Gajalakshmi
Paramasivam
10
December 2019
LAW
ACADEMICS AND LEGAL PRACTITIONERS
When someone draws my particular attention to a news
report – I pay attention as per the person who sends me the communication and
then the subject matter. Recently, such a communication was forwarded to me in
relation to Dr Kumaravadivel Guruparan with reference to his dual role. Tamil
Guardian reported as follows:
[Sri Lanka bars academics from practising as lawyers
Following a decision to the head of
law at Jaffna University Dr Kumaravadivel Guruparan from engaging in private
legal practice, Sri Lanka’s University Grants Commission (UGC) has announced
that all academic staff members can no longer practise as attorneys.
In a circular
released last week, the UGC said that “approval cannot be granted”, despite a
previous 2013 decision, which said academics could practise as attorneys, if
“such work is not an obstacle for his/her routine duties”.
No further
explanation was provided by the UGC.]
When I assisted Dr Darshanan last year
to present his facts and arguments as per the written law, I learnt about Dr Kumaravadivel Guruparan being the head of law at the
University of Jaffna. As per that information - Dr Kumaravadivel Guruparan was
a gentleman. When asked why Dr Guruparan had not headed the University
Management’s team in the trial - the only reason that Dr Darshanan could
think of was that the rules required the inquiring officer to be senior to the
one against whom charges had been made. It made sense. In the process of advising Dr Darshanan I
learnt the following provisions in the Universities
Act:
Section 45
of the Universities Act Universities Act No. 16 of 1978 :
45. (1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the
Council shall exercise the powers and perform and discharge the duties and
functions conferred or imposed on, or assigned to, the University.
(2)
Without prejudice to the generality of the
powers conferred upon it by subsection (1), the Council shall exercise, perform
and discharge the following powers, duties and functions:-
(xii)
to appoint persons to, and to suspend, dismiss or otherwise punish persons in
the employment of, the University:
Provided that, except in the case of Officers and teachers, these powers may be
delegated to the Vice-Chancellor;
In
the case of Dr Darshanan, the disciplinary actions were undertaken by Professor
Vasanthi Arasaratnam – then the Vice Chancellor of the University of Jaffna.
Even though this was highlighted by the team representing Dr Darshanan – claiming
that it was in breach of the above section of the law, the University Council
made the decision to uphold those proceedings.
As
per my discovery, Due Processes & Laws carry the Energy of the original
discoverers to their heirs. All those who respect Due Processes & Laws are
heirs and are entitled to access that Energy. In the case of strong commitment –
the Energy comes to the heir. I did not
find any input into the above inquiry by Dr
Kumaravadivel Guruparan. Outsiders represented the University Administration.
As
per the above report by Tamil Guardian:
[Guruparan was barred from engaging in private practice following
pressure from the Sri Lankan military, after he took up a public interest
habeas corpus case into the 1996 disappearance of more than two dozen Tamil
youth. The incident drew outrage from around the world, with hundreds signing a
statement condemning the ‘threats, harassment and reprisals’ against the
prominent human rights lawyer and the international human rights organisation
Front Line Defenders has issued an urgent appeal.]
The
above confirms clear breach of the principles underpinning the Doctrine of
Separation of Powers between the Judiciary and the Executive. The Executive is limited to using the law to mark rights and wrongs whereas the Judiciary
has the duty to show how the causes and the effects upheld by their judgment, connect.
In doing so the Judiciary has to have belief in the makers of the law – the Legislature
– as if they are the makers. Without such belief they are mere extensions of
the Executive. The Judiciary has to also have belief in its ancestors to
connect to their mind structure through which their judgment is delivered. That
is how we invoke ancestral powers.
In presenting his paper
‘Customary
law of stateless nations: some observations on the question of who can reform
the Thesawalamai, the customary laws of the Tamils in Sri Lanka’ – Dr Guruparan states:
[Despite the definitive trend towards consolidating the Sri
Lankan state as a Sinhala Buddhist state in the post-colonial context, the
legal system was left intact in its plural character. In fact, the current
constitution seeks to even prevent fundamental rights provisions in the
constitution from overriding customary law principles in the event of clash.
However, there have been calls for reform, which have focused mainly on
enacting a uniform civil code. This project of uniformization advertently or
inadvertently aids the monist consolidation of the Sri Lankan state. This paper
argues that the Sri Lankan Parliament and courts lack political legitimacy to
amend the Thesawalamai, which the paper characterizes as pre-state law, leave alone
abolishing it and enacting a uniform civil code. The legitimacy deficit of Sri
Lankan institutions is built on the long history of brutal repression of
the Tamil struggle for self-determination. The paper suggests that a viable,
politically legitimate process for reforming the Thesawalamai can only be put in place if the national question is
settled to the satisfaction of the Tamil community in Sri Lanka. It further
suggests that placing the responsibility of amending the pre-state law of the
Tamils in the hands of institutions which they consider to be politically
legitimate and representative is the best path to reforming the Thesawalamai.]
My experience of Thesawalamai connected me to the
minds of its authors – our ancestors. Uniform Civil Code is based largely on
Administrative laws introduced later. Likewise
the Common Law ruling. The Mallakam District Court as well as the Jaffna High
Court in which our side was represented by Attorney at Law Manivannan who is
understood to be professionally close to Dr Guruparan, upheld the common law
basis of succession – that the intestate estate of an unmarried man without
children – was to be shared Equally by all siblings – including those who
received dowry. Our Appeal to the high court resulted in the ruling that the
Administration of the monies in the UK – was the responsibility of the UK
authorities . The case law used was Ratnasingham Vs Tikiri
Banda Disanaike
and Others.
At the end – Judge Elancheliyan ruled that our
appeal be dismissed and the files be sent back to Mallakam District Court. The other side sought only Certificates of Heirship and opposed Administration which we sought. When we
applied to Mallakam District Court for our certificate – that application was
set aside and the matter continues to be unresolved.
Whether we use Civil Procedure Code or Thesawalamai
order – the practice and theory would show the order in which our work outcomes are arranged. When we arrange them
as per our true motive and commitment – the end would also be truth. Truth has
perfect order.
Dr Guruparan states as follows:
[The paper suggests
that a viable, politically legitimate process for reforming the Thesawalamai can only be put in place if the national question is
settled to the satisfaction of the Tamil community in Sri Lanka. It further
suggests that placing the responsibility of amending the pre-state law of the
Tamils in the hands of institutions which they consider to be politically
legitimate and representative is the best path to reforming the Thesawalamai]
My question is ‘who/which group within the area
covered by Thesawalamai has the true authority to undertake such a change?’ –
In terms of Politics – we had Mr C V Wigneswaran as Chief Minister who to my
knowledge made zero contribution to review judgments recently made through
Thesawalamai law – so to his juniors who made mistakes such review would be
lessons that would prevent such mistakes. Those who receive positive review
would then feel good about themselves.
The need needs to stem from the People concerned.
Where it is driven by the desire of those in high positions – it becomes abuse
of power – as Article 9 of the Sri Lankan constitution has become. When there
is a law – the executive would need to get more rights than the one over whom authority
is exercised. Unless such an executive has ownership/governing power – the source
of the authority becomes simple majority – on the basis of who gets more
rights. If those rights are by cheating – then they become abuse of power.
Mr Wigneswaran who apparently has high position in
Judiciary as well as Politics did not inquire into my complaints as if he was Thesawalamai.
At least when I wrote my analyses he could have proven me wrong. He would have
if he had felt the need of the People as his. Likewise, Dr Guruparan. Even if I
am irrelevant to them – they could have written as per their experience. If
they did not have such an experience – then they are not the ones in need of
change or Thesawalamai did not permit them access to its soul.
As per the Tamil Guardian article - Front
Line Defenders and others from around the world – have felt the need to oppose
the ruling against Dr Guruparan. They are all ‘foreigners’ to Thesawalamai
Law and its practice. If Thesawalamai’s Dowry system was officially practiced in
Ireland – practitioners of Irish law would have weaker support. Given that the
support has been lateral – and given that there has been no parallel provision
in Thesawalamai law – I conclude that the above mentioned paper by Dr Guruparan
is driven by desire for academic status which would then lead to bipolarism.
The law at its fundamental level helps us recognize
right from wrong at the level served by the law. As per Thesawalamai law
separation of powers exist between males and females in terms of inheritance.
The real value is that Energy which can be accessed through pure belief or discriminative thinking through the pathway
used by the original discoverers. Hence as per the principles that separate man
from woman – one who makes changes to customary laws cannot cross over to
contemporary laws and v.v.
We may not ‘see’ the ancestors who gave us those laws.
But they exist and the believer recognizes them and finds her/his logic and
therefore peace of mind. Given that majority Tamils access our ancestral powers
one needs to be driven by the soul value / truth which need not be proven to be
right or wrong. One who is driven by ‘seen’ and/or known outcomes – of money and
status would not access this soul power and therefore has no authority to make
laws nor change existing ones. Hence the architects of Buddhism Foremost
article in the constitution, have no
authority to make changes to Tamil,
Muslim or Secular laws and v.v. If
Thesawalamai Law is amended to suit current constituents – then such leaders
become the parallel of Buddhism Foremost architects and are ineligible to make
changes to the secular laws.
There was nothing to prevent a TNA MP from initiating
such proposal for changes in Parliament. But then that MP loses the moral
authority to initiate changes to the secular laws. In a Buddhist parliament a
non–Buddhist is the natural Opposition. This non-Buddhist could be a specialist
in Secular law, Thesawalamai or Muslim law. Those who are specialists in
Secular Law would merge laterally with others who practice those laws. That was
how Buddhism Foremost separation isolated Sinhala-Buddhists.
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