20 August 2022
Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
PAULINE HANSON & ARAGALAYA
COMPLAINANTS
I protested openly here in
Australia, after Pauline Hanson asked me to ‘go home’. https://www.elanka.com.au/pauline-hanson-and-sri-lankan-protestors-by-gajalakshmi-paramasivam-2/
I presented my case as follows, in my letter of resignation:
‘I heard Pauline Hanson on the 4
Corners Programme last night. Ms Hanson suggests that we go back to our
countries of origin if we cannot be like them. It hurts that we even have to
hear such things. In the name of ‘Freedom of Speech’ we – the new Australians
are being made to lose our freedom to live as individuals. If the leadership of
Australia is unable to turn it around – to make up for their negligence in failing
to hear the cries of new Australians – one has to wonder whether Ms Hanson
is expressing what these leaders (and employers) feel themselves in their heart
of hearts. This is the million dollar question to which I have been seeking
a favourable answer – that the leaders of the country to which we brought our
children and made them call it their ‘home’ would ensure that it is ‘home’ for
our children. But, my experience during the past 13 years has failed to deliver
the answer that I have been seeking so desperately. When an educational
institution such as the University of New South Wales also demonstrated
that it was no different – I do not wish to waste any more time – hoping.’
The reason why I received the pain of Pauline’s declarations
was because by then I was ‘Common Australian’. This included Indigenous
Australians also. When for example, I heard in yesterday’s news that Umar Patek,
the guy who made the bombs that killed 88 Australians, 20 of whom were from my
home area, I felt for the victims as if I was part of their community. It is
intuitive and instantaneous from a still mind.
The letter of resignation was my first act of protest against
White supremacy. The resignation was the confirmation of the sacrifice of my
earned opportunities at the Medical Faculty of the University of NSW.
I proceeded to take action against the authorities and
was ‘failed’ due to the Australian court system using the autocratic ‘inquisitorial
system’ instead of the lateral ‘adversarial system’ needed as per Equal
Opportunity Law. The court judgments were in effect ‘we don’t care if you
leave’. I then wrote my book ‘Naan Australian’ – in the belief that someone,
somewhere would identify with my experiences through the institutional
processes. This book ended up in National Library of Australia, via Congress
library, without my knowledge. That is how truth works.
In real terms, many Tamils consulted with in related
matters.
As per the
article ‘Saying No to Authoritarian Governance’ at https://www.themorning.lk/saying-no-to-authoritarian-governance/
, a group of academics and
professionals are presenting their mind
as follows:
‘We must therefore challenge
President Wickremesinghe’s and the government’s attempts to say that there is a
difference between an aragalaya (struggle) and a “kerella” (rebellion).’
As presented above, my struggle
was through the structured, institutional pathway. It involved sacrifice of
benefits and opportunities earned through that pathway and took me to zero base
– as if I had no credits with that system. But because I was true to myself, I
was able to connect to the truth of those in that institutional structure. It’s
the ‘insight’ one gets in return for genuine sacrifice – for example as a
mother knowing the needs of her child.
To qualify as a protest against
the President – the protestors ought to have invested at Equal level, or more
through the Common structure. Hence the Equal status to the Opposition in
Parliament. To require the whole Parliament to ‘go home’ is much more than a protest
but a rebellion against a democratically structured institution.
Such a call, to my mind,
is the parallel of Pauline Hanson’s call to ask migrants who have come through
the structured pathway to ‘go home’. An unstructured pathway could be true or
frivolous. When true , it would strengthen the existing structure. When
frivolous, it would seriously damage the structure.
Be it Sinhala only group
or Tamil only group, they are the parallels of Pauline Hanson and Indigenous
Australians respectively.
The call for the
President to go home was not institutionally structured. There were provisions
in the constitution which were NOT used towards ousting the President through
due process of law. As per the above mentioned article, the intellectual group
is claiming as follows:
[Sovereignty is therefore in the “People,” and
Parliament and the Executive must exercise their powers in a manner that
ensures that Sovereignty can be “exercised and enjoyed” by the People (Article
4). Fundamental rights must be “respected secured and advanced” by both these
organs of government (Article 4(d) and CANNOT be restricted except when it is
legal, proportionate and reasonable, in the manner defined in Article 15.]
Article 4 (d) provides as
follows:
[4 (d) the fundamental
rights which are by the Constitution declared and recognized shall be
respected, secured and advanced by all the organs of government and shall not
be abridged, restricted or denied, save in the manner and to the extent
hereinafter provided.]
Article 14 (1) (e ) under
Fundamental Rights provides as follows:
‘14. (1) Every citizen
is entitled to –
(e) the freedom, either
by himself or in association with others, and either in public or in private,
to manifest his religion or belief in worship, observance, practice and
teaching;’
Article 9 states:
[9. The Republic of
Sri Lanka shall give to Buddhism the foremost place and accordingly it
shall be the duty of the State to protect and foster the Buddha Sasana, while
assuring to all religions the rights granted by Articles 10 and 14(1)(e).]
Article 9 separates the
county into two entities – one Buddhist and the other non-Buddhist. Where there
is relativity – such as ‘foremost’ there cannot be Absolute power and v.v. Fundamental
Rights such as those covered by Article 4 (d), do not apply to a group driven
by relative power in the constitution. They therefore apply only to those
covered by Article 14(1)(e) and Article 10 but not those covered by article 9.
If there were Buddhists
in Aragalya, they had the Constitutional duty to follow the Buddhist pathway –
according to which they had the duty to renounce desires. The call for the
Buddhist President to ‘go home’ by a group that did not earn the right to ‘dismiss’
the president – is an expression of desire.
Every believer in Sri
Lanka is a Sovereign Sri Lankan by belief. But to have the authority of the
law, and have the ‘freedom’ to ask the President
to go home – they have to have the authority of a fundamental power – undiluted
by relativity specifically allowed by the constitution. Natural powers work to
deliver as per the belief of each person, including the President in his
position and/or Mr Gotabaya Rajapaksa as
an individual citizen.
Mr Gotabaya Rajapaksa is
the victim and not Aragalaya complainants.
No comments:
Post a Comment