Gajalakshmi
Paramasivam
04
December 2019
19th
AMENDMENT IS THE WILL OF THE UNP GOVERNMENT
Dual citizens by law (Article 91 (1)(d) (xiii)) included through the 19th Amendment to the Sri
Lankan Constitution are barred from being elected to Sri Lankan Parliament. Mr
Victor Rajalingam – a Tamil Diaspora leader, includes in his presentation of his book ‘History of the Dispossessed
Sri Lankan Tamils’ the following:
[Contents of
this book targets the second and later generations of Sri Lankan Tamils in the
Diaspora worldwide.]
I believe that my articles include this group and
beyond. The natural spread depends on the truth in the content of the writings.
Most Dispossessed Sri Lankans are Dual Citizens during the early stages of
their/our new life. If we interpret the happenings in one country, through the
mind of a citizen in another- we would mislead ourselves and those who need our
services. Take for example members of the Diaspora who draw pensions from Sri
Lanka as well as from Australia. Are they not Dual Citizens? Even if the laws
do not ban it – we need to refrain from participating actively in ‘judging’ as
if we were Sri Lankans but in favour of Australians – our new partners. If we
use global structures of thought – then they would be of value to both. Global
citizens, like the UN are common citizens.
To my mind, the above book written by Victor is his
Will in relation to his investment in Public Life. The last UNP government’s will is the 19th
Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution. It confirms completion of
transitional life as Sri Lankan towards Global citizenship.
In Thesawalamai Law – particular to Northern Sri
Lankan Tamils – Dowry is allocated to daughters who marry early and leave the
family home of parents to live with the husband’s family and/or his cultural systems.
Immigration like marriage becomes the life of a daughter when the migrant takes
wealth from the 1st nation to the 2nd one. It was for
this reason that I named my book – ‘Jaffna is my heritage; not dowry’. I have
thus far not brought from Sri Lanka, any money or status wealth to be applied as is in Australia. I have brought pure
intelligence. These days when I invest
in Sri Lanka, it is of global standards – to be free of the pitfalls of dual
citizenship – the worst of it being bipolar disorder. This was highlighted by ‘Homeland’
- American TV series in which CIA’s Carrie Mathison is
portrayed as being bipolar. While many reviews have valued this through the
individual with bipolar disorder, no one
seems to have identified with dual cultures that this character - Carrie Mathison assumes in the course of
her work in foreign/Middle Eastern/Islamic war zones.
Recently, an American
journalist displayed high risk of bipolar disorder when he effectively ‘ordered’
me to remove him from my email list. He
came into that particular list due to his writings about Sri Lanka’s internal
war. By ‘disciplining’ him to do it himself –I reduced such a risk. This kind
of ‘excitement’ happens in areas affected by war – into which money is pumped
to ‘show’ progress rather than recovery. The new Sri Lankan President’s
emphasis on Development instead of Devolution in Northern and Eastern Sri Lanka strongly indicates this
kind of risk.
I am often ‘mistaken’ by Northern Sri Lankans
looking for handouts in the mistaken thinking that they would get over their
pain through new money. I insist that they earn what they get including through
paying respects to donor systems. From time to time, I have to ‘pause’ and help
the folks in need ‘come out of their desires for quick answers’ and feel the
need as if I was not there. I am able to do so because I do not desire to ‘show’
anyone any progress. If I did have that desire – I would be a dual citizen and
not common global citizen.
A highly
respected journalist who as per my
assessment is global minded wrote in response to my yesterday’s article ‘SRI
LANKA’S NATURAL POWERS:
[You have said
that LTTE was influenced by minds outside Sri Lanka including Indian minds. I
think it is not fully correct. Prabakaran was influenced more by his close
aides in his hideout and perhaps some of his people settled outside in London
like Balasingham. But even Balasingham had his limits.]
I do identify with the above in the Diaspora which
is a mix of two or more ‘commodities’. As I say to my juniors – when they
package their work as per their methodology I have the right to take it or
leave it – as in trading / business. But to the extent they use my methodology –
we become shareholders in common. My methodology is the pathway through which I
became a senior. Included are my sacrifices to attribute to my seniors for the credits
I held. Prabakaran produced his own outputs and
to the extent he failed to attribute credit to those who resourced him – he had
the duty to demonstrate respect for them. This did not include New Delhi – any more
than the new Lankan President not attributing
credit to the UNP for the 19th
Amendment, which naturally opened the connection to the Democratic nations in
the West.
If minds do not merge – laterally as Equals or
vertically as seniors-juniors, apparent economic progress would not be
sustained. In fact it is likely to lead to radicalization and/or strengthen
radicalization that already exists. When minds merge – whatever we do in one
part of the world would be returned naturally through any part of the merged world.
To my mind, the provisions of the 19th
Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution, when actively practiced, would
facilitate travel through the pathway.
Making commodities of resources blocks such pathways and isolates us.
The new President needs to develop higher pathways
than existing ones, if global investment in Sri Lanka is to make Sri Lankans
feel they are Equals to any other nation and not juniors. Truth is the basis of
any relationship – including in journalism driven by Sri Lankan wars.
In terms of diverse culture of Jaffna - FACTSHEET –
UPR 2017 – SRI LANKA 3rd CYCLE UNIVERSAL PERIODIC REVIEW, states the following:
[Jaffna
Matrimonial Rights and Inheritance Orinance of 1947 disables women subject to
Thesawalamai law from entering into contracts without the express approval of
their husband.]
Section 6 of the above Ordinance states:
All movable or immovable property to which any
woman married after the commencement of this Ordinance may be entitled at the
time of her marriage, or which she may during the subsistence of the marriage
acquire or become entitled to by way of gift or inheritance or by conversion of
any property to which she may have been so entitled or which she may so acquire
or become entitled to, shall, subject and without prejudice to the trusts of
any will or settlement affecting the same, belong to the woman for her separate
estate, and shall not be liable for the debts or engagements of her husband,
unless incurred for or in respect of the cultivation, upkeep, repairs,
management, or improvement of such property, or for or in regard to any
charges, rates, or taxes imposed by law in respect thereof, and her receipts
alone or the receipts of her duly authorized agent shall be a good discharge
for the rents, issues, and profits arising from or in respect of such property.
Such woman shall, subject and without prejudice
to any such trusts as aforesaid, have as full power of disposing of and dealing
with such property by any lawful act inter vivos without the consent of the
husband in case of movables, or with his written consent in the case of
immovables, but not otherwise, or by last will without consent, as if she were
unmarried.
The recommendation by the UPR included the
following:
[6. Amend all
Personal Laws, including the Muslim, Kandyan and Tesawalamai Personal Laws, to
remove discriminatory provisions regulating ownership, inheritance, transfer
and disposal of land and property, as well as provisions regulating legal
capacity, marriage, divorce, and child custody.]
As most members of the Jaffna Tamil Community are
aware – dowry continues to be very much a part of the marriage system of Jaffna
Tamils. My own sisters in law sought to claim that they were paid ‘donation’
and not ‘dowry’ by their father. My husband and I argued in Court that as per
Thesawalamai law they were paid ‘dowry’ and hence were not entitled to any
share in the residual wealth of the parents and those who were not married. The
Jaffna Courts upheld their claim and dismissed ours. They thus earned Common
Law application and not lost their heritage of
Thesawalamai mind itself. In the
system of Natural Justice – they Oppose Devolution of power to Tamils.
Ultimately we are ‘given’ as we ask – often without knowing what we are losing
through the system of Truth. Thesawalamai fundamentals confirm diversity of
Gender and Equal Rights of women who are required by law to access the
knowledge of men who specialise in ‘external relationships’ – such as in ‘foreign
ministries’. They do not need handouts from promoter of general law.
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