Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
05
December 2018
Is
Law not Putty in the hands of Lawyers?
[“There are
several pending political cases in the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal.
These are not related to murders, robberies or rapes. They are political cases.
Now, these Courts have given Interim Orders in some of those cases. I respect
and accept the decisions of the Courts wholly.
But
the general public has various opinions on the orders of the Courts. Some
people say that the Court is completely independent while others claim that the
Court is biased. Some even say that a Temple’s Chief Incumbent is delivering a
sermon which is supposed to be delivered by a Chief Prelate. However, during
this political turmoil we have to behave in well mannered fashion, protecting
the Constitution,” the President said.] Ceylon Today article headed
‘Ranil
destroyed me to a certain extent – President’
As opposed to the above we have the following from a
senior Tamil lawyer:
[President’s
Counsel K. Kanag Iswaran said yesterday the Constitution was not clay
in the hands of contesting parties to be moulded as he or she sees fit while
the constitutional language sets the limits of interpretation which aspires to
give constitutional unity and harmony.] Daily Mirror article headed ‘Constitution not clay in hands of
contesting parties: Counsel’
Let us examine, whether Mr Kanag
Iswaran who has a family home in Sangarathai, Vaddukoddai not too far from our
family temple, has paid his dues to the laws of Thesawalamai - especially those
provisions that are relevant to inheritance – as practiced by the local folks
in his ancestral home?
Does Mr Kanag Iswaran know
whether the local councillor of that area understand the law of Thesawalamai.
As per my observations – that is not the case. They rule as per their personal
thoughts. To the extent their thoughts are based on belief, they would not
contradict the conclusion reached through any reliable law. That which seems
reliable to Thunaivi folks would not
seem reliable to Sangarathai or Vaddukoddai folks. Hence when the two are
together in a group – Truth must be upheld above law for true harmony to
prevail.
Given that Mr Sirisena is not
claiming to be conversant in the laws of the country – it would be unjust to
expect Mr Sirisena to appreciate that he ought to respect the law on equal
basis as his cultural belief. In his mind, as per his experience he was the ‘boss’.
He appointed the and therefore he had the authority to dismiss. Article 107
provides for appointments in the case of Judicial leaders:
107. [ (1) The
Chief Justice, the President of the Court of Appeal and every other judge of
the Supreme Court and of the Court of Appeal shall, subject to the approval of
the Constitutional Council, be appointed by the President by warrant under his
hand. ]
The parallel of the above in terms of the Prime
Minister is stated in Article 46(4)
(4) The
President shall appoint as Prime Minister the Member of Parliament, who, in the
President’s opinion, is most likely to command the confidence of Parliament.
The question is, if majority Sri
Lankans ‘believed’ that the person appointing
is senior to the appointed – then are the above valid in upholding the
Sovereignty of Sri Lanka?
In order for the status of law to
be more valid than the status of cultural belief, the law needs to be practice
at a deer level than culture by that side. Likewise, between two cultures. If
for example Hindus believed more deeply than Buddhists – then in a multicultural
group they are entitled to lead where there are no Equal Opportunity laws that
prohibit such leadership.
As per my experience, lawyers and
judges of the Jaffna Courts have very little respect for Thesawalamai Law.
Those of us who actually practiced it have greater authority to judge than
those who have made merely intellectual investment. Under the circumstances the
Courts have the duty to become Facilities and shall NOT TELL the deeper practitioner. If they did tell –
then they earn negative karma.
The dowry system is actively practiced within
the Sri Lankan Tamil community. As per the fundamentals of Thesawalamai law –
daughters who claim dowry are not entitled to Muthusum / ancestral wealth. When
daughters ask and get both – dowry as well as Muthusum - it would naturally rob sons of Equal
entitlement. Such daughters are NOT entitled to equal footing especially in groups where there are unmarried
sons and/or men who did not ‘take’ dowry when they married.
The Jaffna judges killed the
diversity of Thesawalamai law by facilitating double dipping. It happened
during the reign of Mr Wigneswaran who is reported to have stated recently ‘Burn
my effigy a thousand times but don’t burn policies of Tamil people.’ What did
Mr Wigneswaran do when the Tamil legal fraternity trampled to death, Thesawalamai
Customary Law and upheld equal distribution of Muthusum? Thesawalamai Law is
heritage of Northern Tamils which is being destroyed by Tamil legal fraternity.
Those of us who sacrificed our shares so our siblings would get married, continue
to carry the essential value of that heritage. Mr Wigneswaran glorified one of
his own group as follows:
Ms.
Nagendra has delved deep into the subject of matrimonial properties and
inequality of sexes armed with proper understanding of these differences in
values, in social norms and perspectives. This recent publication dealing with
certain aspects of Thesawalamai is logically designed, cogently discussed and
makes good and interesting reading. It is a worthwhile adornment to the
libraries of both lawyers and others.
Justice .V.Wigneswaran
Justice .V.Wigneswaran
How can one blame the President for not trusting the law and the legal fraternity? If majority Sri Lankans are driven by local cultural habits because they do not trust the judiciary – then the question arises as to whether it is Dharmic to use the law to judge elected leaders purely for the purposes of ‘rights’? Should elected leaders be judged only in relation to actions that cause measurable damages? It’s a question of whether the chicken caused the egg or the egg caused the chicken?
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