Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
14
August 2018
Government killing the Jaffna Brain?
The
real power of the Common Jaffna Tamil
was the her/his above average brainpower. Just this morning, our son called
from the airport – to seek my husband’s assistance in resolving a mathematical
problem for his daughter. That is the vertical network of our Jaffna hierarchy.
It was therefore appalling to learn that the Governor who is required to
reflect the Truth of the People of the area Governed by him is sowing the seeds
of personal interpretation of the Constitution as if the Jaffna Common person
would not know the difference. The persons in that audience may not have
recognize the problem. But I do and I am Jaffna. Below is the offensive
expression:
[Northern Province Governor
Reginald Cooray today suggested that the Northern Provincial Council (NPC)
ministers should resign so as to resolve the issue, which has arisen from the
change in its ministerial composition.
He said the
composition had changed in the wake of the Appeal Court reinstating B.
Deniswaran as a NPC minister.
"With the reinstatement, the number of
ministers had increased to six. This has prevented the council from taking
decisions or enacting laws. The best solution available to resolve this matter
is for the ministers to resign and a new set of ministers appointed. According
to clause 154 (E) of the Constitution, the Chief Minister is empowered to
appoint ministers. I, as governor, have no authority to appoint or remove
ministers. Therefore, Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran should resolve this
matter without further delay," the Governor said during a visit to the
Advanced Technological Institute in Jaffna.] – Daily Mirror article - 'To resolve ministerial dilemma: Better for NPC ministers to resign'
Article 154E of the Sri
Lankan Constitution states:
[A Provincial
Council shall, unless sooner dissolved, continue for a period of five years
from the date appointed for its first meeting and the expiration of the said
period of five years shall operate as a dissolution of the Council.]
The Article that renders
the authority to appoint ministers states as follows:
[154F. (5) The
Governor shall, on the advice of the Chief Minister, appoint from among the
members of the Provincial Council constituted for that Province, the other
Ministers.]
The statements by the Governor at an educational
institution are clearly in breach of the above provisions of the Constitution. The
Governor has to act as per the advice of the Chief Minister.
Article 154F in fact protects the Chief Minister as
follows:
(1) There shall be a Board of Ministers with the Chief Minister at the head and not more
than four other Ministers to aid and
advise the Governor of a Province in the exercise of his functions. The Governor shall, in the exercise of his
functions, act in accordance with such advice, except in so far as he is by
or under the Constitution required to exercise his functions or any of them in
his discretion.
(2) If any
question arises whether any matter is or is not a matter as respects which the
Governor is by or under this Constitution required to act in his discretion,
the decision of the Governor in his discretion shall be final and the validity
of anything done by the Governor shall not be called in question in any Court
on the ground that he ought or ought not have acted on his discretion. The exercise of the Governor’s discretion
shall be on the President’s directions.
(3) The
question whether any, and if so what, advice was tendered by the Ministers to
the Governor shall not be, inquired into in any Court.
Where the law is silent, Discretionary powers could
be used. As per 154F (2).
If Mr Cooray executed the decision to terminate – as
per his discretionary powers – but did so without specific directions from the
President – then he has clearly acted in breach of the Constitution and
implicated the President also.
Mr Reginald Cooray is unfit to be the Governor of
Jaffna and therefore Northern Province. The President owes the People of
Northern Province an apology for failing to discipline his Governor before the
matter went to Court. It was a clear case of negligence of DUTY that Sri Lanka
cannot afford at current times.
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