Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
09
June 2020
Elections Commission Lacking in
Gender Diversity
As
per my discovery, we make decisions at various levels – summarised as follows:
(1) Based
on what happened
(2) Based
on calculations as per common measures, theories and laws.
(3) As
per our intuition.
The
energy from the first does not go past
our immediate physical circle. The second spreads to wider circles to connect
us mentally to others using those measures. The third is universal and spreads
beyond time. The third is exponential in value due to being independent of time
and place limitations.
Examples
of the above are Politics, Administration and Governance respectively.
Article
43B(3) of the Sri Lankan Constitution states:
[ It shall be
the duty of the Council to recommend to the President fit and proper persons
for appointment as Chairmen or members of the Commissions specified in the
Schedule to this Article, whenever the occasion for such appointments arises,
and such recommendations shall endeavour to ensure that such recommendations
reflect the pluralistic character of Sri Lankan
society, including gender. In
the case of the Chairmen of such Commissions, the Council shall recommend three
persons for appointment, and the President shall appoint one of the persons
recommended as Chairman. ]
The three members of the Election Commission are Mr Mahinda Deshapriya (Chairman), Mr Nalin
Abeysekera, PC and Professor Ratnajeevan Hoole. All are males.
Sri
Lanka’s pluralism is largely from (1) Gender; (2) Religion and (3) Language.
There
are no females, Hindus or Muslims heading the Election Commission; Only the
last of the above 3 seems to have been satisfied. The recommendations are required to reflect the pluralistic
character of Sri Lanka. Since the recommendations are available to me, I
conclude that the Constitutional Council did not recommend to satisfy this criterion. The
Council of 10 itself has one female, one Muslim and 2 Tamils. In terms of the
population – women are slightly more than men. Hence, to be democratic at least
on gender basis the Council ought to have had at least 5 females. On the basis
of religion the distribution ought to have been 7 Buddhists, 1 Hindu, 1 Muslim
and 1 Christian. On the basis of language 7 Sinhalese, 2 Tamils and 1
Burgher/Eurasian.
The
Constitution based on combination of intellectual logic falls within ‘common
measures’ and ‘intuition’ listed above. Like the coronavirus the latter would
show rising curve and the former would show flat lateral spread. Belief based
intuition spreads exponentially whilst physically observable characters spread
one to one laterally and scientific
knowledge spreads vertically. The more dependent we are on leaders the more we would use what
happened and therefore would be open to being ‘controlled’ – as in China which
also showed the vertical line where the mind of the leader was the scientific
measure.
Every
true believer can therefore defeat ‘controllers’ and ‘intellectuals without
belief’.
Whilst
Article 9 of the Lankan Constitution requires Buddhism to be given foremost
place, Article 43B(3) requires recommendations to the following Commissions to be
pluralistic:
(a) The Election Commission. (b)
The Public Service Commission. (c) The National Police Commission. (d) The
Audit Service Commission. (e) The Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka. (f) The
Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption. (g) The Finance
Commission. (h) The Delimitation Commission. (i) The National Procurement
Commission.
In terms of the Election Commission, Professor Ratnajeevan Hoole has recently been in the news through Ceylon Today article ‘Independent'
EC's Ratnajeevan Hoole publicly declares : Do not vote for SLPP’ and the other
being the Island editorial of 09 June 2020 headed ‘Was
Prabhakaran bribed?’ As per the latter:
[Election
Commission member Prof. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole has challenged a newspaper group
to investigate what he calls a bribery scandal involving the LTTE’s polls
boycott, which prevented the Tamil people from voting at the 2005 presidential
election, in the North. Several others have made this allegation during the
last 15 years or so.]
A politician representing her/his people has the
authority to question as per her/his belief based indicators. As an
Administrator – Independent of the Government – Dr Hoole did not have this
authority and is in breach of the ethics of his position. Since he carries the
title ‘Professor’ he had the responsibility to produce logic based connections
confirming his wisdom in this issue. When one expresses like a politician but
without the vote of a group – s/he becomes frivolous. When this is in breach of
the law – s/he becomes vexatious. Dr Hoole has proven to be a failure in
Administration and has the moral authority to resign from his position. THAT
would confirm self governance.
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