Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
15
December 2018
Contempt
of Court v Freedom of Speech
To my mind, Contempt of Court is valid only to the
extent Freedom of Speech on the basis of
Belief is not restricted. Next to Truth that connects us Universally are laws
that connect their believers subconsciously as well as consciously. As a
litigant I believe I have every right not only to share my facts with the
Courts but also to share my court experiences with the Public. I do not have
the right to criticize the judges while the matter is being heard. As per my
mind, I have not done that at any time. In terms of the recent decisions by the
president of Sri Lanka – every investor in Sri Lanka has the natural right to express her/his experience and
interpretation of the law as per her/his belief. Interference happens only when
one interrupts and overrides the interpretation of a senior within that
institution – in this instance the Parliament and the Judiciary.
Mr Ranil Wickremesinghe was careful not to do that
with the President’s Administrative ruling. He kept referring to the matter as
being a question of law. I conclude that that was how his genuine commitment to
law came to his support in his hour of need. Something that Mr Sirisena did not
have.
There are reports that a Contempt of Court case has
been filed in the Supreme Court against former Chief Justice Sarath N. Silva. The
case is reported to have been filed by
Professors Chandraguptha Thenuwara, Hewa Waduge Cyril and Prashantha Gunawardena,
under Article 105(3) of the Constitution of Sri Lanka. This article states as
follows:
[(3) The Supreme Court of the Republic of Sri
Lanka and the Court of Appeal of the Republic of Sri Lanka shall each be a
superior court of record and shall have all the powers of such court including
the power to punish for contempt of itself, whether committed in the court
itself or elsewhere, with imprisonment or fine or both as the court may deem
fit. The power of the Court of Appeal shall include the power to punish for
contempt of any other court, tribunal or institution referred to in paragraph
(1)(c) of this Article, whether committed in the presence of such court or
elsewhere : Provided that the preceding provisions of this Article shall not
prejudice or affect the rights now or hereafter vested by any law in such other
court, tribunal or institution to punish for contempt of itself.]
At Mallakam District Court, lawyer Yogendra,
representing our opposition claimed that I was acting in contempt of court – by
sharing my experience outside court. The District Court judge asked our lawyer
Mr Kanagasingham to warn me. I wrote my feelings that it was not contempt of
court to share my experience. In any case there was no mention of any judgment
by me of the judge at that stage while the matter was in process. Even later
when the judge said that I was behaving like a street woman, I shared my
experience – including through Naan Australian book. I did not know what the
law said. But I had already lost trust in that Court and I shared how I felt.
To my mind, Truth cannot be subdued by any human
law. If Sri Lanka did have such a law – Mr Yogendra was free to take action against me. I
would have then considered such a law to be unjust law.
I therefore do not understand as to how these three
professors who are NOT part of the Court system could have been affected by
expressions by Mr Sarath N Silva. A member of the law profession has every
right to do so on the basis that Mr Silva was part of the Judiciary as an
elder. A lawyer who respected Mr Silva would therefore have conflict or
excitement in her/his mind due to the active investments s/he has made in the current Judiciary. But not others
outside that circle of influence. It will be interesting to learn how the Sri
Lankan judiciary handles this.
Article 14 (1) (a) states:
‘Every citizen
is entitled to – the freedom of speech and expression including publication’
Freedom from restrictions help us bloom as
individuals and as sovereign groups. Gays are recognized by law so they are not
made juniors by heterosexuals. Likewise
age, gender, race etc. To my mind lawful acceptance as equals is the release from suppression of nature.
The basis of that freedom is one’s Belief. The Petitioners
have the onus to prove that their belief based rights have been damaged by Mr
Silva, if their action is not to be in breach of Article 14 (1) (a) of the
Constitution.
Article 105(3) of the Constitution is about the
power of the Courts in contempt of court. The contempt itself needs to be felt
by the Judiciary and its various support services. In terms of general public –
to my mind the parallel is Defamation action.
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