AHRC
declares a week of concern for threats against the independence of the judiciary
in Sri Lanka
The Asian Human Rights Commission alerts all
concerned persons in and outside of Sri Lanka to the possibility that a five
days from now there may not be a judiciary that can exercise judicial power with
independence in Sri Lanka. In all likelihood, the judiciary will be brought
under the direct control of the Executive President, in the same way that other
institutions in Sri Lanka, including the Attorney General’s Department, have
been brought under the direct control of the Executive President. This is no
false alarm.
According to state media, the government will
defy the interpretation of law given by the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka last week
(1st January 2013) which declares that:
“It is mandatory under
Article 107(3) of the Constitution for the Parliament to provide by the matters
relating to the forum before which the allegations are to be proved, the mode of
proof, burden of proof and the standard of proof of any alleged misbehaviour or
incapacity and the Judge's right to appear and to be heard in person or by
representative in addition to matters relating to the investigation of the
alleged misbehaviour or incapacity."
The Supreme Court also declared that,
“In a State ruled by a
Constitution based on the rule of Law, no court, tribunal or other body (by
whatever name it is called) has authority to make a finding or a decision
affecting the rights of a person unless such court, tribunal or body has the
power conferred on it by law to make such finding or decision. Such legal power
can be conferred on such court, tribunal or body only by an Act of Parliament
with is “Law” and not by Standing Orders which are not law but are rules made
for the regulation of the orderly conduct and the affairs of the Parliament. The
Standing Orders are not law within the meaning of Article 170 of the
Constitution which defines what is meant by "law"”.
However, the government, according to the state
media, will ignore this interpretation of the law by the Supreme Court and will
proceed to impeach the Chief Justice on the basis of the report filed by the
Parliamentary Select Committee. Thereafter, the incumbent Chief Justice will be
forcibly removed from the position and a new Chief Justice, who is chosen by the
government, will be appointed.
The government has now guaranteed impunity to the
state media from contempt of court and a massive media campaign is being carried
out, not only against the incumbent Chief Justice, but also against the very
notion of the independence of the judiciary.
With the removal of the incumbent Chief Justice and the appointment of the new Chief Justice, the two-hundred-year-old tradition of the independence of the judiciary in Sri Lanka will come to an end. The courts will be directly brought under the control of the executive and any judge who acts independently will face the same consequences (removal) as the incumbent Chief Justice.
The Sri Lankan court system will be reduced to a
mere administrative mechanism, deprived of the power to take any measure that is
contrary to the wishes of the government. Thus, the capacity of the Supreme
Court and the other courts to safeguard the dignity and the rights of the
individual against the assaults by the state on individuals will come to an end.
Deprived of the power to protect individuals from the assaults of the
government, the fundamental rights provisions of the constitution and other
legal provisions, such as the writ jurisdiction of the court, will lose all
significance.
Once the judicial system lacks independence, the
rule of law system cannot function anymore. Thus, Sri Lanka will walk out of the
rule of law orbit. The people will be victims of whatever directives the
executive prefers to make, irrespective of its impact on the basic human rights
of the people.
This is even more dangerous in Sri Lanka as the
Ministry of Defense has developed into a ‘shadow state’ and acts through
paramilitary forces and the intelligence services to suppress the rights of
citizens. Forced disappearances, illegal arrests, illegal detentions, the
practice of torture and ill treatment, denial of fair trial, suppression freedom
of expression and publication, suppression of the freedom of assembly and the
denial of the right to free and fair elections are now very much part of the Sri
Lankan experience. With the total eclipse of the independence of the judiciary,
the people will be totally trapped within the schemes of the Ministry of
Defense.
Thus, the coming five days are historically
crucial for Sri Lanka. If the government’s declared intention to abide by the
PSC report succeeds, Sri Lankan democracy will sink. The people will lose the
protection of the rule of law and will be under a virtual dictatorship.
How long that will last will depend on when and
how people learn to resist a dictatorship.
We therefore wish to bring to everyone’s notice
the crucial importance of the coming five days and request them to open their
eyes and to see the changes that are taking place, to use their judgment and act
in every possible way to protect their democracy, the system of rule of law,
separation of powers and the independence of judiciary, and their civil
liberties.
There are countries where courts are mere
administrative bodies and are obligated to facilitate the government’s schemes
however contrary this may be to the rule of law and the rights of the
individuals. In Asia, Myanmar, since the military coup of General Ne Win, and
Cambodia, despite constitutional recognition of independence of judiciary since
1993, are two glaring examples.
Related documents;
1. The relevant judgment of the Supreme Court ( Click Here)
2. The speech to the Judicial Service Association by Justice C V Wignashwaran ( Click Here)
3. The statement of the AHRC ( Click Here)
1. The relevant judgment of the Supreme Court ( Click Here)
2. The speech to the Judicial Service Association by Justice C V Wignashwaran ( Click Here)
3. The statement of the AHRC ( Click Here)
- AHRC