Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
02
July 2020
China Money
& Jaffna University
Yesterday I quoted as follows:
Article 356 of the Indian Constitution begins as
follows:
[356. Provisions in case of failure of constitutional machinery in State
(1) If
the President, on receipt of report from the Governor of the State or
otherwise, is satisfied that a situation has arisen in which the government of
the State cannot be carried on in accordance with the provisions of this
Constitution, the President may by Proclamation
(a) assume to himself all or any of the functions of the Government
of the State and all or any of the powers vested in or exercisable by the
Governor or any body or authority in the State other than the Legislature of
the State;
(b) declare that the powers of the Legislature of the State shall
be exercisable by or under the authority of Parliament;………………………….]
The above picture came to my mind when I read the
Tamil Guardian report headed ‘Sri Lanka’s Supreme
Court hears petition by Jaffna University lecturer appealing practice ban’
The matter before the court is presented by the Tamil
Guardian as follows:
[Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court began hearing a
Fundamental Rights Petition filed by Jaffna University senior lecturer Dr
Kumaravadivel Guruparan, challenging the decision of the University Grants
Commission and University of Jaffna to bar him from legal practice.
Last year, the senior law lecturer and prominent
civil society representative 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.
…. On August 21, 2019, the
military sent a letter to the University Grants Commission (UGC) asking whether
Kumaravadivel Guruparan, Senior Lecturer and Head of the Department of Law at
Jaffna University, had permission to engage in private practise. Acting swiftly,
the UGC that very same day forwarded the letter to Jaffna University.]
The said letter is as
follows:
As per my
interpretation this is common to all law academics and is the parallel of a policy
in National Parliament - that has words to the effect ‘Members of Parliament’
are permitted to engage in Notary work but are not permitted to practice as ‘Attorneys
at law’. To my mind the parallels in my profession are book-keeper and
Accountant. The latter represents the whole profession.
In principle, is the
above a just order? If as Dr Guruparan seems to claim – it is ‘no’
why not?
On 03 April 1980, the
UGC wrote as follows to the Universities, through circular 69:
[The
opinions of the Attorney-General were sought as to:
1. Whether the University Grants
commission and the higher Educational Institutions were Public Corporations;
and
2. Whether Circulars and Circular
Letters issued by Ministries and departments thereunder, containing decisions
and instructions binding on department, Public Corporations and statutory
bodies, were binding on the University Grants Commission and the Higher
Educational Institutions.
(2) In regard to the issue at (1) above, the Attorney-General has ruled that the University Grants commission and each Higher Educational Institution is a Public Corporation within the ambit of article 170 of the Constitution of the Democratic socialist republic of Sri Lanka.
(3) As for (2) above, the
Attorney-General has expressed the opinion that where such Circulars and
Circular Letters deal with the management of internal affairs of the University
grants Commission and the Higher Educational Institutions, the provisions of
the Universities Act, No. 16 of 1978 will supercede instructions contained in
such Circulars and circular Letters, but that it was open to the commission and
the Higher Educational Institutions to adopt and to act upon any such
instructions as are not inconsistent with the provisions of the aforesaid Act.]
To my
mind, the above clarification confirms that Government does not have the
authority to directly administer the Universities. It however has similar
powers to those provided for under article 356 of the Indian Constitution. As
per the above mentioned article 170:
[“public corporation” means any
corporation, board or other body which was or is established by or under any
written law other than the Companies Ordinance, with funds or capital wholly or
partly provided by the Government by way of grant, loan or otherwise;]
The
above is like the China situation in Sri Lanka. It can ‘give’ money but not make
policy including directing as to how that money is to be spent. There are
arguments here in Australia also over Labor MP - Mr Shaoquett Moselmane’s connections with
the Chinese leadership. In essence one sovereign entity has no right to influence
through ‘free money’ – a member of another sovereign entity. Free money is
allowed only internally within a sovereign unit.
In the case of Democratic
Parliament and Judiciary – they are two sovereign entities due to the
respective roots being different. Former is place based and is current local through
electoral power. Latter is time based and is ancestral. Hence the Doctrine of
Separation of Powers – as required between nations – such as China and
Australia.
But for
Administration – courts do come under the Executive Government. Not for
Governance. That in essence is Article 356 of the Indian Constitution. In the
case of Ratnasingham Vs Tikiri Banda Disanaike and Others – report in 1998 1 SLR – Justice Feernando concluded as follows:
‘Whether a grant of probate or administration ought to be made is a
question of administration; how the estate devolves is a question of
succession. The fact that the latter is a matter (and that, too, not
exclusively) for the courts of the domicile does not mean that the former is
also a matter for them. Whether a will should be admitted to probate is
governed by the rules relating to administration’
The UGC which is the parallel of the President of India and the individual
universities are the parallels of
States. Hence the question is whether UGC has the authority to make a
governance order to individual Universities which are confirmed to be sovereign
units ?
Every university has the duty to meet the needs of
its local community and through such service connect to National and Global
values – in research and teaching. The practice of law in terms of fundamental
issues particular to that region – in this instance Jaffna, is part of the
Governance needed by Jaffna. The Governing Council of the University of Jaffna
has the responsibility in this issue and not the UGC. In this instance the UGC
acted like the government that dismissed the Chief Justice.
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