegal’

Rival lawmakers clash on Nov. 15. Photographer: AFP/Getty Images

By
Sri Lanka is now effectively a country without a prime minister, with weeks of political turmoil culminating today in a brawl on the floor of the country’s parliament.
Two men believe they have the right to call themselves prime minister: the democratically elected leader, Ranil Wickremesinghe, who was sacked by the president on Oct. 26 and the pro-China strongman, Mahinda Rajapaksa, who was appointed in his place.
Tensions boiled over Thursday when rival lawmakers exchanged blows in the middle of the chamber, with some Rajapaksa supporters running towards the speaker, Karu Jayasuriya, shouting and throwing water bottles, trash cans and books at him. Members of Wickremesinghe’s party surrounded Jayasuriya to protect him, but the speaker adjourned the house as the violence continued for nearly half an hour.
Earlier, Jayasuriya told parliament he considered there was no functioning prime minister or cabinet after a majority had voted against Rajapaksa and since President Maithripala Sirisena had not appointed another leader.
The prolonged chaos, which countries including the U.S., China and India are watching with increasing concern, has stalled foreign aid and a $1.5 billion International Monetary Fund program, threatening to grind the entire country to a halt. It has also roiled the nation’s bonds and currency, which was already dropping to fresh lows amid the emerging market sell-off. The island nation’s rupee fell to a new low of 176.80 per dollar on Thursday.
“The crisis must be ended as soon as possible, because the uncertainty is going to drive investment out of the country and leave government services in a state of paralysis,” said Jehan Perera, executive director of the National Peace Council of Sri Lanka. “If the parties are not able to work out an accommodation, then it needs to go back to court.”

No Confidence

Rajapaksa, who lost a no-confidence motion in parliament on Wednesday, challenged Wickremesinghe to a general election to let the people decide the next government of the island nation.
He accepted the prime minister-ship because of the country’s economic woes and to lead an interim government until general elections were held, Rajapaksa said.
Siriseena had earlier dissolved the parliament and called for fresh elections, but after Wickremesinghe led a legal challenge to the constitutionality of the president’s move, the Supreme Court late on Tuesday stayed Sirisena’s order and allowed the house to reconvene.
On Wednesday, an opposition Marxist party handed over a no confidence motion to the house speaker as parliament met for the first time since Sirisena plunged the country into crisis.
The motion challenged the appointment of Rajapaksa, as well as the country’s freshly appointed cabinet ministers, as illegal. When the house speaker asked for a vote on the matter, as many as 120 members -- a majority in the 225-seat parliament -- stood up against Rajapaksa, according to Lakshman Kiriella, a member of Wickremesinghe’s United National Party.
The speaker declared the motion was passed by a voice vote but was prevented from doing a roll call, Wickremesinghe said on Wednesday. “Parliament voted that they have no confidence in the government under Rajapaksa,” Wickremesinghe said. “It is an illegal government.”
Sirisena rejected the no-confidence motion brought against his nominee for prime minister, saying proper parliamentary procedures had not been followed.
The move to fire the prime minister and unilaterally appoint Rajapaksa, who ruled between
2005 and 2015 but was criticized for human rights abuses and corruption, has been strongly criticized by countries including the U.S.
At first, both sides insisted they had the votes to triumph in a parliamentary vote on the appointment of Rajapaksa, but Sirisena later dissolved parliament entirely after his party conceded they lacked the numbers.
“Sri Lanka’s problem is not the prime minister-ship. Let us not deprive the people their right to show their franchise,” Rajapaksa said on Thursday.

In the Odyssey that is history, Ithaca is only a way-station



2018-11-19

o much is being written about President Maithripala Sirisena’s political U-turn and the resulting chaos, both pro and against. Of all the regular political columnists, Tisaranee Gunasekara has written what is easily the best analysis, (Deranged, published by the Colombo Telegraph website on Nov. 11).
It’s a gem of an analysis. I am not saying this because it echoes my own fears, hopes and sentiments. This writer is neither a political analyst or columnist. Depending on others’ evaluations and opinions about the current crisis, I found myself swimming in murky waters until I read Tisaranee’s column. I have never met the writer and do not even know how she looks like. What I can see clearly is an analytical mind of the highest order, free of personal prejudice. If she is biased, it’s in favour of democracy and our rights to live and breathe freely in the country of our birth.  

Her language is exceptionally good and obviously she’s extremely well read. In ‘Deranged,’ she quotes from The ‘Lord of the Rings’ by JRR Tolkien and refers to Homer’s epic poems. A political columnist doesn’t have to be literary; but in a country where most journalists brazenly display their lack of reading and inability to present a cohesive argument (in whatever language), it’s both a delight and a relief to come across a writer who has such wide reading and intellectual depth. Her column would still be a gem even without those literary allusions. But they are the embellishments which make reading it such a delight.  

She starts with a quote from Tolkien – ‘Precious, precious, precious, Gollum cried’ – and ends with a reference to Homer. Speaking about the battle that must be waged to protect our democratic rights, she writes: “This battle requires the most inclusive tent. It is a battle that must be waged, and waged right, irrespective of the outcome. In the Odyssey that is history, Ithaca is only a way-station.” 
That last sentence is something which should be hung as a slogan at the entrance of our parliament. It sums up, like nothing else written by any other columnist about the current crisis, the nature of the struggle which will have to be waged if we are not to lose our basic rights as citizens, not just now, or till December or till 2020, but for many centuries to come, for there will be more Ranil Wickremesinghes, Maithripala Sirisenas and Mahinda Rajapaksas in the eons to come.  

"What I can see clearly is an analytical mind of the highest order, free of personal prejudice. If she is biased, it’s in favour of democracy and our rights to live and breathe freely in the country of our birth"

The writer has made a comparison with the president’s ‘coup’ with Adolf Hitler’s call to an election as soon as he became Germany’s new chancellor through a backroom deal. She writes: “They (the Nazis) understood that democracy can be killed best and easiest using the legitimacy a victorious election would bring.” 
The comparison is striking. It doesn’t matter that we do not officially have Nazis and fascists here. It’s the thought processes which matter, the homophobia and hatred of political opponents, minorities and democratic institutions. I recall that one writer recently criticized Tisaranee for comparing Gotabhaya Rajapaksa to Adolf Hitler. I believe he has missed the point. When we compare someone to Hitler, it isn’t about so-and-so being exactly like him. It’s rather a way of saying that so-and-so has some of the traits, habits and thought processes which Hitler had. For example, one can argue that Gotabhaya has a nasty temper and liking for revenge, just like Hitler. If he hasn’t, then he can prove me wrong if and when he comes to power again.   

Finally, for those who haven’t read either Tolkien or Homer: Gollum is an important character in Tolkien’s ‘The Hobbit’. He lives on an island on a mysterious lake, a dwarf in size, and is known for his greed. The latter quality reminds you of someone? 
As for Ithaca, that’s where Odysseus came from. He was sent by King Menelaus to bring back his eloped wife Helen from Troy. This took ten years of war (The Illiad), and it took Odysseus another ten years to return to Ithaca. Now you can figure out why Ithaca  is only a way-station in the Odyssey that is history.    

PUBLIC, INTELLECTUALS CALL FOR GENERAL ELECTION

Call to act with restraint
‘People are supreme in any society’
‘Politicians should respect democratic norms’
Speaker Karu Jayasuriya entering the Chamber with a posse of policemen from the MPs’ entrance for the session. Picture by Dushmantha Mayadunne

Saturday, November 17, 2018

Speaker Karu Jayasuriya entering the Chamber with a posse of policemen from the MPs’ entrance for the session. Picture by Dushmantha Mayadunne

The prevailing situation has resulted in the people calling for the holding of a General Election as the only solution to the present political impasse.

A cross section of society including religious dignitaries said that the best solution is to hold a General Election.

People are supreme in any society in any part of the world. Therefore, the people have the right to demand for an opportunity to elect a Government of their choice and they should be given that right.
Speaker Karu Jayasuriya should be held responsible for the situation we are facing today. It seems the sole purpose of the Speaker is to show to the world that the country is in a chaotic situation.

Commenting on the prevailing political situation in the country, Kelaniya Raja Maha Viharadhipathi Ven. Prof. Kollupitiye Mahinda Sangharakkitha Thera called upon the citizens to act with restraint at the present juncture.

“It is a very unpleasant and sorry state of affairs that we witnessed happening within Parliament, one of the country’s most prestigious institutions. What is happening there is a very bad precedent and sets a very bad example. It is the responsibility of those maintaining law and order to see that the situation is brought under control,” Ven. Prof. Sangharakkitha Thera said.

“It is very sad to note that our MPs have become a commodity and getting sold. We send our representative not to be sold for a price.

They are sent to Parliament to fulfill the people’s aspirations. But, we note that nothing of the sort happens today as the people expect. We blame the Speaker for what has happened, the Thera added.
Ven. Yatamalagala Sumanasara Thera, the Executive Director of Daham Handa Centre, Pattivila told the Daily News that what President Maithripala Sirisena had predicted a few days ago, the country is experiencing right now. Those with brains should have acted wisely to avoid the recurring conflict situation.

The Ven. Thera also opined that it was necessary to carefully study the reasons behind the current situation in Parliament. “I see the only tangible solution is to call for a General Election. There is no other solution,” the Thera said.

“There is no point in trying to add numbers by changing heads. Because that will not help in any way solve the issue. All political parties should shun their personal agendas and come to a solution that is acceptable to all,” the Thera added.

Meanwhile, CAFFE Executive Director Keerthi Tennakoon told the Daily News that the intervention of a third party is needed to solve the conflict in Parliament.

Speaking to the Daily News yesterday Tennakoon further emphasised that the need of the hour is to get third party involvement to resolve the present crisis in Parliament.

Tennakoon further added that the public will see that this is a conflict between President Maithripala Sirisena and Speaker Karu Jayasuriya and also a conflict between Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa and former Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.

The CAFFE Executive Director said the prevailing crisis situation cannot continue emphasised the need to resolve it before it gets worse and out of control. He further warned that there could be bloodshed and the loss of life if a third party does not intervene and help resolve the conflict between the top politicians in Parliament

Tennakoon further said that the politicians involved in these clashes should be ashamed of themselves for the manner in which they have acted in Parliament which has brought disrepute to Sri Lanka.

Commenting on the unruly behaviour displayed in Parliament by the Members of Parliament, legal experts stated that the violence created and unruly behaviour by certain Parliamentarians inside the House cannot be covered by Parliamentary Privileges.

Meanwhile, a Senior Counsel, who wished to remain anonymous told the Daily News that the individuals who committed criminal acts should be dealt with by the law, irrespective of their political party affiliations.

‘The law makers have come law breakers. Parliamentary Privileges cannot be utilised to protect their criminal acts. The police have powers to take legal action in accordance with prevailing laws,” he added.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka’s leading business Chambers, associations and business leaders raised concern about current political situation in Sri Lanka, noting that the political uncertainty in Sri Lanka will dampen the business confidence to a great extent in the coming days.

Issuing a joint statement, The Ceylon Chamber of Commerce (CCC), International Chamber of Commerce Sri Lanka (ICCSL), Joint Apparel Association Forum (JAAF) and The Women’s Chamber of Industry and Commerce (WCCI) stressed the need to resolve this issue in a peaceful and sensible manner and noted that events of the last few weeks have resulted in absolute instability which is a situation that Sri Lanka simply cannot afford.

The joint statement further noted that political uncertainty will have a significant impact on the social and economic trajectory of our country and the hinder the development of the country to a great extent.

Noting that entire administration of this country has come to a standstill and the public officers are paralyzed being unable to discharge their functions, the joint statement said, the ultimate victims are the people of our country.

“We call upon all those responsible to accord the highest priority to national interest and refrain from pursuing any path that will result in an economic downfall which will have an adverse impact on the country and the people. We call for urgent and sensible action,” the statement said.

Meanwhile, senior investment advisor attached to the SC Securities said business confidence especially among foreign investors has been tepid during the last couple of weeks and this uncertain political atmosphere will have a profound impact on overall stock market activities in Sri Lanka.

Why Ranil Should Be Appointed As Prime Minister Not Sajith?

logo
Hema Senanayake
I am not an enthusiastic supporter of Ranil. But, right now, any right-minded citizen knows that the struggle to protect Constitution at this very moment, is narrowed down to one single point, which is to get Ranil appointed as Prime Minister. President has insisted that he will never appoint Ranil as P.M. After Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena, told to media that President has the power to appoint the Prime Minister and that H.E has firmly decided not to appoint Ranil as P.M. even though he commands the confidence of the Parliament, I decided to go through the relevant clauses of the Constitution, in order to understand this point by myself as a non-legal ordinary person.
I have observed that many legal luminaries and other intellectuals such as Dr. Nalin De Silva have reiterated the same point insisted by Mahinda Yapa. What is the exact position about it? There cannot be two truths on one single point. I have decided to investigate about it.
The relevant clause of the President’s power to appoint a Prime Minister has been defined in clause 43(3) under the Chapter 8 of the Constitution. I quote it below:
“43(3) The President shall appoint as Prime Minster the Member of Parliament who in his opinions is most likely to command the confidence of Parliament.”
How do you understand this clause? I do not see any unambiguity on this clause or in other words, there is no more than one genuine interpretation in regard to this clause of the constitution. 
This clause cannot be defined as “President shall appoint as Prime Minister the Member of Parliament who he wishes.” Therefore, there is no discretionary power vested on the President to appoint the Prime Minister. Yet, the President can and must make an opinion in regard to whom He shall appoint as Prime Minister. But his opinion must be subjected to a certain important condition, which is, that the Prime Minister so appointed should be able to command “the confidence of Parliament.”  What does this mean?
This means that you may remove the phrase “in his opinions” to get the practical application of this clause; so, it should be read as “The President shall appoint as Prime Minister the Member of Parliament who is most likely to command the confidence of Parliament.” The most insignificant phrase used in clause 43(3) is “in his opinions.” I guess that the words “in his opinions” are added to this particular clause to add a certain kind of curtesy. Therefore, the President must make an opinion based on evidence. If majority of members of parliament submit sworn affidavits that they have the confidence in Ranil as Prime Minister, President has no choice other than appointing him as P.M. If Mahinda has the majority support of members of the Parliament, President must appoint him as P.M.
This means that even if Anura Kumara or Sampatnahan can prove that he commands the confidence of Parliament, the President must appoint him as P.M. If president does not do it, he violates the constitution and ethics. 

Read More

Confused Parliamentary Brawl in Sri Lanka

The chaos degenerated into semi-violent fisticuffs between parliamentarians of the two groups. Prime Minister number two, Mr Rajapaksa wants fresh elections. This has further aggravated the crisis.

by K Natwar Singh-
( November 19, 2018, New Delhi, Sri Lanka Guardian) The political confusion in Sri Lanka is amazing and disconcerting. The country’s President, Maithripala Sirisena is helplessly groping in the dark, the Supreme Court has clipped his presidential wings, the country has two Prime Ministers, a besieged Speaker and a bewildered people.
The grave crisis was caused by President Maithripala falling out with his Prime Minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe, the most experienced, astute, popular and sophisticated Sri Lankan politician. He is well known and well liked in India and beyond. Out of the blue, former President Mahinda Rajapaksa was appointed as Prime Minister. When he was asked to prove his majority in Parliament, he could not do so. The majority of members were with Ranil Wickremesinghe. The President adjourned Parliament. The Supreme Court overruled him. Mahinda Rajapaksa refused to resign and let loose his hot heads to attack the Speaker, Karn Jayasuriya, a member of Wickremesinghe’s United National Party (UNP). The photograph of the fracas in Sri Lankan Parliament reminds me of similar scenes in Parliaments of Japan, South Korea and in the Uttar Pradesh Assembly.
The chaos degenerated into semi-violent fisticuffs between parliamentarians of the two groups. Prime Minister number two, Mr Rajapaksa wants fresh elections. This has further aggravated the crisis.
I might also mention that Mr Rajapaksa quit the Sri Lanka Freedom Party led by President Sirisena and joined his brother’s party, Sri Lanka Podujana Peremuna. Here, I feel like giving up. India cannot.
What does India do? Wait and watch. For how long? Intervene? Out of the question. Ignore? Can we afford to do so? Hardly. Sri Lanka is a strategically located friendly neighbour. Developments in Sri Lanka have an impact in Tamil Nadu—remember the LTTE and Prabhakaran, the vicious and brutal leader of Sri Lankan Tamils? What about China’s developing interest in the island and Mahinda Rajapaksa’s not so concealed pro-China proclivities?
This is where the need for skilled and wise diplomacy comes in. I am aware that diplomacy does not provide salvation. It does provide hope. We have many Sri Lanka experts in the IFS past and present. Among the past Sri Lanka experts we have several brilliant, accomplished former high commissioners with penetrating minds and deep understanding. I trust government is in touch with them. If not, do contact them. Prolonged instability in Sri Lanka cannot be in our interest.
***
When I was born, the British Empire covered 1/5th of the surface of the globe. India’s national anthem was “God Save the King”. A hundred thousand Brits ruled a country of three hundred million. Most were racist, arrogant, insensitive and rude. The memsabs were insufferable. Their contribution to the downfall of the British Empire was considerable.
Today, Britain is a B class power. Rich, civilised, highly developed, but in the middle of the high table of the very influential countries. Yet, it must be accepted that Britain has left durable democratic, educational, scientific, industrial, institutions in every part of its former empire. The most useful is the English language, now generally accepted as the world’s lingua franca.
Three days ago, I watched the Brexit debate in the House of Commons. It lasted five hours. The beleaguered Prime Minister, Theresa May stood her ground, but the House of Commons was not with her. The European Union is both condescending and not so subtly patronising. It is yet to be seen whether May survives or not, but Britain’s clout diminishes by the day. It’s all so un-British. Will the United Kingdom stay united, or will Scotland and Wales become separate entities, both independent but united by a common language?
I played a minor role in the process that led to the liquidation of British Empire in several British colonies as a member of the UN Committee on Decolonisation. Most of these colonies were in Africa. This was in the early 1960s. Zambia was Northern Rhodesia; Zimbabwe, Southern Rhodesia; Namibia, South West Africa; Botswana, Bechuanaland; Malawi, Nyasaland and so on. Before I left the UN in 1966, almost all had gained independence except Namibia.
Kunwar Natwar Singh is an Indian politician, a former senior bureaucrat, a former Union cabinet minister, and a writer.

Need for a Referendum


 
by Rajeewa Jayaweera- 

Political developments in usually slow-moving Sri Lanka, between October 26 and November 14, was a rare exception. Matters moved rapidly after the dismissal of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe (RW) by the President, his replacement with a former President Mahinda Rajapaksa (MR), Prorogation and subsequent dissolution of Parliament, announcement of General Elections on January 5, dissolution stayed temporarily by the Supreme Court, reconvening of Parliament and loss of NCM by the new government all happened in less than three weeks.

Vociferous protests have been made recently of anti-democratic measures. Therefore, it would be useful to recall some of the glaring undemocratic acts besides deviations from principles of good governance since January 9, 2015.

President Sirisena, minutes after taking his oath of office, committed his first anti-democratic act by swearing in RW backed by 60 MPs as Prime Minister replacing a sitting Prime Minister supported by 144 MPs. Where were defenders of democracy demanding a vote of confidence or a ‘floor test’? Even the Ven. Sobitha Thero who gave leadership to the good governance project by his silence endorsed it.

It was followed by the dismissal of the Chief Justice with a letter, informing his appointment two years earlier was not lawful. Once again, defenders of democracy remained silent.

One is compelled to ask, were these acts constitutional and in the spirit of good governance? Democracy and constitutionalism are for all times and not for selective application.

The COPE investigation into the Central Bank bond scam came up with much damning evidence against the Governor, an RW protégé, but President Sirisena dissolved parliament on the eve of the release date of the report as the findings could have impacted parliamentary elections which were due. Those howling over the dissolution on midnight of November 9 were in slumber.

In the run-up to Parliamentary elections in August 2015, President Sirisena announced he would not appoint MR even if his group secured the highest number of seats. This announcement might have influenced voters, cost MR’s group some votes and impacted the difference between 95 and 106 MPs. Those who lament today of lack of democratic spirit remained silent.

Since then, good governance has gone South. Investigations into murder and corruption have been stalled due to political interference. Senior staffers in the Attorney General’s Dept. have been prevented from carrying out a thorough cross-examination of some VVIPs during the PCoI hearings into the bond scam due to political pressure. LG elections were delayed for over two years. Six Provincial Councils are currently under Governor’s rule.

These are but a few of the many anti-democratic self-serving acts by the Sirisena-Wickremasinghe government, voted into office to correct Rajapaksa misrule. Most protestors, foreign envoys who remained silent for three years and local proxies of international NGOs who sing for their supper did little or nothing.

Being a layman, how this writer understands this issue is that President Sirisena has acted based on powers vested with him under Article 33 and its sub-clauses in the Constitution. RW and others argue on the basis, contents of Article 33 may not be interpreted in isolation but in conjunction with Article 70 and its subclauses which restricts Presidential powers.

Republics with an Executive Presidency (i.e. USA, France) are Presidential democracies whereas countries with an Executive Prime Minister (i.e. UK, India) and a Monarch or Constitutional President amounts to Parliamentary democracies. Accordingly, in countries with the former, people’s sovereignty is exercised through the President whereas, in the case of the latter, it is exercised through the Legislature (Parliament or National Assembly).

Nevertheless, it is paramount to remember, under both systems Presidents, Prime Ministers and elected representatives are but only trustees of people’s sovereignty which is inalienable.

People’s sovereignty vested with President Sirisena on January 9, 2015, has been passed on to Parliament by way of the 19th Amendment without the concurrence of the people. It was an ill thought out, hastily prepared and purpose designed amendment with no consideration of its long-term effects. The primary objective being preventing another MR presidency, it overlooked the lack of provision for situations when the heads of the Executive and Legislative branches are no longer able to work together resulting in a deadlock. Judging by the version given by President Sirisena, their differences had reached a breaking point.

The doctrine of Separation of Powers is perhaps best articulated by French political thinker Charles de Montesquieu (1689 – 1755), in his book ‘The Spirit of the Laws’ (French: De l’esprit des lois) first published in 1748.

According to Montesquieu’s dictum, in a Republican constitution, the power of the people lies with the President and supreme power is in the hands of the people, not, as in a Parliamentary democracy, in the body of the people. The representative body ought not to exercise the executive function, because it is not suited to it. The legislature ought not to be able to arraign the person entrusted with executive powers, for this would turn the legislature into a body with arbitrary powers. The executive officer ought to have a share in the legislative power by a veto over legislation, but he ought not to have the power to enter positively into the making of legislation. The executive should have the power of calling and fixing the duration of meetings of the legislative body. In this way the executive branch will be able to prevent the encroachments of the legislature on its authority, thus ensuring that the legislature will not become despotic.

In the British Westminster system, the power resides with the Monarch as do all aspects of governance. Hence it is Her Majesty’s Royal Navy, Air Force, Army, etc. The Queen has the power to both suspend and dissolve Parliament besides refuse to give royal assent to laws. However, by convention, she will act on the advice of the Prime Minister. 

In the Sri Lankan context, Sovereignty lies with the people and is entrusted to the President to uphold. Therefore, all state power flows from the President. All executive arms of government from the armed forces, police, civil and diplomatic services are the prerogative of the President. It changed with the enactment of the 19th Amendment. 

Ill effects of the 19th Amendment of making the Executive President answerable to parliament are being felt today whereas a more suitable option would have been an Executive Presidential system like that before the 18th Amendment with term limits or a Westminster styled government with a Constitutional President acting on the advice of the Prime Minister. Yoking of the two systems together has plunged the country over a political precipice.

President Sirisena claims he offered the premiership to both the Speaker and Deputy Leader of UNP who had declined. Because of his inability to work together with RW any longer, his third attempt was to offer it to MR. His modus operandi in resolving the challenges he faced leaves much to be desired and has made him vulnerable to severe criticism and condemnation.

A more pragmatic approach would have been to use his Presidential prerogative to address Parliament and explained to legislators of actual instances when RW had exceeded his powers, some of which are in the public domain. The most recent is RW’s offer of the East Container Terminal to the Indians. Having done so, he could have requested the House for a 2/3 vote to dissolve parliament and revert to the people for a decision. If declined by Parliament, he could have appealed directly to the people by way of calling a referendum. Instead, he chose a path undemocratic in nature and not in the spirit of good governance.

RW and the UNP could have sought the intervention of the Supreme Court earlier but opted to first take up the issue with foreign envoys in Colombo seeking support from the international community and prolonging the nation’s agony.

Whatever the apex court’s final decision, it will not bring a stable government.

A decision upholding the dismissal of RW and his cabinet will see the return of MR’s government. A struggle between President Sirisena and the Rajapaksa clan for the 2020 Presidential poll is bound to follow. The economy would suffer.

A decision against the dissolution will see RW’s return as Prime Minister. An administration in which the President and Prime Minister are unable to work together will be disastrous for the economy unless RW steps aside. A move to impeach the President may not be to RW’s liking as his chances of winning a Presidential election are debatable.

As a solution to the current deadlock, the appointment of a member of the UNP other than RW as Prime Minister would be more feasible.

Even though both sides have voiced their intention of passing a resolution to dissolve parliament immediately after the current deadlock is resolved, the danger of failing to muster a 2/3 majority vote is real. Pension Rights of 55 sitting MPs in jeopardy is a significant factor. It will also require the UNFF, SLFP, and SLPP to cooperate, a rather tall order.

In democracies, citizens express their dissatisfaction of governments through elections. Delaying lesser elections, due between Presidential and parliamentary elections, is never a good idea as people tend to find other avenues to express their dissatisfaction. Some of the recent strikes were genuine expressions of frustration which at some point could turn ugly. The UNFGG/UPFA alliance, formed to oust the Rajapaksa administration should not have stayed on with an insufficient majority in parliament. It paved the way for MR’s return to the political fray. The country is in a political deadlock. The economy is in shambles.

Parliamentary elections are an absolute necessity.

Therefore, a safer route would be a Referendum allowing the People state if they approve the dissolution of parliament; and if so, hold a general election.

Unleashing the power to lead: Global presence with local pulse



logoMonday, 19 November 2018 

We are indeed delighted to present 441 extraordinary managers at the PIM’s latest convocation. They have been developed as leaders with global presence and local pulse. That’s why we picked the apt theme this year as ‘unleashing the power to lead’. Instead of cursing the darkness of leadership we see at the political fronts, we decided to light not one candle but many. Today’s column is all about this prestigious event of the premier postgraduate enterprise that aptly acclaimed as the “Nation’s Management Mentor”.

Overview 

As we are much aware, leadership is all about inspiring, influencing and initiating. It is more than positions and titles as it involves decisions and actions. We have been breeding leaders to the nation for over 30 years. These thoroughbred professionals have mastered value creation with confidence and competence. They are equipped with cutting-edge knowledge and complementary skills needed to perform in both private and public sectors alike. In producing them with clarity and commitment, the PIM has always been a centre of excellence in management education with its wings spreading beyond Sri Lanka.

Excellence is all about being exceptionally good. When applied to enterprises, it involves exceptional achievements in a consistent manner. That’s what the PIM is proud of as a self-financed and semi-autonomous public entity. We simply excel with extraordinary executives in essentially engaging them to unleash their true potential. The nation expects them to contribute towards the socio-economic upliftment in multiple fronts.

As our mission proclaims, we ignite human imagination by developing leaders with global presence and local pulse. In this endeavour, we pursue innovative teaching, cutting-edge research, enriching partnerships, inspiring sustainability and exemplary governance. Now the time has come to expand our reach, regionally and globally in adhering to best practices with appropriate use of technology. The PIM will continue to produce value in practicing values, as the nation’s management mentor.

Keynote speaker

Jan Kunigk, the Executive Vice President of Siam City Cement PLC and the Director Marketing, Sales and Innovation at Siam City Cement Lanka Ltd. was the keynote speaker of the PIM’s annual convocation this year. Currently Kunigk is leading the Sales, Marketing and Innovation departments for Siam City Cement in Sri Lanka and is part of the Thailand based Corporate Sales and Marketing Excellence Circle and a member of its Digital Council.

Siam City Cement is the fastest growing cement and construction materials company in Asia with current revenues of close to $ 2 billion, 6000 own employees and assets in India, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Vietnam, Myanmar and Indonesia.

Kunigk is an independent advisor to several European, US and Singapore based institutional investment companies and has served in various top management and senior management positions before joining Siam City Cement. He served as Commercial Director of Holcim Indonesia, a publicly traded company since January 2013, generating revenues of Swiss Franc 1 billion. Kunigk was responsible for all sales and marketing activities and lead the transformational and change management program from a product-centric to a customer-centric and customer-focused organisation, changing the mindset of over 2,500 employees.

He holds a Master degree in Business Administration (MBA) from Western Illinois University (USA) and a Diploma in European Business Studies of Bamberg University (Germany). He continuously focuses on executive education to stay up to date and joined programs at Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts, Chicago Graduate School of Business, and at IMD, Lausanne, Switzerland.

Highlights of the keynote address

I felt Jan’s speech was timely and topical. His main focus was to highlight how unleashing the power to lead becomes relevant in the current business context. He brought a wide array of points to ponder in order to ascertain the rigour and relevance of leadership. I thought of sharing some extracts from his speech:

“I believe the greatest truths of universe is before leading others it is foremost important to lead yourself first. Envisioning a better future, setting worthy, self-reflected and challenging goals, and following through with sustainable impact first and foremost requires leading yourself. Often leadership is a lonely road. And to keep ourselves inspired, motivated, and energised we need to lead ourselves with our heart, with a clear purpose, and full devotion. Successful organisations need leaders who know themselves first; have the inner compass that points them into the right direction. Many leaders never take the time to do so. Take time to reflect on what you want to do, why you want to do it, and how you will do it.”

“Good leadership isn’t something that just happens,” he went on to say. “It requires many competencies such as decisiveness, motivation and the ability to lead by example. It might seem easy to set the right example for employees and be a source of inspiration for them, but putting it into practice successfully can take a lifetime. It’s about trust, gaining respect, and motivating and managing employees to get good results. A team that’s being led by a poor leader, will be more likely to experience a conflict than teams with leaders who encourage, involve and inspire their employees. It’s sometimes said that managers do things right and leaders do the right things. The best solution however, is to be both a manager and a leader.”

As Jan further observed, “When it is done the right way, we call it leadership; when it is done the wrong way, we call it a disaster.” “It falls to the person in charge to give people a reason to believe in that person’s talents, and the ability to get people to work together.”

“Few people in high places get there without being knocked over a few times. Being flattened is nothing to be ashamed of; how you rise to your feet is what counts. If you do it by acknowledging your shortcomings and then set about remedying it through further education, training, or even experience, you demonstrate that you have resilience. Employees deserve leaders who know how to bend, but not break. Such leaders handle the issues that make everyone else weak in the knees – a fierce new competitor, a pending merger, or conflict in the workplace. They need to know that their leader has the heart to embrace a challenge and the guts not to break down in the face of adversity. They also need to know that their leader has brain enough to back off from the impossible so as not to break the organisation. Savvy leaders pick their moments carefully; tough leaders persevere only.”

“Command is granted; leadership is earned,” observed Kunigk. “That’s an adage that governs our military. People are put into positions of authority, but it is up to the individual to earn the respect and trust of his followers. When followers see the leader doing what is right for the team; that is, supporting, developing, nurturing, and defending in good and bad times they grant their trust. The same trust-building revenue applies to individuals. Managers who put the interests of their people first by finding ways to help them grow, develop, and take on more responsibilities cease to be mere managers; they are leaders of men and women who have earned their rank by giving their people a reason to believe.”

“Leadership only succeeds when it shows others how to extend and push for greatness.” Your team should look at you and think, “If she/he can do it, I can, too.” True leaders do not whip their team into shape from the back of the pack. They lead the charge, while carrying their share of the weight. If your leadership model says, “Failure is not an option,” you may be setting yourself up for not only more failure, but a culture of disappointment and fear. Failure is a vital process of invention, innovation, and risk-taking. If you want a truly extraordinary team, celebrate failure and even encourage it in a controlled, experimental environment.”

“Good leadership takes strength of character and a firm commitment to do the right thing, at the right time, for the right reason,” opined Jan. “This means doing what you say, when you say it. If your team can’t trust you, you’ll probably never lead them to greatness.”

“Setting an example isn’t just about finding ways to motivate employees in the short term; it can also inspire them in more lasting ways. Inspirational leadership generates enthusiasm and passion for the organisation’s mission by helping employees to align their personal values with company initiatives. An inspired team is more likely to meet its goals, demonstrate higher levels of engagement, and produce higher quality work.”

“You have all the thinking in your hands by now. You are ready to excel and launch. With that, I wish you the very best for your future, in developing your legacies, and with that all the best for your future endeavours”. That’s how Jan Kunigk concluded.

Way Forward 

As Aristotle said, roots of education are bitter but the fruits are sweet. The convocation day was a time of tasting that sweetness. A premier postgraduate program should have high quality and relevance. That’s what we at PIM are continuously striving for. I earnestly hope that the 441 private sector managers and the public sector administrators who graduated will contribute their utmost towards the betterment of themselves, their respective organisations, and the nation at large. That’s how we unleash the power of leadership in breeding holistic leaders fulfilling a dire need.
(The writer can be reached through director@pim.sjp.ac.lk, ajantha@ou.edu or www.ajanthadharmasiri.info.)

Saturday, November 17, 2018

London Palestinian film festival exposes human stories beyond the headlines


The comeback of one of the oldest Arab film festivals in Europe represents Palestine’s rich history and a projection of future memories.

A scene from Mohamed Jabaly’s feature, Ambulance (2016), a first-person account that documents the efforts of a team of ambulance paramedics throughout the 2014 war (Screengrab)

Joseph Fahim's picture
LONDON - After a two-year hiatus due to funding issues, the London Palestine Film Festival(LPFF) has made an unexpected comeback. A rich lineup covering the past and present of evolving Palestinian cinema features rare shorts, retrospectives, book discussions and some of the most acclaimed Palestinian films of recent years.
The festival was initiated in 1998 as a student undertaking at London’s School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS). Throughout the past 20 years, the festival sought to explore different facets of the Palestinian experience, presenting eclectic programmes that combine historical films with the latest highlights of Palestinian film productions, along with a variety of side-activities such as art exhibitions and panel discussions.
Taking place at some of London’s biggest art centres - Barbican, Curzon Soho and the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) among others – this year's edition of the festival boasts an ambitious selection focusing on exile, incarceration and the elusive collective memory of Palestine and Gaza.
The festival opens with Raed Andoni’s highly acclaimed documentary Ghost Hunting. Winner of best documentary at the 2017 Berlin Film Festival, Andoni’s latest provocative experiment sees him recreating Jerusalem’s Al-Moskobiya, Israel’s notorious interrogation centre, as he employs former detainees to play the role of their captors.
Gradually, the inmates start to subject a group of gullible actors to the psychological torture they have undergone, as the line between fact and fiction blurs. Andoni’s daring study of captivity and trauma is, by turns, fascinating, disturbing and haunting. Nearly two years after its release, it remains one of the standout Arab documentaries of the century.

Life in Gaza

A focus of this year’s edition is stories from Gaza, which has been under an Israeli and Egyptian blockade since 2007. A number of shorts and features shed light on life during Israel’s three main military operations targeting the Gaza Strip between 2008 and 2014.
Given the recent Israeli air strikes that left seven Palestinians dead and the ongoing protests in Gaza where more than 200 Palestinians were killed, these stories feel all the more urgent and timely – achingly familiar narratives of history that continue to repeat themselves.
The programme includes Dina Naser’s short fiction, One Minute (2015), an affecting portrait of a woman’s last minutes before an Israeli raid and Areej Abu Eid’s short documentary, A Very Hot Summer (2016), a personal account of the director’s memories in one hot Ramadan season during the 2014 war.
Mohamed Jabaly’s feature, Ambulance (2016), is a first-person account that documents the efforts of a team of ambulance paramedics throughout the 51 days of the 2014 war.
Mickey Yamine and Philip Gnadt’s effervescent documentary feature, Gaza Surf Club (2016), is an upbeat portrayal of the growing surfing scene in Gaza.  

Palestinians in exile

One of the most distinctive voices presented by LPFF is Danish-Palestinian Mahdi Fleifel, who made a big splash in the festival scene with his 2012 feature-length documentary, A World Not OursThe film is an intimate look at three generations of exiled Palestinians at Ain al-Hilweh, the largest Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon.
The festival offers a retrospective of five short films Fleifel directed between 2014 – 2018 that cement his reputation as Palestinian cinema’s contemporary poet of exile.  
In Xenos (2014), Fleifel follows a group of young Palestinian migrants from the aforementioned Lebanese camp as they grapple to survive in an economically ravaged Athens.
In A Man Returned (2016), an unofficial sequel to Xenos, the director chronicles the return of one of the migrants to Ain al-Hilweh. Now addled by a heroin addiction, he attempts to forge a new life for himself as the shadow of the Syrian war looms large over the camp.
In 2017, Fleifel directed his first fiction film, the Cannes contender, A Drowning Man; a gritty, uncompromising companion to Xenos about a young Palestinian refugee struggling to cope with the hostility of an alienating Athens.
The most playful of the bunch is I Signed the Petition (2018), a humorous, ironic account of a young Palestinian man mulling over the consequences of signing a petition for the cultural boycott of Israel.
Equally ironic but more bitter is 20 Handshakes for Peace (2014), a dissection of the iconic handshake between Yasser Arafat, Yitzhak Rabin and Bill Clinton on the day of the Oslo Accord on 13 September 1993, juxtaposed with a raging voiceover of Palestinian literary critic and world-renowned scholar Edward Said.
Few other filmmakers have succeeded in evoking the fading memories of Palestine as thoughtfully as experimental director Kamal Aljafari whose debut feature Port of Memory (2010) – an elliptical docu-fiction about Palestinian displacement in Jaffa – is now considered one of the watershed Palestinian films of the decade.
The Berlin-based Aljafari returns to Jaffa with Recollection (2015), a formally inventive document of the port city comprised of footage culled from various resources between 1960 and 1990.
By wiping out the presence of all Israelis in these snippets, Aljafari’s dialogue-free conceptual documentary resurrects the lost Jaffa to a Palestinian populace who no longer have a place in what once was the cultural centre of Palestine. The screening will be followed by a masterclass by Aljafari at SOAS on 18 November.
A different, more straightforward treatment of lost Palestinian memory is explored in Cinema of the Palestinian Revolution, an indispensable programme composed of five restored short documentaries made between 1969 and 1984.
The programme includes Ali Siam’s The Flower of all Cities (1969), a revealing propaganda film showing harmonious Palestinian life in Jordanian-controlled East Jerusalem before the 1967 Israeli occupation.
Mustafa Abu Ali’s Palestine in the Eye (1976) is a record of the life and times of photographer Hani Jawharieh, one of the founding fathers of Palestinian cinema. The film was produced and commissioned by the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). Also included in the programme is veteran visual artist Ismail Shammout’s Glow of Memories (1972), a wordless examination of an elderly man who happens to be the subject of one of his paintings.

Dystopian universes

Another distinctive retrospective is the sci-fi shorts trilogy of Palestinian artist, Larissa Sansour. Her idiosyncratic work uses live motion, archival material, and CGI in creating dystopian universes highlighting issues of segregation, political mythology, and reframing the Palestinian narrative.
Sansour envisions herself as the first Palestinian in space in A Space Exodus (2008), in a nod to Stanley Kubrick’s classic 2001: A Space Odyssey that uses Neil Armstrong’s 1969 moon-landing to pose questions about national identity and nationhood. 
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Nation Estate (2012), Sansour’s most famous work, imagines Palestine as a gigantic skyscraper, trapped in the middle of the occupied land. Meanwhile, In the Future They Ate from The Finest Porcelain (2015) centres on a resistance group, or “narrative terrorists” as they describe themselves, that implant pieces of porcelain imprinted with the traditional keffiyeh graphic pattern in the soil of their homeland for future archaeologists to excavate; an elaborate endeavour to counter the narrative of the occupier.
Other highlights include Mats Grorud’s animated feature, The Tower (2018), an intimate epic anchored by an 11-year-old girl exiled in the Burj al-Barajneh camp in Beirut. The film traces four generations of displaced Palestinians over a span of 70 years.
Jumana Manna’s debut documentary feature, A Magical Substance Flows Into Me (2015), is an enchanting study of Palestine’s little-known multi-cultural musical heritage.
Samer Salameh’s closing night documentary, 194. Us, Children of the Camp (2017), is an unflinching inspection of the Yarmouk Palestinian camp in Syria from the beginning of the war.
The festival will also present a discussion of the newly released book, Palestinian Cinema in the Days of Revolution, by author and chair of the Department of Asia Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Nadia Yaqub. All screenings will be followed by Q&As with the directors. 
As Palestine once again returns to the headlines, the London Palestine Film Festival provides a valuable portal for humanising a nation and people that continue to be reduced to figures in news bulletins.
The London Palestine Film Festival kicks off on 16 November and concludes on the 28th