| by Kishali
Pinto Jayawardena
(
November 11, 2012, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) It is heartening to witness an
element of angry vigor emanating from Sri Lanka’s legal profession against the
pending impeachment of the country’s Chief Justice. The resolutions issued by the
general membership of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka yesterday expressing
concern over the impeachment and the indignation displayed by provincial Bar
Associations show that decency and sanity is not yet lost in the country.
Stifling the Chief Justice’s response
In
depressing contrast however, we have a most shameful attempt to stifle freedom
of expression by a group of unnamed ‘President’s Counsel’ this week who have pontificated
that replying and commenting outside Parliament on the charges contained in the
impeachment motion constitutes breach of parliamentary privilege (see Island,
Saturday 10th November 2012).
This is only the beginning of a long and difficult struggle as the pieces of a once proud legal system are sought to be painfully retrieved. Assuredly the very survival and public legitimacy of the Bench and the Bar remains contingent on this struggle.
Further,
these worthies have stated that replying to these charges could constitute an
additional charge in the impeachment motion. This is obviously aimed at stifling
the publication and discussion of the letter sent by the Chief Justice’s
lawyers eminently in the public interest this week, clarifying the specific
allegations of alleged financial impropriety in an effort to meet the vicious
avalanche of state media led attacks on her personal and financial integrity.
These
‘Counsel’ have taken umbrage at the public discussion of an impeachment motion
which contains mistakes even in regard to essentials such as the correct
reference to the official law reports, the correct reference to the reported
case challenging her assumption of office and the correct constitutional
provision in terms of which the Secretary to the Judicial Service Commission is
appointed. If this was a legal document, it would have been thrown out of court
at the very first instance.
Is
it any wonder therefore that, instead of a candid discussion of what these
charges are all about, these ‘President’s Counsel’ urge a ruthless lynching by
the state run media while the Chief Justice is supposed to remain silent and is
therefore condemned in the public forum by that very silence. Where the
Parliamentary Select Committee’s proceedings are held in camera and
(reportedly) with even stricter restrictions imposed than normal, from where
exactly is the public supposed to glean the truth?
Or is the truth no longer relevant in
this country where a sitting Chief Justice is now facing the exact fate meted
out to Sri Lanka’s former Army Commander, both of whom have fallen foul of this
administration? These are valid questions in the public interest.
Inapplicability of Parliamentary
privilege
These
government backed lawyers, conferred with ‘silk’ by President Mahinda Rajapaksa
appropriately enough for favours done, appear to be blissfully unaware of the
precise legal nature of parliamentary privilege. One may well ask, are they
aware of the law at all? It would be vastly amusing if it was not so
tragic.
For
their enlightenment, (assuming that this is indeed possible), parliamentary
privileges do not exist to prevent public scrutiny of parliamentary proceedings
but are merely the “sum of the peculiar rights enjoyed by the House
collectively and by members individually in order to enable the proper carrying
out of constitutional functions” (Erskine May’s Parliamentary Practice, 22nd
Ed, London Butterworths, 1997).
Sri
Lanka’s Parliamentary (Powers and Privileges) Act No 21 of 1953 (as amended), modeled
on the English law, lists grave breaches of privilege in Part A of the Schedule.
These are serious acts amounting to criminal offences which were mandated by
the original Act to be punishable only by the Supreme Court. Lesser offences
(such as disrespectful conduct in the precincts of the House) listed in Part B
of the Schedule are in the hands of Parliament to punish.
In
consonance with the draconian tone of the Jayawardene administration at that
time, an amendment of 1978 gave Parliament concurrent power with the Supreme
Court to punish in respect of these offences. But this amendment was repealed during
the Kumaratunga administration and exclusive power restored to the Supreme
Court in that regard. In all fairness, the repeal was in response to repeated appeals
by legal activists that this was an undesirable power given to parliamentarians.
Threat made with malice
Importantly
however, even in respect of breaches contained in Part A., the prohibitions are
strictly defined. These include willfully publishing any false or perverted
report of any debate or proceedings of the House or a committee or words
ordered to be expunged by the Speaker or any defamatory statement reflecting on
the proceedings and character of the House or any member thereof.
Relevantly
these prohibitions cannot, even in the wildest imagination of these “Counsel’
who would like to spew any lie for the benefit of the government, encompass the
publication of a deliberately reasoned and carefully worded response by the
Chief Justice, sent through her lawyers, to reverse the considerable harm
sought to be done to her reputation. Neither can it restrain balanced
commentary on the substantive contents of the motion.
This
threat is made with the malicious intention of ‘chilling’ discussion of a
matter that goes to the heart of the integrity of Sri Lanka’s legal system. As
such, it needs to be roundly condemned.
Rendered a laughing stock in the eyes of
the world
Quite
apart from all this, let us however assume (hypothetically) that an extremely
defamatory report is published by a newspaper, putting into issue the very
integrity of the Parliamentary Select Committee in question and offending the
grave privileges stipulated in Part A.
If
an objection is brought in this context, it will be the very Supreme Court who
will assess the gravity of reports critical of the parliamentary process in
regard to the impeachment of its own Chief Justice. The absurdity of this does
not need to be spelt out for the dim witted or the deliberately obtuse among us.
These
ill conceived, ill judged and ill timed actions against the head of the
country’s judiciary only hides the fury and chagrin of the government against a
Chief Justice who is not seen to be abasing herself sufficiently enough before
it.
The
Bar has now indicated that enough is enough in no uncertain terms. In doing so
even at this late hour, a clear message has been passed to the government. This
is only the beginning of a long and difficult struggle as the pieces of a once
proud legal system are sought to be painfully retrieved. Assuredly the very
survival and public legitimacy of the Bench and the Bar remains contingent on
this struggle.