Gajalakshmi
Paramasivam
19 October 2016
My Home is my Queensland
The Harvard Medical School news began as
follows:
[Dear Gaja,
Memory loss is one of the most common fears people
have about growing older. Fortunately, there are many steps you can take right
now to boost your brainpower and protect your mind and memory from fading.]
One of my steps to protect my memory is to get rid of rubbish
and focus more and more through my Truth on issues that are common. Towards
this, given that the Common Interest of majority in my email list is Sri Lanka,
I connected to the current Sri Lankan issue – the President’s mind – whether it
is working laterally as required by the system of Democracy or vertically as is the way of religious order?
This is also an important aspect in curing violence – especially mental
violence.
In the Colombo Telegraph article headed ‘Has
President Sirisena Caused A Constitutional Crisis?’, author Niranjan Rambukwella states:
[The Director-General of the Bribery Commission, Dilrukshi Dias Wickramasinghe, resigned yesterday. Her
resignation was a response to President Sirisena’s comments accusing the
Commission of politically motivated investigations.]
As per Daily Mirror article headed ‘MR says surprised over President's FCID
remark’:
[Former President and Kurunegala district MP
Mahinda Rajapaksa said he was surprised to note that President Maithripala
Sirisena was unaware of the action of the Financial Crimes Investigation
Division (FCID).
Addressing a religious ceremony at a temple in Lunugamvehera
on Sunday, he said the Executive President should be strong enough to run the
country properly. “But during the past two years the government focused only on
taking revenge,” he said.
He said the government took revenge not only from him
and his family members but also from
Buddhist monks.
“They took
Buddhist monks to the FCID. Questioning them on how did they build their
temples and who funded them. Then they searched for the funded list and
questioned on them how much they funded for the constructions. More than 20,000
people had been summoned to the FCID for questioning. There are 48 Buddhist monks were who sentenced to prison,”
Mr. Rajapaksa said.
He alleged these moves could
be a part of a conspiracy carrying out against a religion.
“Some people in the government are not
ready to accept what the white men accepted. They accepted that Buddhism should
be given prominence from the constitution,” he said.
He said the judiciary or the responsible officials
should think thoroughly before taking action.]
The fact is that the Dutch who are part of
the ‘White men’ group – codified Customary Law of Thesawalamai. I do not know
the source of the above claim that the White Men accepted that Buddhism should
be given prominence through the Constitution. If they did – then one must
conclude that the White men who so concluded were not fit to Administer
Ceylon/Sri Lanka. Given that ‘White men’ through Channel 4 documentary also
exposed war crimes – of Buddhist army – they seem to have compensated for any
such imbalance caused by them. As per my knowledge, the Dutch considered the
land that we now call, Queensland to be their territory before the British claimed
it as part of New South Wales.
Recently, the current President of Sri
Lanka also, is reported to have followed the mind of the British Prime
Minister:
[He noted that Prime Minister Theresa May had
told her senior commanders to stop British soldiers from falling victim to
“abuse and legal system” by lawyers representing Iraqis who allege they were
victims of war crimes during the occupation of their country.]
Which of the British Leaders’ minds do the Presidential
Sri Lankans follow? Which ones do they have to follow. For example in the case of the Director-General
of the Bribery Commission, we have an example through ‘THE BRIBERY COMMISSIONER V RANASINGHE; PC 5 MAY 1964’ – which case predates
the Republican Constitution:
[S.29 of the Ceylon (Constitution) Order in Council
1946 gave the Ceylon Parliament power to make laws for the peace, order and
good government of the island.
S.29(4)
gave it the power to ‘amend or repeal any of the provisions of this Order’; but
provided that no Bill for amendment or repeal should be presented for the Royal
Assent unless it was endorsed with a certificate of the Speaker, which was to
be conclusive for all purposes that the Bill had been passed by a two-thirds
majority of the members of the House of Representatives.
The appellant was convicted of a bribery offence
before a tribunal created by a provision of the Bribery Amendment Act 1958, which
conflicted with a provision of the Constitution. The 1958 Act was not endorsed
with the requisite Speaker’s certificate and was not shown to have been passed
by a two-thirds majority.
Held: The orders made against the appellant were null
and void. The persons composing the tribunal had been appointed under an
invalid statute.
Lord Pearce said: ‘When a sovereign Parliament has
purported to enact a bill and it has received the Royal Assent, is it a valid
Act in the course of whose passing there was a procedural defect, or is it an
invalid Act which Parliament had no power to pass in that manner?’
The passages he quoted from McCawley’s case: ‘showed clearly that the Board in McCawley’s case
took the view, which commends itself to the Board in the present case, that a legislature has no power to ignore the
conditions of law-making that are imposed by the instrument which itself
regulates its power to make law. This restriction exists
independently of the question whether the legislature is sovereign, as is the
legislature of Ceylon, or whether the Constitution is ‘uncontrolled,’ as the
board held the Constitution of Queensland to be.
Such a Constitution can, indeed, be altered or amended
by the legislature, if the regulating instrument so provides and if the terms
of those provisions are complied with; and the alteration or amendment may
include the change or abolition of these very provisions.
But the proposition which is not acceptable is that a
legislature, once established, has some inherent power derived from the mere
fact of its establishment to make a valid law by the resolution of a bare
majority which its own constituent instrument has said shall not be a valid law
unless made by a different type of majority or by a different legislative
process.’ and ‘No question of sovereignty arises.
A parliament does not cease to be sovereign whenever
its component members fail to produce among them a requisite majority, e.g.,
when in the case of ordinary legislation the voting is evenly divided or when
in the case of legislation to amend the Constitution there is only a bare
majority if the Constitution requires something more.
The minority are entitled
under the Constitution of Ceylon to have no amendment of it which is not passed
by a two-thirds majority. The limitation thus imposed on some lesser majority
of members does not limit the sovereign power of Parliament itself which can
always, whenever it chooses, pass the amendment with the requisite majority.’
Lord Pearce rejected the proposition that: ‘a legislature, once established, has some inherent power, derived from the mere fact of its establishment, to make a valid law by the resolution of a bare majority which its own constituent instrument has said shall not be a valid law unless made by a different type of majority or by a different legislative process.’
Statutes: Ceylon (Constitution) Order in Council 1946 ]
Lord Pearce rejected the proposition that: ‘a legislature, once established, has some inherent power, derived from the mere fact of its establishment, to make a valid law by the resolution of a bare majority which its own constituent instrument has said shall not be a valid law unless made by a different type of majority or by a different legislative process.’
Statutes: Ceylon (Constitution) Order in Council 1946 ]
The way I read the above, at the center of the
McCawley case is Constitutional issue between Queensland and the Commonwealth
of Australia. Queensland in this instance seems the parallel of Northern
Province of Sri Lanka. Sri Lankan Constitutional specialists could learn from
the McCawley case to prevent Constitutional crises in Sri Lanka – as indicated
by Mr. Niranjan Rambukwella. Strangely the Lankan matters relate to Bribery
Commission. To me due to my workplace experience
in Australia, the employee’s Workplace entitlement as Lowest Common Denominator is of deeper interest. Mr. Thomas
McCawley playing a key role in this is presented
as follows:
[One of the principal legislative initiatives
of the Ryan Government was the Industrial Arbitration Act 1916 (Qld)
(‘Industrial Arbitration Act’).
In conjunction with Edward Theodore as Secretary for
Public Works, McCawley, as Crown Solicitor, played a key role in drafting the
Act in its original form.
While the Act was presented as a measure designed to
secure ‘industrial peace’, it was clearly
intended to lay the foundations for an arbitration system that would strengthen
the role of industrial unions and promote the interests of the working class.
At the centre of the Act was the new Queensland
Arbitration Court. Section 6(1) established the Court and s 6(2)–(3) empowered
the Governor-in-Council, by commission, to appoint judges of the Court, one of
whom was to be designated President. Under s 6(5), the Court was deemed to be a
‘branch’ of the Supreme Court and every judge of the Queensland Arbitration
Court was deemed to have the ‘status’ of a Supreme Court judge. Section 6(6)
provided that the President and judges of the Court were to be appointed for a
term of seven years, and were eligible for reappointment. Problematically,
however, s 6(6) of the Act also provided that judges of the Queensland
Arbitration Court could be appointed to the Supreme Court, bypassing the
specific provisions for the appointment of Supreme Court judges contained
within the Constitution Act, which required
that they be granted life tenure during good behaviour and which set the
maximum number of judges at five. McCawley was
appointed to the Supreme Court under Industrial Arbitration Act s
6(6), and it was this provision that would be the subject of the constitutional
challenge in McCawley’s Case, on the ground of its inconsistency with the Constitution Act.] - POLITICS, LAW AND THE CONSTITUTION IN MCCAWLEY’S CASE
NICHOLAS ARONEY
The Director-General of the Sri Lankan Bribery
Commission, Ms Dilrukshi
Dias Wickramasinghe, resigning from her position is also a workplace
issue. If treated politically it is likely to be through political heads – some
of which are strongly driven by personal interests. These cannot be related to
by those outside the political circles. Hence we need Common Laws through which
all of us can relate.
The following by Mr. McCawley reminds me of
my own situation with the Hon John Howard and his Government whom I sued on the
basis of my assessment of the
applicability of the Racial Discrimination Act 1975 at the workplace:
[As to my own little matter, the Court
reserved its decision … I have no doubt that the decision will be adverse — the
atmosphere of hostility, political, professional, and personal, certainly
favours such a result.
— Thomas William McCawley to Henry Bournes Higgins J, 2 February 1918]
— Thomas William McCawley to Henry Bournes Higgins J, 2 February 1918]
Now when I think of it – I could not have
done otherwise. My contribution to Australian Workplace transformations had
peaked and the need was greater in the area of Racial Discrimination karma –
beyond the work place, at National level.
They say that there is a god within all of
us. As per my experience, there is also a god within each Sovereign block of
land. The law that facilitates the demarcations of the physical boundaries of
such a block – is the law of Dharma/Righteousness. This may or may not be
upheld by the Executive Government and/or the Judiciary. But the owners of such
Land will have the special communication with that Land and the Land itself
will support them. When such Sovereign individuals lead issues particular to
that Land – Natural Forces support them towards Peace and Harmony of the whole
that that land is part of.
To my mind it is no coincidence that the
President of Sri Lanka who invoked ‘Buddhism foremost’ at the UN – became a
victim of his own lack of investment in the Secular laws by which the Bribery
Commission and other Authorities investigating into civil wrongs have been
finding fault with the previous regime which included the current President. The
President’s emotional attachment to his son, which is public knowledge – would have
kindled fears within himself about the Secular Powers of Bribery Commission which
could subject him also to similar treatment. When he claimed Buddhism foremost –
he was losing also the special powers of the President under the Democratic
system which requires clear Separation of Powers between sections that are
distinctly diverse in Belief / Faith, in comparison with the Central Custodians of Power. This Separation
is necessary for each group to realize Sovereignty through its own belief.
Since it is difficult to maintain this separation at
workplaces – we have in place, the Anti Racial Discrimination Laws in most
Western Nations. Those affected need to feel strong enough pain to have the
courage to genuinely sue their supervisors at the workplace. Others would derive
only surface value – such as majority rule from such laws. In the Absence of
such laws, Physical Separation is needed by the Central Powers so they do not
become victims of their own karma. Those with deep common belief would invoke
the natural powers of leadership of the whole.
The civilians killed and / or injured in the
Sri Lankan war – have become natural owners of the blocks of land that they
thought was their home. The Sri Lankan Army has been proven to be seriously
lacking in respect for law and order – unless killing and raping prisoners is considered
to be part of Due Process – in which case
they disqualify themselves from becoming part of a global Army – at least in principle.
The more this Buddhism foremost is chanted by the Government – the further away
the real Buddha will move from such a Government. Otherwise Buddha would have
protected the old regime – which included the current President. By joining the
President’s chant of ‘Buddhism foremost’ Prime Minister the Hon Ranil
Wicremesinghe is also distancing himself from the system of Democracy and
therefore is losing the real powers of other Democratic nations. All those who
identify with this weakness and do the needful to connect to the real internal
cause – would strengthen their own Sovereignty. We can’t all be Presidents and
Prime Ministers. But we can all be Queens and Kings of ourselves. Thus my home
where I am queen is my Queensland.
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