Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
23
May 2020
Has the Lankan Parliament been buried or
cremated?
[One of the issues in
contention in current public debates is the legal effect of a dissolution of
Parliament. Those who support the President’s position argue, among other
things, that the effect of dissolution on a Parliament is the same as death in
a natural person. Just as much as a dead person cannot be brought back to life,
they argue, a dissolved Parliament cannot be recalled. In meeting this
argument, opponents of the President’s position argue that the appropriate
metaphor to illustrate the constitutional provisions on this issue is not death
but tranquilisation. Dissolution has the effect of tranquilising an existing
Parliament until such time as a new Parliament is brought to life through an
election. Presumably, the old Parliament only dies when the results of the
election are declared, or when the new Parliament formally meets for the first
time. Whatever the literary merits of the metaphor, this is the obviously
correct way to view the constitutional framework.] Ground Views article ‘DEAD OR
TRANQUILISED? THE RECALL OF DISSOLVED PARLIAMENTS’ by Dr Asanga Welikala
To my mind the
dissolved parliament does die and if recalled in the same form – it needs to be
taken as having been buried and not cremated. If a new form happens – then it
needs to be taken as having been cremated.
The intent of the President was to cremate and not to bury – as were his orders
in the case of Coronavirus victims. Both
are allegedly due to preventing infections from dead bodies. Hence the
President is confirming consistency which strongly indicates belief that he is right.
He may of course seem
wrong to legal experts. But their contribution is limited by articles 3 & 4
of the Sri Lankan Constitution which provides as follows:
[3. In the Republic of Sri Lanka sovereignty is in the
People and is inalienable. Sovereignty includes the powers of government,
fundamental rights and the franchise
4.(b) the
executive power of the People, including the defence of Sri Lanka, shall be
exercised by the President of the Republic elected by the People]
Article 3 requires the
President to ensure that the exercise of Executive power to not damage the
Sovereignty of the People. To the extent the sovereignty of the Muslim
community was so damaged, the Sovereignty
of the President was confirmed to have been weakened. One who is truly
sovereign would not damage the sovereignty of another. The test is the freedom
to exercise fundamental rights.
I have no knowledge of
Dr Asanga Welikala educating the public
about what was right or wrong in the case of cremation. Nor do I have any
knowledge of this legal academic raising the issue of Buddhism foremost article
and its projected structure and position in the Sri Lankan Constitution - especially vis-à-vis global applications of legal principles which are gobbledygook to
the common Sri Lankan. Most Sri Lankans would have understood the cremation
issue better than the constitutional problem of recalling parliament. Intellectually
speaking Dr Asanga
Welikala could be right. But in democracy, belief ranks about the intellect. A decision based on true belief would always
be right intellectually for that place at that time.
Until
proven otherwise the current president is taken to represent the belief of the
People. Prescriptive rights override lawful purchase rights for the reason of
true belief. One who has the real
experience knows that truth urges a person who has contributed to truth to act when the law needs it on behalf of all
law abiding people. Unless one is acting out of such an urge – the intellectual
balance is for other purposes – including towards academic grades.
I have
been regularly sharing my analyses from a lay person’s belief – with Mr M A
Sumanthiran, Dr Asanga Welikala, Dr Suren
Fernando and Dr Kumaravadivel Guruparan –
by including them in my list of academic group. Thus far none of them have
shown interest in what I had to say. But as per my experience – to the extent I
communicate with belief in my position vis-à-vis theirs to the in our common society –
I am empowered by Natural Forces to work the system at that level. Even if I
give up – the system of Nature / Truth takes over and delivers as it did at the
University of NSW also. Where personal results become stronger than common
ownership – Natural Forces ‘let it be’. One driven by positive natural forces is
empowered by Dharma. Those who remained silent about the damage to fundamental
rights of minorities in Sri Lanka do not have a legitimate voice to access the
powers of Dharma.
The power of ownership / belief is exponential. In intellectual power is relative.
The power of ownership / belief is exponential. In intellectual power is relative.
No comments:
Post a Comment