Gajalakshmi
Paramasivam – 11 February 2016
Are These Judges Internal or
Foreign?
‘President
Maithripala Sirisena and the government would never accept foreign judges in
the proposed court to be established in accordance with Oct. 1, 2015 Geneva
Resolution to inquire into accountability issues during the final phase of the
Vanni offensive, Provincial Councils and Local Government Minister Faizer
Musthapha, PC, said yesterday.’ Former
President accused of raising Geneva bogey – The Island Newspaper
If that is the ruling principle during this
Government – then the Dharmic (Righteous) move is to have a law that no Sri
Lankan Judge could hold office in another country’s judiciary. Sri Lanka, which
through its Constitution is committed to Buddhist pathway has the
responsibility to ensure that the system of Karma is upheld in key aspects
of Governance. If the President expresses
an opinion that he does not think it would be appropriate to include foreign judges to make judicial
decisions in Sri Lanka – then that is a political opinion with no justice implications. To make
a statement that the government would never accept foreign judges – is a projection
of definite ruling. If this is undertaken then the balance needs to be
maintained to rule out all Sri Lankans from holding parallel positions in other
countries. Maintaining this balance of Equality is most important for us to
have stable government.
When the culture is different - mind order
is different; When the mind order is different there needs to be separation of
powers so one does not interfere with another’s work pathway and system of
faith. Minister Musthapha who continues to carry the qualification PC
(President’s Counsel) in breach of the Doctrine
of Separation of Powers, is reported to have stated:
[Recalling the circumstances
under which the then Chief Justice Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake had been impeached
at the behest of President Rajapaksa, Minister Musthapha said that such actions
caused rapid deterioration of judiciary. Regretting that he, too, had backed
the impeachment of the Chief Justice, the minister said that remedial measures
taken since the last presidential polls had helped improve the situation
gradually.]
The change
at least at the level of this minister is more in style than in
substance. In democracy – one must already confirm practice of a principle
before proposing it to others. Without this mental separation between cultures –
the minister is letting politics take over Administration. The dismissal of
former chief justice will continue to happen in one form or the other when the
status of such minds is elevated without connection to the root.
One is pushed to conclude that to this government
– it is alright for legal qualifications earned in the past to be carried
forward as is – by politicians but our heritage from other nationals is to be ‘forgotten’
now that the rulers are local only. When
we carry the value with faith as common owners – it is of heritage value. Such
value is part of the structure but does not become active part of current
merit. Separation of Powers helps preserve that heritage for the environment in
which it was developed. This environment could be a discipline, country,
province or even family with mother and father being Equal and Diverse.
Sri Lanka needs both – local investigation
by the Government which was an active participant in the conflict. Ideally the
judges at this level would be purely local with no foreign mind at all. That
would then educate the Sinhala only and/or Tamil only learners. The International
panel would in turn need to mandatorily include those who are legally not Sri
Lankans but have invested in Sri Lanka for their global activities. Like
auditors they do not have the mandate to punish directly through local laws and
institutions but would publish judgments for global purposes – including for
those Sri Lankans who are global minded. Sri Lanka used global resources to
combat what it claimed to be Terrorism. It is now Sri Lanka’s turn to provide
the return to that global community through the global pathway and not the
local pathway.
The difference between the two judgments is
the ‘gap’ between the Lankan mind and the Global mind. In Common terms it could
be stated that the gap represents the difference in culture between Service Provider and Beneficiary – due to lack
of investment in global principles such as Doctrine of Separation of Powers. This
could very well be on the part of the one with high status but unless we go
through the process –we would not know whose mind is weak – would we?
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