Sri Lanka: Lawlessness
Sri Lanka: Autochthonous constitutions, indigenous commissions and homegrown lawlessness
These days, there is a great deal of discussion about what is autochthonous, what is indigenous and what is homegrown. Contemporary discussion on the proposed commission for reconciliations and lessons learned according to the Minister for the Media will be an indigenous one. During the last three to four decades, Sri Lanka has experimented with an autochthonous constitution. However, the overwhelming experience of Sri Lanka throughout the country remains one of homegrown lawlessness, which has descended to the level of child trafficking. The use of language, therefore, to give an appearance of something uniquely ‘Sri Lankan’ works to cover up a blatant abuse of power, and for the purpose of deception, needs to be examined closely if cheating on the basis of nice words but extremely bad social experiments are to be prevented.
In 1972, the coalition
government which consisted of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party
and the country’s well known Marxist parties, talked about
an autochthonous constitution. It was said that the Soulbury
Constitution was in fact a foreigners’ constitution, one
which was not homegrown. However, what was the type of
autochthonous constitution that the country’s well know
intellectuals of the time, such as Colvin R De Silva, Felix
Dias Bandaranayaka, NM Perera, and many other people who
were involved in the drafting of the 1972 Constitution
brought about? The primary aim of the 1972 Constitution was
to undermine the power of the judiciary. There was a
homegrown fear among the so-called leftists of the time that
the Supreme Court was conservative. They created the
impression that they were involved in progressive
experiments for the larger masses and that the conservative
Supreme Court may stand against these experiments. For that
purpose, the idea of the supremacy of the Parliament - in
which th
This autochthonous constitution making came to
its zenith with the making of the 1978 Constitution. In this
constitution, the idea of the people’s sovereignty was
used to do away with the separation of powers concept
altogether. All power was to be placed in the hands of the
executive, who was then placed above the law by this
constitution. The western notion of the people’s
sovereignty - which meant the supremacy of the rule of law
over the executive - was rejected as an alien concept. Thus,
what was really being removed on the basis of the people’s
sovereignty is the fundamental notion of the rule of law.
Sovereign people can give power to the executive to
arbitrarily make the laws he wants, whenever he sees fit.
This kind of language twist to give the appearance of an
indigenous concept of the people’s sovereignty worked to
make the people powerless. The sovereign people became
increasingly powerless before an overwhelming power of the
executive, this is t he way the people’s
The result of
all this becomes very clear. This is apparent in the recent
cases of people who were removed from their houses by
arbitrary action of the executive and are now living in
slum-like conditions at Slave Island. All these people have
property deeds which are legitimate before the law. If they
were to be removed under a rule of law situation, it would
have been necessary for the government to legally acquire
the land by making alternative arrangements for the tenants
first. In the normal course of application of the law, that
the people would receive just compensation for their lands
and an alternative place to live would be guaranteed, prior
to them being removed. There would not have been a situation
where people were thrown onto the streets, when children had
to cry out to the media that they have no place to sleep and
no school to go to; such is the homegrown lawlessness that
is growing in the country.
The greatest example of the
colossal lawlessness in the country is the nature of the Sri
Lankan policing system itself. Constant custodial killings
of innocent people, absolute impunity enjoyed by police
officers, widespread corruption, absence of any command
responsibility and absolute control of the top of police,
the IGP and other officers, by the executive are normal
experiences in the country today. In the midst of this,
there are no solutions to robbery, murder, rape and many of
the crimes that take place without people having any kind of
protection. A symbol of the country’s lawlessness is the
disappearances that have taken place in Colombo in recent
years. The recent reports in the media talk about six
hundred disappearances around the time of the final conflict
with the LTTE. The last of such disappearances is the case
of Prageeth Eknaligoda, a well-known journalist and father
of two children. The police are unable to account for this
disappearance. Such is the dark h our of lawlessness in the
It is this kind of problems that Sri Lanka has to
address in the aftermath of the country’s bitter civil
war. It has been one year since the military victory against
the LTTE. The media speculated that once Prabhakaran was
removed from the political scene, the country would come to
a period of milk and honey. However, the country has not yet
come to any kind of stability or progress. Civilians are
becoming increasingly powerless as corruption and
lawlessness spreads and they find that they have nothing to
resort to as violent forces destroy their basic livelihoods.
About AHRC: The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional non-governmental organisation monitoring and lobbying human rights issues in Asia. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in 1984.
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