One cannot fail to
be amazed at the considerable ingenuity if not wild imagination with
which the government’s National Plan of Action to implement the
recommendations of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission has
been drafted. Some responses invoke chuckles of glee whilst other
promises invoke far more heated reactions given the sheer chutzpah with
which they have been made.
Lack of requisite political will
For example, the unfortunate inhabitants of this blessed land would
be vastly relieved to learn that this administration has committed
itself to disarming persons in possession of unauthorized weapons and to
prosecute them in the impressively speedy period of six months (point
9.204).
Yet if this process is as uncomplicated as is made out to be, why was
such a disarming exercise not carried out for so long? Several deaths
would have been spared, among them an innocent British tourist in
Tangalle who ironically enough had been engaged in humanitarian work in
the Gaza as well as a UPFA politician who lost his life in a deadly
skirmish with a UPFA parliamentarian cum drug lord.
It is most relevant that the latter is rumored to be back in the
country but is well beyond the reach of the Criminal Investigation
Department, protected as he is, by the ruling hierarchy. Did we need a
Lessons Learnt Commission and an imaginative Action Plan if the
requisite political will to disarm political thugs was evidenced? The
answer to that question is all too self evident.
Other impressive but incredulous promises
We proceed from this wonderfully Alice in Wonderland guarantee to the
even more impressive promise that allegations, (against whom or in
regard to what is not specified save for a mention of Bhareti, Karuna,
EPDP extortion and a Major Seelan), will be prosecuted and punished
irrespective of political links within that ubiquitous period of six
months (point 9.213).
The authorities mandated with this task is the Department of the
Police, the Department of the Attorney General and the Ministry of
Justice which have all in one voice, promised solemnly to ‘conduct
investigations speedily and ensure that the Rule of Law prevails having
due regard to the Constitution(sic) guarantee of the equal protection of
the law.’
This promise literally beggars the imagination. If there was one
overwhelming problem with the Rule of Law in Sri Lanka, it is the
concretely evidenced and extensively documented lack of independence
that dogs these two key implementing institutions, namely the Department
of the Attorney General and the Department of the Police.
It is precisely due to this problem that proper investigations and
prosecutions are not carried out while politicized prosecutions are
evidenced aplenty. While this trend was certainly seen on the part of
past Presidents, it was elevated to a veritable art by this Presidency.
Laws such as the 1994 Convention Against Torture Act which with all
its flaws could have used to set right the deficiencies of the penal
regime in prosecuting torturers, were deliberately disregarded by state
prosecutors in furtherance of state policy, no less. Sri Lanka’s former
Army Commander and Tamil journalist J.S. Tissainayagam were included
among those against whom the law and prosecutorial policy was
unforgivably twisted in the objective of obtaining politically motivated
verdicts. Presidential pardons then followed as if this apparent
magnanimity would suffice to wipe out the shame of the subverted process
through which those who angered the regime were punished.
Inability to protect the judiciary
In the face of this body of evidence and given that no change in
state policy has been shown in terms of practical reality, are we
supposed to believe that, magically as it were, these institutions of
the police and the prosecution would be bestowed with the requisite
independence from the executive in order to carry out their functions
without fear or favour? The Action Plan promises an ‘increased rate of
successful prosecutions’ in six months. This is stretching our credulity
a bit too far, even for the incredibly supine society that Sri Lanka
has been reduced to now.
The backlash from the attacks on the Mannar court house and the
chambers of a judicial officer continues for a further week without any
concrete arrests taking place. Last week, this newspaper highlighted the
fact that preliminary investigations had indicated the complicity of
state officials in the attack. Has action been taken against them in
order to justify this government’s claims that it will protect the
judiciary? If even as serious an incident as the Mannar courthouse
attack cannot give rise to an effective government clampdown on those
responsible, what are we to believe of its promises in the National
Action Plan that it will ensure speedy prosecutions of those against
whom ‘allegations’ have been made in the most contentious of
circumstances? These are fairy tales, fit only for the childish and the
naive.
Using the police for political ends
Meanwhile, this Plan contains a series of other promises the
dissection of which would require far more space than that contained in a
newspaper column. A few warrant particular mention. We are told, for
instance, that the all important delinking of the Department of the
Police from the institutions dealing with defence (point 9.214, 215)
would be referred to a Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) as it deals
with ‘an entirely policy/political issue.’ This is a convenient
euphemism, of course, for shelving this recommendation which is by far,
one of the most far reaching of the LLRC’s points of emphasis.
As experience has surely shown us, a PSC is the Siberia of effective
political action in Sri Lanka This column predicted all along that the
LLRC recommendation of delinking the Department of the Police from the
Ministry of Defence would get short shrift as it would immediately
undermine the intensely anti-democratic nature of this administration in
using the police for its own ends. This end result was therefore
eminently predictable.
Just another consummate exercise in deception
But most amusing of all is the Action Plan’s affirmation that an
independent Police Commission and an independent Public Service
Commission exists, thereby satisfying that part of the LLRC’s
recommendations.
Let us take the notion of what is meant by ‘independent’ which the
incurably optimistic framers of this Action Plan appear to have lost
sight of. A glance at the country’s case law would provide many answers
to this core issue. As the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka has categorically
stated, the requirement of ‘independence’ must be satisfied through
firstly, the appointing authority, secondly, security in tenure of
office and thirdly, freedom from governmental control (Determination Re
The Broadcasting Authority Bill, S.D. No 1/97 – 15/97, delivered on 5th
May 1997).
Could it be honestly said that the ‘constitutional commissions’
established under the 18th Amendment to the Constitution satisfies all
three requirements? What has this NPC done except to admit that it can
only mediate and has no effective power to actually bring about change
in the police force. This shameful admission completely distinguishes
the current body from its predecessor Commission under the 17th
Amendment which was too ‘independent’ and was therefore dispensed with
summarily.
In sum, for those intimately acquainted with several typically
unfulfilled promises contained in this Action Plan, this document only
amounts to just another consummate exercise in deception. Its dexterity
in using the LLRC for political ends is obvious. And as citizens of a
country on the verge of falling into the abyss, we can only roundly
condemn its fundamental lack of honesty and sincerity.
http://www.sundaytimes.lk/120805/columns/an-action-plan-that-is-basically-dishonest-7877.html