NEVER in Sri Lanka's post-independence
history has so much power been concentrated in the hands of so few
The nasty, brutish and short impeachment process of Dr
Shirani Bandaranayake from the post of Chief Justice and the appointment of
presidential adviser Mohan Peiris as her replacement has emasculated the last
institution bold enough to stand up to President Mahinda Rajapakse.
Most lawyers, judges and human rights activists saw the
process as deeply flawed and an attack on the independence of the judiciary.
The highest court in the land had opined that the impeachment was not in
accordance with the law.
The move attracted international concern and condemnation.
But Rajapakse paid scant heed and went ahead with the appointment of a new head
of the courts.
Some would say Sri Lanka's highest court has been complicit
in making Rajapakse powerful. Ever since a new Republican constitution was
promulgated in 1978 creating an executive presidency, which had the power of
appointing the judges to the Supreme Court, the highest court in the land has
not struggled to keep its independence.
In fact, in several landmark judgments the Supreme Court
helped strengthen the executive in decisions that alarmed jurists. For example,
decisions such as the change in the procedure for Members of Parliament to
cross the floor without facing a by-election made it possible for Rajapakse's
ruling coalition to amass a two-third's majority in parliament.
In the past two decades or so, there has been no real tussle
between the executive and the judiciary.
That was until now. A few months ago a bench of the Supreme
Court headed by Dr Bandaranayake found that a proposed parliamentary bill that
would give the president's brother, a cabinet minister, Basil, control over
much of the development budget of the country currently devolved to Provincial
Councils was unconstitutional.
That placed her in direct confrontation with the president,
and the former CJ's supporters are convinced that is why she was sacked.
The end result is that Sri Lanka now has a president with
true untrammelled power through his office and those of his siblings. The
country's security forces are under the control of Rajapakse's younger brother
the Defence Secretary Gotabhaya.
The speaker of the Parliament -- constitutionally next in
line to the president -- is an older brother Chamil. And now the other brother
Basil more or less controls the economy.
While the recent power struggle may have distracted the
country in the past weeks, greater political and economic challenges remain.
Growth and foreign investment has slowed since the post-war spurt.
In 2011, gross domestic product growth was 8.3 per cent. It
slowed sharply to 6.5 last year and is forecast to stay around that level in
the current year.
The cost of living has risen sharply and the fall in GDP
rates is because of the contraction of import and export trade. Sri Lanka
partly depends on the export of light industrial goods and agricultural goods
for its survival, and this is not a good sign.
The demilitarisation of the Tamil minority-dominated North
and East and the efforts at reconciliation are not progressing at promised
levels according to politicians representing those regions. Rather, university
students in northern Jaffna have been arrested because they peacefully
commemorated dead Tamil Tiger cadres.
Externally the country could come under increased pressure
over human rights issues at international fora. The United Nations Human Rights
Council has Sri Lanka on its agenda for its next meeting.
To add to that the Commonwealth has been making concerned
noises about the impeachment process and the efforts at reconciliation. The
Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting is scheduled to be held in Rajapakse's
hometown of Hambantota later this year.
This is being touted as a major feather in the cap of the
president. But Canada and the United Kingdom (two key players in the
Commonwealth) have expressed dismay at recent events and may boycott the
meeting -- causing him to lose face.
Rajapakse has almost absolute power today. With that comes a
huge responsibility.
In the tussle with the judiciary, he has shown that he has
no regard for a ruling of the courts. The new CJ is a Rajapakse loyalist who
controversially told the United Nations in a deposition defending the
government's human rights record that a missing journalist was alive and well,
living in another country.
This was subsequently admitted by him in a Sri Lankan court
to be unverified information. By appointing such a person to the post of CJ the
president has shown he has little respect for the independence of the courts.
No wonder many Sri Lankans are feeling they are standing on
the edge looking into a dark abyss.
Read more: http://www.nst.com.my/opinion/columnist/for-sri-lanka-it-s-all-in-the-family-1.203264#ixzz2IYG57QzK
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