17 June 2023
Gajalakshmi Paramasivam
WHY
DO PROTESTS FAIL?
‘The
government’s obsession with the idea of suppression of people’s agitations
irrespective of their merit or demerit is again well manifested by the Anti-Terrorism Bill which was published on March 22 this year. The Bill seeks to replace the draconian
Prevention of Terrorism (Temporary Provisions) Act of 1979 which drew wide
criticism against it from local and international human rights organizations
and civil society organizations.’ – MSM Ayub in his article ‘Comedy
of Terrors A government haunted by the memory of Aragalaya
How does one determine
whether the steps taken by the government are obsessive or preventive? It may
be both at the same time, within the Parliament. If the Parliamentarians voted
on the basis of their belief, then it is valid. If valid, it would be worked by
the Parliamentarians. But Sri Lankan parliamentarians are known to ‘trade’ and ‘gamble’
with their positions. The People did not ‘protest’ when that came to light.
Aragalaya happened when the folks felt and/or saw economic hardship. Many of
the media reports during the time, was to highlight economic hardship. This
included Australian ABC reports that I could not identify with, as a common Sri
Lankan. To the extent one feels ownership, and expresses that feeling through one’s
declarations in words and/or actions, their ownership Energy would become part
of the causal forces of the change. Energies of deep owners are often least
visible.
The question before us
is about the author’s ownership. MSM Ayub
writes :
‘Justice,
Prison Affairs and Constitutional Reforms Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe
presented in Parliament another piece of legislation called the Bureau of
Rehabilitation Bill on September 23 last year, apparently with the same
objective of suppressing dissent.
The Bill very clearly seemed to be meant to hound those who
agitated between April and July last year demanding relief from the
economic hardships and a total “system change.” According to the Bill, “the
objective of the Bill shall be to rehabilitate drug dependent persons,
ex-combatants, members of violent extremist groups and any other group of
persons who require treatment and rehabilitation …
Several fundamental rights petitions
were filed against this Bill and the petitioners argued that the categories of
persons and groups cited in the Bill to be rehabilitated are ill-defined and do
not clarify how these persons may qualify for rehabilitation.
Ambika Satkunanathan, the
former Human Rights Commissioner, who was one of the petitioners, in her
petition says that the use of such vague and arbitrary classifications can thus
lead to persons being detained for rehabilitation for even participating in protests.’
Every institution that
by law, is an independent unit, has the right to publish its findings within
the boundaries of its sovereign power. This applies to the Human Rights Council
also. The sovereign borders of the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, are as
per the HUMAN RIGHTS
COMMISSION OF SRI LANKA ACT,NO.21 OF 1996.
After
Ms Satkunanathan left
the commission, her sovereign borders are defined legally in the Fundamental
Rights articles 10 to 17 of the Constitution.
Mr MSM Ayub continues as follows:
‘The
Court determined that the controversial Bill was, as a whole, inconsistent
with Article 12 (1) of the Constitution.
Article 12 (1) of the
constitution reads:
“All persons are equal before the law and are entitled to the
equal protection of the law.”
According to the determination by the apex court, the
inconsistency with Article 12 (1) will cease if all references to
‘ex-combatants’, ‘violent extreme groups’, and ‘any other group of persons’ are
deleted from the bill, and if the Bill is limited to rehabilitation of drug
dependent persons and such other persons as may be identified by
law.
As if the government’s very target was those three
groups, it dumped the Bill following this ruling.
The government and the drafters of the Bill should have
considered the Supreme Court ruling on the regulations gazetted by former
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to rehabilitate ‘extremists’ on March 12,
2021.
Those regulations sought to send
‘extremists’ to rehabilitation centres for one year, without them being tried
by any court. Those regulations also did not define the term
‘extremists.’
The Supreme Court suspended the gazette in August last year
after considering a Fundamental Rights petition filed against it.’
The above ruling by the Judiciary and its acceptance by the
government, while being positive, did not prevent Mr Rajapaksa from dismissing himself
from the position of Presidency. There is consensus on ‘what happened’. Each
sovereign group/person would have contributed to why it happened, as per their
own sovereignty. Given that the ethnic war issue was extended to UN level by
Tamils with the support of the West, the sovereign powers of all of them also
contributed to the resignation.
Every leader, needs to recognize this nuclear
power of sovereignty as structural changes at fundamental levels of their own
organisations/selves.
The Supreme Court ruling is already part
of the ‘past’. We need to make it our ‘present’ through rules and processes
that protect our sovereignty as individuals. The Truth in our thoughts would do
the rest.
Protests without truth would lead to weakening
of the opposition power. True Opposition is invisible, except to protect and
propagate itself. Hence non-violence.
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