Gajalakshmi
Paramasivam
13 April 2017
Judiciary, Race & Caste systems
[The
judicial appointments to Sri Lanka’s judiciary hold a prominent and important
place. As an independent arm, its appointments are highly anticipated and
looked upon by all parties in society. Throughout its history some appointments
have been looked down upon as politically motivated or as being used to achieve
the goals of certain political parties or politicians.
In
the recent past the scenario which arose with former Chief Justice Shirani
Bandaranayke who proceeded and succeeded former Attorney General Mohan Peiris,
considered the 43rd de facto Chief Justice of Sri Lanka after President
Maithripala Sirisena declared his appointment void in 2015, brought about such
confusion. The most recent appointment to draw flank from several parties,
including the Judicial Service Association was the appointment of Ramanathan
Kannan an Attorney-at-Law from the private bar of Batticaloa.] The Sunday Leader article -
Judicial Appointment In Turmoil
As is the case with any position – there is
the apparent and there is the real. The real is as per our contribution to the
position. If there is position, there is relativity. If our apparent
contribution to the position is more than our real contribution – we start
disconnecting from the institution itself.
As per my experience as a lay litigant in
the Sri Lankan Court of Appeal (which also would have contributed to the
current outcome), the current judges of the Court of Appeal do not seem to have
the will or the authority to override lawyers of high status. I terminated the
services of our barrister who as per my belief, did not connect to my belief
that I was fighting to uphold my fundamental rights to hold Land in Colombo. I represented myself and have
submitted to Court the ‘facts’ (that were ignored by the Colombo District Court)
– primarily the records of court
decision submitted as evidence by my opposition that included the ‘fact’ that another
party was residing at the premises to which my opponent was claiming ownership
through Prescription. I discovered this ‘fact’ sitting in my Sovereign home
here in Coogee, NSW, Australia, where Truth through Common culture is upheld as
priority over individual cleverness. In addition, I identified and highlighted
that in this instance, 30 years and not 10 years of continuous occupation was
needed for another person to claim prescriptive rights. (as per Section
13 (e ) of the Prescription Ordinance).
They say that the strength of a chain is
its weakest link. The strength of any institution is its weakest position.
Where judges are dependent on lawyers both positions are weakened. Then the
relationship is naturally ‘dissolved’ to de facto style – based on current
outcomes only (as in majority vote) or reverse leadership happens with the lawyers
taking over the Judiciary – as children rule over parents.
Where this happens – it is the duty of the
citizens to restructure the Judicial system. If the President appointed Mr. Kannan
in good faith – and for genuine political reasons – then he was effectively restructuring
the Judicial system away from processes that disadvantage the Public. In my
case, I went all the way from Australia to make my arguments in court in
addition to preparing my submissions. The other side did not need an
outstanding lawyer of high status to present the case against me – a lay
litigant, unless they wanted to win through subjective influence of the lawyer
in court. All they needed to do to
uphold fairness was to present the mind of their barrister Mr. Faisz Musthapha
through one of the juniors and through written submissions. But the
relationship was direct between the judge and the lawyer – often resulting in
postponements. Under those circumstances, the requirements on the side of a lay
litigant also need to be set at a lower level or the side that failed to follow
Due process as expected by the Common citizen, needs to be penalized through ‘costs’.
Recently a Vaddukoddai, Sri Lankan friend
visiting Australia sought my services to edit her translation of Australian
National Anthem to Tamil. In that the lady used the Tamil equivalent of ‘Justice’
as the translation of ‘Fair’ in ‘Advance Australia Fair’. I substituted the Tamil
word ‘Niyayam’ that to my mind came closest to Fairness. Just outcomes need
firm institutional structures to maintain their credibility. In a young nation
like Australia, one needs to be more conscious of ‘Fairness’ than ‘Justice’ to
be socially harmonious.
In his determination of Fairness in this
matter the Hon Mahinda Rajapaksa states:
[If
the private bar is given the power to recommend the appointment of judges, that
would corrupt the entire legal system with judges being dependent on the
lawyers appearing before them for promotions and appointments.]
At litigants’ level – the parallel of the
above would go as follows - ‘if the
lawyers lead the judge – the richer side that hires the higher status lawyer wins’
– often through postponements on the basis of personal reasons. Mr. Rajapaksa
is reported to have stated also:
[The
accepted practice in this country is that virtually all the judges serving on
the Supreme Court, Court of Appeal and High Court are promoted to those
positions through the ranks of the judicial service or to a lesser extent, the
Attorney General’s Department]
That to my mind is the parallel of the
Caste system through which - only those of Brahmin caste or to a lesser
extent Garland-makers were promoted as priests of Hindu temples . The strict rules to qualify to hold the
position of garland-maker are indicated
by the following:
[In Srirangam Ranganathar temple only
garlands made by temple sattharars (people who make garlands and never marry -
surrendering their life to the lord's service) are used to adorn Lord
Ranganatha. No other garlands, flowers are used there. Sattarars have
traditional rules for everything - from plucking the flower to making garlands.
Some of them are as follows:
The flowers should be plucked
in early morning.
The flowers should not be
smelled by anyone.
They should be plucked only
after having bath.
The flowers which fell down
on earth or dirt should not be used.
Namajapam or the repetition
of holy names should be done while plucking flowers.
While making garlands they
keep flowers and other materials on a table because the garland for God should
not touch the feet. It is always kept above hip level.] Wikipedia
The responsibilities of the Brahmin are on
the other hand indicated as follows:
[The 1st millennium CE Dharmasastras, that
followed the Dharmasutras contain similar recommendations on occupations for a
Brahmin, both in prosperous or normal times, and in the times of adversity. The
widely studied Manusmriti, for example, states:
Except during a time of
adversity, a Brahmin ought to sustain himself by following a livelihood that
causes little or no harm to creatures. He should gather wealth just sufficient
for his subsistence through irreproachable activities that are specific to him,
without fatiguing his body.
He must never follow a
worldly occupation for the sake of livelihood, but subsist by means of a pure,
upright and honest livelihood proper to a Brahmin. One who seeks happiness
should become supremely content and self controlled, for happiness is rooted in
contentment and its opposite is the root of unhappiness. — Manusmriti,
Translated by Patrick Olivelle] Wikipedia
The lower the social ranking the more one
needs specific rules. Hence those who come through the Attorney General’s
Department which in Sri Lanka is part of the Executive Government would be
under the influence of the Executive even in a free environment, unless they of
their own freewill first become citizens without portfolio and then become part
of the judiciary. It’s similar to migration from Sri Lanka to Australia.
The lawyer driven by money is likely to
lead the Judiciary to de facto status. The civil administrator driven by the
Executive is likely to lead the Judiciary to become dependent on the Executive
by reversing the pyramid of hierarchy without
paying her/his respect to the Judicial elders who maintained the high value of
the law as an independent government finding its own balance in its own world
through all its citizens which may not include many politicians who did not
participate in Court and/or did not accept the verdict of the Highest Court as the
verdict of the law itself. This did not happen in the case of the former
government which dismissed the then Chief Justice by acting outside due
process. That’s the karma that the seat would inherit without disconnection
from the past forms of government – including on seniority basis.
While we play around with the apparent, the
real develops its own structures. Those who forewent earned benefits to uphold
that which represented their Truth – will find their own internal balance in
due course. That is the natural promotion of ourselves to the positions of
judges especially in social environments where institutional ties are less
apparent.
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