Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
11
September 2020
Is
University of Jaffna Independent of the Government?
A leading member of the Tamil Diaspora directed me
to the issue of whether law academics could practice as lawyers, with specific
reference to Dr Kumaravadivel Guruparan of the University of Jaffna. By reading
Dr Guruparan’s response, I concluded that his main grievance was that the University
Grants Commission (UGC) lacked jurisdiction. I looked up the Universities Act, No. 16 of 1978 to
which Dr Guruparan refers as the
proper authority. Section 3 (1) and 3(4) of this Act state:
[3. The
objects of the Commission shall be
(1)
the planning and co-ordination of university education so as to conform to
national policy
(4)
the regulation of the administration of Higher Educational Institutions]
And Section 15 (xiii) states:
[to do all such other acts or things as may be necessary for
effectively exercising any of the powers specified by this act and for the
attainment of the objects set out in section 3.]
To my mind, 3 (1) defines governing power and 3 (4) defines
Executive power.
If Dr
Guruparan finds the ruling by the UGC to be in violation of freedom of
intellectual rights – then he needs to take the issue up through Due Processes.
As per my understanding, the Doctrine of Separation
of Powers between the Judiciary and the Executive is a key to determining
whether or not there is conflict of interest in an Academic representing
clients with Human Rights issues. Dr Jeyaseelan
Gnanaseelan states in support of Dr Guruparan:
[Since he has established and the executive
director of the Adayalam Center for Policy Research in Jaffna, which functions
as a human rights organization, it might have irritated the enemies of human
rights violations. Since September 2011, his holding a senior lecturer post and
the headship of the Department of Law at the University of Jaffna was his
strength in bolstering human rights in the country. …. the Council had the power to fight against the
UGC decision that it violates against the existing norms and practice that the
university academics can do consultancy and community practice outside the
institution like the academics in medical faculties as consultants in private
hospitals and other academics in all other departments serving as consultants
outside in private ventures and NGOs]
If it were for business purposes, then law
academics would rank with others mentioned above. But as acknowledged above, Dr
Guruparan takes up Human Rights cases, including against the Government. These
are governance issues which ought to be part of Research by the University. In
Research, there are no rights and wrongs and one keeps going until one makes a
discovery. Hence the entitlement to Intellectual Freedom and Independence. Not so in business. Human Rights cases are
part of a research process into ourselves through ourselves, for ourselves. It
is a kind of self-judgment process. They need to be channelled through the
University structure and processes. The outcomes belong to the Public who fund Universities
and not to particular individuals.
In a court of law, the lawyer is junior to the
judge and therefore lacks the independence to judge. THAT is where the conflict
arises – intellectual freedom and the obligation to submit to the Judge.
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