Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
07
December 2018
Australian
Paal and Sri Lankan Kanchi
It is not uncommon for us to express opinions on
manifestations by other cultures. That which is manifested by one Nation should
first be observed by another and then raised on the basis of belief in the
issue by the observed, to the level common to both.
To my mind the Sri Lankan Constitutional crisis was
strongly influenced by failure to pool common
investments by junior side surrendering to the senior side. In most religions, fasting helps surrender to the higher self.
This is different to producing the outcomes and then enforcing the finished
product on the other. The depths of our
investments in law would determine the validity of our interpretations. One who
has status needs to be mindful of not overriding the interpretation of another
who is senior by status in that issue.
Dr Laksiri
Fernando, for example presented the following through his Sri Lanka
Guardian article ‘Evolving
Disaster: Agreeing to Call for Election Might be the Best’
[The controversy is because of the
unexpected and the dramatic nature that it had happened apart from its
secretive or ‘conspiratorial’ nature. Such dramatic changes have not been
uncommon in Westminster model democracies as well. Among many examples, the
dismissal of the sitting Prime Minister, with even a majority in Parliament,
was enacted in 1975 in Australia.]
Professor Suri Ratnapala who is also Australian of
Sri Lankan origin states as follows :
[The purpose
of this note is to clear up another confusion. Hon Mr Mahinda Rajapaksa, among
others, have cited as a precedent the dismissal of the Australian Prime
Minister Gough Whitlam and the dissolution of both Houses of Parliament by the
Governor-General in 1975. This involves serious misunderstandings of the facts
concerning the dismissal and the relevant provisions of the Australian
Constitution.] Sri Lanka Guardian article ‘Constitutional Paradox in Sri
Lanka’
My interpretation, to my mind, was closer to that of
Professor Suri Ratnapala but is more valid (as per my mind) because it comes
naturally as a lay common person.
Those with titles usually are handicapped by their
ego which prevents them from seeing the ‘other’ side at equal level. The Daily
mirror reported as follows about Professor Ratnapala’s involvement in the
improvements to the Sri Lankan constitution:
[Emeritus
Professor of the University of Queensland, Australia and former Senior State
Counsel, Professor Suri Ratnapala is among this panel of intellectuals, who
have been giving technical advice to the Steering Committee as well as the
other Sub-Committees. – Article headed – ‘The Constitution’s tricky issues: Prof. Suri Ratnapala’ – date 01-11-2016
The question that comes to my mind is whether Professor
Ratnapala ensured that the President understood the Articles relevant to his
position in the language that would facilitate returns to all investors in that
position? The example that comes to mind is the song Paadariyen Padippariyen (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jXEkwwqh9Q0
) in the Tamil film ‘Sindu Bairavi’ by great K Balachandar.
Law experts like Professor Ratnapala are the
parallels of the musicians singing Telegu songs (mari mari nine) to Tamil
audience who do not actually participate in the experience. The parallel of the
Tamil audience are the voters of Sri Lanka – including the politicians who have
not invested formally in the study of law. The young lady from the audience who
is naturally interested in music and appreciates music is able to sing in Tamil
to the same audience using simple language that they understand. The reason is
the depth of belief without in music without status ego. Hence the singer is
part of the audience also. That is democracy.
Mr Sirisena could not sing the Sinhalese version of
the Constitution because he lacked depth of belief in law, including in Kandyan
Law.
Even the Attorney General revealed lack of depth by stating that the Supreme Court did
not have jurisdiction to ‘entertain
petitions questioning the conduct of the President’, despite Article 35
providing as follows:
‘Provided
that nothing in this paragraph shall be read and construed as restricting the
right of any person to make an application under Article 126 against
the Attorney-General, in respect of anything done or omitted to
be done by the President’
An ordinary citizen does not need to understand the
law. But those who have status through proficiency in law – need to understand
the laws relevant to their positions.
Professor Ratnapala explains in his analysis:
[According to s 64 of the Australian Constitution, the Ministers,
including the Prime Minister, serve at the pleasure of the Governor-General.
The President of Sri Lanka has no such power. He or she must choose as PM a
member likely to command the confidence of the House who can then be dismissed
only by Parliament.]
The actual wording of
Article 42 (4) is:
[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. ]
To my mind, ‘in
the President’s opinion’ is the parallel of ‘at the pleasure of the
Governor-General’. If
Professor Ratnapala’s presentation is valid – Article 42(4) would state as
follows:
[ The President shall appoint as
Prime Minister the Member of Parliament, who, has demonstrated the confidence
of Parliament through majority vote. ]
THAT is the parallel of singing in Tamil to a Tamil
audience. Professor Ratnapala ought to
have become Sri Lankan in mind when contributing to Sri Lankan law. Likewise,
Professor Laksiri Fernando ought to have become Common Australian in mind to interpret the Australian Dismissal – as if
he himself was dismissed and experienced the pain of the Hon Whitlam’s common
voter. Belief makes us Common. Without belief we need to reveal our reasoning –
on the basis of common theory / law, to prevent plagiarism.
If the Presidency is non-executive – then the
President needs immunity.
The current president has confirmed the need for
separation of powers between cultures which in effect is also the claim of
minorities who have been unjustly discriminated against. Those who compare
various manifestations in other nations – forget that Sri Lankans have to
practice ‘Buddhism Foremost’ as per Article 9 of the Constitution. Which is the
parallel of that in the Australian Constitution? Each part must be passed
through to its respective fundamentals on which the whole has been developed.
Section 64 of the Australian Constitution should not be related directly to
Article 42 (4) of the Sri Lankan Constitution. The saying in Tamil is that the
pain of one who complains that the rice soup/kanchi is lacking in salt is the same as the pain of
one who complains that his milk is
lacking in sugar. It is taken as the same because soup and milk respectively are
staple diets for diverse cultures.
Australia is milk and Sri Lanka is Kanchi.
When discussing Sri Lankan
constitution we need to be as humble as the Kanchi drinking Sri Lankan.
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