Not too long ago the ‘international community’ was up in
arms when Mahinda Rajapaksa moved to oust the then Chief Justice Shirani
Bandaranayake. The Bar Association of
Sri Lanka (BASL) lent its vociferous and self-righteous voice to these
objections and went as far as desecrating the supposedly sacred high chamber of
justice in the country by turning it into a picketing ground.
Now, in post-Rajapaksa Sri Lanka these objectors are calling
for the removal of the ‘Rajapaksa-appointee,’ the incumbent Chief Justice,
Mohan Peiris. One would have thought
that those who howled over ‘improper procedure’ in the ousting of Bandaranayake
would use ‘proper’ mechanisms for this, for example drawing from the Latimer
Principles which were bandied about during Maithripala Sirisena’s presidential
campaign. What we are hearing of,
though, are all kinds of behind-the-scenes moves which include negotiations
over ‘give and take’, none of which cover either the CJ or the negotiators with
glory.
Mohan Peiris is accused of being part of an alleged coup
attempt aimed at overturning the decision of the people. We have the unprecedented situation of a
sitting CJ being questioned by the Police.
One would imagine that this could be followed by the Attorney General
instituting legal proceedings against the CJ, a process that would have to take
place in the latter’s own house with the accused, in effect, sitting in
judgment!
We have also a bizarre situation where the CJ has appointed
a spokesperson who happens to be a lawyer.
‘Conflict of interest?’ is a question that is so glaring here that it is
astounding that the CJ appears to have missed it.
BASL President and well-known UNP politician Upul Jayasuriya
claims that in a meeting with the CJ the latter had ‘agreed to step down if
he’s compensated with a diplomatic post’.
If this is true then the office of the Chief Justice has become
something that can be bought and sold, up for purchase, amenable to barter etc. The situation does not paint Jayasuriya in
positive light either, one observes, because this self-righteous objector to
the eviction of Bandaranayake on grounds of improper procedure has no business
to cut deals with the CJ. There’s no
evidence that he was offering the CJ a bribe but he was most certainly
requesting him to step-down. Where he
found this ‘mechanism’ in the Latimer Principle one just cannot fathom!
But then again, Jayasuriya was one among many lawyers who at
one time vowed not to appear before Peiris but later happily represented
clients before him and in other courts, all of which come under his
purview. Only one of the prominent
objectors made good on this promise, the inimitable S.L. Gunesekara who
ironically passed away the day Maithripala Sirisena was elected President following
a clean-up promise as well as a pledge to institute good governance.
Thus any argument on the lines of Peiris’ appointment being
illegal and amoral and therefore he doesn’t have the right to demand the
courtesies warranted by the office just fly out of the window. That’s no ‘out’ for Jayasuriya. His moves call to question the entire
movement to oppose the impeachment of Bandaranayake. It was not about the dignity of the justice
system, the primacy of the law, separation of powers or any of the lovely
things the objectors said they were fighting for.
If someone said ‘justice stinks’ then Jayasuriya, the යහපාලනය (yahapaalanaya or ‘good governance’) politicians he has represented in this
surreptitious move and the Chief Justice himself (assuming he did, as
Jayasuriya claims, attempt to cut a deal) have provided ample evidence to
justify the proposition.
Jayasuriya is but a pawn here. He could not have been acting on his own
initiative. It is the movers and shakers
of the new Government that talked of a coup attempt and dragged in Peiris’ name
as a suspected accessory after the fact.
They, not Jayasuriya, have to make good on the good-governance promise.
They have to and can rehearse the Latimer Principles in any move that seeks to
oust the CJ.
Impeach the man if impeachment is warranted, we say. Stop this childish hora-police (cops and robbers) game. Right now you people are tripping over good
governance rhetoric and its bad, bad precedence that’s oozing out of your
preferred-procedural knees. If that
which came before was ugly, rest assured that you people are giving your
predecessors a good run for their money in the ugliness department for this
amounts to just one thing: digging a grave for good governance.
9 comments:
Thank goodness you're not a politician. If you were Ranil or Maithree, we won't get anything done.
Yahapalanaya is turning out to be a posh version of Mahinda palanaya. This is sick.
So...end justifies means, lefroy? :)
Question: Does the Latimer House principles or an impeachment process apply to an illegally/unlawfully appointed CJ in the first place? Moreover, in my opinion, since the process of impeaching CJ43 was unlawful itself, it would be sufficient to merely revoke the order made by the former President asking for the removal of Dr. Bandaranayake, by the incumbent President. Just a thought.
how does one establish 'illegality' though? it can't be 'we think so' right? the 'removal' was not by 'order' alone (technically speaking). in any event the legality of this CJ has been affirmed by members of the BASL (Jayasuriya included) by appearing in court. BASL doesn't have the moral authority. i am just worried about bad precedent being followed by as bad or worse practices.
comment is free, insults cheap, mr/ms anonymous. :)
Try to convince the Cheap Justice to do the right thing by resigning when the makority think he is illegally appointed,then you can vindicate yourself from being Mahinda's lackey
you conducted a referendum, mocam? look, if you are illiterate or selective in reading, i really can't help you. strongly suggest that you get back to school. :)
I feel there's an inherent desire to follow 'the rule of law' here; a desire to prove that the end does not justify the means. Perhaps that's the reason for delay in action.I hope the interim cabinet follows the rules.
It doesnt help of course to see the so-called CJ bargaining for position!
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