Gajalakshmi
Paramasivam
07 January 2017
Kangaroo Genes
‘Many
courts in the world have foreign judges. Many developing countries have in the
past deliberately brought them in so as to raise their quality. Some of our
judges, people from our system, are in other courts, such as in Fiji. There are
so many of our judges there, including sitting judges. We have also sent
prosecutors and judges to the International Court of Justice.’ Mr. Basil Fernando – through Colombo
Telegraph article ‘The Job Of A Judge Is To Do Justice, Regardless Of
Nationality’
As per my assessment of Fiji – they are
importers of Management intelligence. Many of my Sri Lankan colleagues went
over to Fiji to make more money. Many of them migrated to Australia, where we
do have ‘kangaroo courts’. Mr. Basil
Fernando, the winner of ‘Right Livelihood Award’ declares as follows in this regard:
‘What we don’t want to have are
kangaroo courts. That is what we have to avoid. In order to do that, we need to
advertise the required qualities and get people from wherever. This is not
about genes. This is not about colour or about what country you come from. A judge,
acting in their professional capacity, has no nationality.’
The case that comes to mind is that of an
Australian mother – Lindy Chamberlain who was unjustly charged with the murder
of her baby daughter Azaria. In that matter Wikipedia report includes the
following:
‘One
anonymous tip was received from a man, falsely claiming to be Azaria's doctor
in Mount Isa, that the name "Azaria" meant "sacrifice in the
wilderness" (it actually means "God helped"). Others
claimed that Lindy Chamberlain was a witch.’
I myself was
declared a mentally ill person by the Australian Judiciary. Dr. David Garlick one
of the few Democratic Academics known to me, said to the Deputy Vice Chancellor
of the University of NSW, that their actions against me amounted to witch hunt. I may be mad / a witch or may not
be. To me it is Catch 22 – in that if I
know I am mentally ill I am no longer
mentally ill for my own purposes, as per MY SOVEREIGNTY. Likewise, if I recognize myself to be a witch, I am no
longer a witch to myself and to those who believe in me. Others may describe me
as per their own needs and desires. I am not bound by them – unless we are
bound by Common Belief, Common Law or specific agreement. If the authorities
punish me outside any of these bases – then they act unjustly. Likewise in the
case of Sri Lankan war.
Given that the Sri Lankan war was between
Tamils and Sinhalese – genes do matter. Genes are part of our makeup as
Sovereign persons/nations. If it is in our genes (as known through our
horoscopes) to fight for physical
possession in defence of our own land and/or to invade, – current laws using
current interpretations by those who are not familiar with the Sri Lankan psyche
would have the effect of being unjust to those who acted out of their own
intuition based on their belief – given form through their knowledge of
history. The combatants on both sides
are likely to have held religious
beliefs and/or their own natural karmic beliefs. For example – the Sri Lankan
National flag that carries the Lion would develop the royal ‘attitude’ in those
who believe in the flag and what it symbolizes. Likewise the LTTE flag with the
Tiger. They are both through possession and are physical outcome based. The rules
are interpreted to suit those anticipated physical outcomes. Hence the
battlefield itself was ‘Kangaroo battlefield’.
Given that the effects were produced
according to those Kangaroo rules – any inquiry through Common Laws and Beliefs
of those who are foreigners to Sri Lanka – would be for the purposes of
outsiders and not for inner harmony in Sri Lanka. The exercise therefore
becomes largely academic.
The Earth carries the true experience and
responds to those to whom that earth is ‘home’. Unless therefore the judges
have had the global experience – they would be limited to ‘academic’ inquiry
for academic purposes. This would not lead to Total Justice – either through Sri Lankan laws or through
Global laws that Sri Lankans do not practice – due to the missing Common Belief
aspect . To deliver justice both sides need to be bound by Common Belief. The
Common Laws do not always lead to Common Belief due to lack of practice by one
side or the other. In this instance, it is highly likely that neither side to
the war had the required level of knowledge of the common rules of global war. Hence the ‘way’ it was fought is not within
the area of lawful authority. It was very much a jungle war. Judgment by
outsiders needs to be limited to discovery through inquiry on the basis of visible
outcomes – except in the case of leaders within the Government circle,
including those who represent Sri Lanka at the UN and over whom the UN has
subjective authority.
Like in Fiji – foreign judges may strengthen the judicial system but
they do not have direct authority over the citizens of another country to ‘judge’
– effectively to reward or to punish. Sri Lankan judges in Fiji are therefore
acting in breach of the fundamentals of the Doctrine of Separation of Powers –
to uphold Sovereignty. Primarily – within the same country – the Executive is
required to be Independent of the Judiciary and v.v. Both use the same set of laws but the interpretations are
likely to vary due to the Experience based belief of Politicians who are part
of the Executive Government, being different to that of the Judiciary – as in
two religions. Unless therefore there is separation between the two bodies –
the Judiciary becomes an extension of the Executive and hence loses its
independence.
Cultural Diversity between victims and
perpetrators adds complexity to the
problem, unless zero advantage start is practiced and use of subjectivity is
limited to commonness of belief. When Foreign judges with little investment in
Sri Lankan culture are authorized to judge Sri Lankans – the common area
available for subjective judgments is narrow. The judges are therefore limited
to the objectively measurable evidence, to find out wrongs and recommend
punishments – something that is the responsibility of the UN.
The ‘criteria’ required would therefore need
to include demonstrated experience in the practice of Judicial Democracy in
multicultural environments. The outcomes / judgments expected, need to be the
quality that produced unlawful, undemocratic outcomes and NOT point the finger
at particular individuals. The applicants are likely to be Legal Academics and
not Judicial Practitioners.
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