News
MP Sumanthiran: President has committed impeachable offence
By Saman Indrajith
TNA Jaffna District MP MA Sumanthiran told Parliament on Saturday that an impeachment motion could be brought against President Ranil Wickremesinghe for using the latter’s parliamentary time to violate the provisions of the Constitution.
Participating in the debate on Budget 2024 under the expenditure heads of the Ministry of Justice, Sumanthiran said that the President had stated in Parliament on 24 Nov., that the Constitutional Council was under the purview of the executive branch of government. “This is wrong and it is a deliberate attempt to violate the Constitution and that amounts to an offence on which the President could be impeached,” Sumanthiran said.
MP Sumanthiran said the President came to the Chamber on 24 Nov., and read from some Supreme Court determinations, claiming that the Constitutional Council was a part of the executive. “I spoke on the same matter on the same day, but the President did not remain in the House. He left. Two days later he came to the Chamber again and replied to me. And then he left again.
While the Opposition Leader was asking him to stay, he left the Chamber. The President before leaving told this House that as per the 17th Amendment to the Constitution, the CC was a part of the executive. He said that he, KN Choksy and Karu Jayasuriya drafted that law. That is also wrong. It was brought at the insistence of the JVP.
The President was actually talking about the 18th and 19th Amendments which were aborted in this House. They wrote them during his tenure as the Prime Minister to clip the wings of the executive presidency. He was reading from those determinations, and claimed that those readings were from the 17th Amendment.
He also claimed that I provided counseling to those deliberations before the Supreme Court. That too was wrong. I was not in the country then and I was reading for my Masters elsewhere. Chief Justice Sarath Silva giving the determination on the 17th Amendment to the Constitution stated that the establishment of the CC was the core of the 17th Amendment.
The provisions pertaining to the CC are in the Chapter 7 (A). The Leader of the House too on the day the President spoke said that it seems the CC comes under the executive. Executive powers are in Chapter 7 and a new chapter was created as 7 (A). It is a sui generis [unique] chapter stating that the CC is neither part of the executive nor the legislature. On the day of my intervention, I did not state that the CC was a part of the legislature but it was a part of the legislative structure. That is what the determination of the 17th Amendment says. The CC is a body separated from the executive, separated from the legislature but is under the aegis of Parliament.
President comes here and says what he wants. The half-baked arguments go unchallenged. That is not democracy. When someone challenges his claim, he gets up and walks away.
The 17th Amendment was brought for good governance. Subsequent amendments took good qualities away and brought them back to the Constitution. But the President behaves as if there were no checks and balances and thinks that the CC should accept his nominations. That is wrong. That was not the intention of Parliament when it implemented these amendments which sought to curtail untrammeled powers of the executive.
Now, we have come to a crisis of governance. This has implications on economic recovery as well. This has been highlighted by the IMF too. The President has violated the Constitution in this House for the second time within a month. This is deliberate offence on which he could be impeached,” Sumanthiran said.
News
Presidential Suite at Sri Jayewardenepura General Hospital opened to the public
The special ward at Sri Jayewardenepura General Hospital, which had until now been reserved exclusively for the use of the Executive President, was opened for the public for the provision of medical treatment to the general public from Tuesday (24).
This decision was taken jointly by the Ministry of Health and the hospital administration, in accordance with instructions given by President Anura Kumara Dissanayake.
Constructed in 1984 with a grant from the Government of Japan, Sri Jayewardenepura General Hospital was originally established with a capacity of 1,000 beds. However, in line with the initial design, an additional special unit, designated as Room No. 1001, was included exclusively for the personal use of the Executive President.
Over the 42 years since the hospital’s establishment, this facility has been utilised only on a very limited number of occasions. Nevertheless, it has been maintained over the years in anticipation of a possible visit by a sitting President, without being made available for patient use.
With effect from today, this special unit will be utilised for the benefit of general patients receiving treatment at the hospital. This step has been taken in line with the Government’s policy of ensuring the more efficient use of public assets and resources to meet the healthcare needs of the people.
News
Cabinet Sub-Committee appointed to streamline the Public Service meets for the second time
The second meeting of the Cabinet Sub-Committee appointed to ensure the orderly functioning of the public service was held on Tuesday (24) afternoon at the Presidential Secretariat, under the patronage of Prime Minister Dr Harini Amarasuriya.
Extensive discussions were held on the immediate measures required to ensure the uninterrupted delivery of government services to the public and to address the challenges faced by public servants.
Attention was also drawn to maintaining the continuous operation of services under the Ministries of Public Administration, Provincial Councils and Local Government, Health, Education, and Justice. Accordingly, it was decided to ensure that examinations are conducted as scheduled and that essential medicines are supplied to hospitals without disruption.
The challenges in passenger transport services and the railway transport system, as well as future measures, were also discussed at length. Focus was also placed on the steps to be taken regarding the transportation of essential goods.
In addition, attention was given to introducing digital service systems to facilitate working from home and to enhance the efficiency of existing services. It was also noted that these activities would be supervised under the Ministry of Digital Economy.
Instructions were further issued to review the current energy management practices across all ministries and departments and to take steps to implement necessary policy changes.
Minister of Public Administration, Provincial Councils and Local Government A. H. M. M. H. Abeyaratne, Secretary to the Prime Minister Pradeep Saputhanthri, Chief of Staff to the President Prabath Chandrakeerthi, Secretary to the Ministry of Public Administration, Provincial Councils and Local Government S. Aloka Bandara, Secretary to the Ministry of Health and Mass Media Dr Anil Jasinghe, Secretary to the Ministry of Energy Professor T. M. Udayanga Hemapala, Secretary to the Ministry of Digital Economy T. R. W. S. Dhanapala, Secretary to the Ministry of Justice and National Integration Ayesha Jinasena, PC, Senior Additional Secretary to the President Roshan Gamage, and Chairman of the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation D. J. A. S. S. Rajakaruna, along with other committee members, were also present at the occasion.
News
Energy Minister indicted on corruption charges ahead of no-faith motion against him
… first NPPer to face charges under Section 70 of Bribery Act
Colombo High Court has issued summons on Energy Minister Kumara Jayakody to appear in court today (27) to serve indictment in a corruption case filed by the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC). Action has been taken under Section 70 of the Bribery Act. The losses suffered by the government have been estimated at Rs. 8,859,708.
National List (NL) MP Jayakody is the first NPP minister or politician at any level to be indicted for corruption. The NPP parliamentary group consists of 159 including 18 NL members.
The summons has been issued by High Court judge Rashantha Godawalage.
Although CIABOC previously in many instances arrested those who had been under investigation and produced them before Magistrate courts, Minister Jayakody has been directly summoned by the Colombo High Court.
The investigation into alleged corruption in procurement during the time Jayakody served the Ceylon Fertilizer Corporation (CFC) started after the change of government in 2015.
According to the CIABOC investigation, the alleged instance of corruption took place in early 2014 towards the tail end of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s second term. At that time Jayakody was CFC’s Procurement Manager, and the CIABOC dragged the investigation until its current leadership under overall speeding up of the cases recently completed the inquiry.
Parliament recently announced that the debate on no-faith motion moved against Minister Jayakody over alleged irregularities in the procurement of substandard coal for the country’s only coal-fired power station at Norochcholai.
SJB MP Mujibur Rahman said that the NPP, having campaigned on an anti-corruption platform during presidential and parliamentary polls in 2025 couldn’t under any circumstances shield minister Jayakody. The indictment of Jayakody over a corruption case that had happened in 2014 and the failure on his part to fulfill obligations as Energy Minister under the current dispensation couldn’t be considered separately, the Colombo District MP said.
The issue at hand is whether the NPP would try to protect Jayakody at the expense of the government, MP Rahman said. Once the NPPer is formally charged in a corruption case the government would find it extremely difficult to keep him in the cabinet, the former UNPer said.
SJB lawmaker S.M. Marrikar recently warned Minister Jayakody that he should be prepared to serve a jail term. The warning was issued at a media briefing that primarily dealt with the alleged irregularities in the procurement of coal and their decision to move a no-faith motion against the minister. Marrikar explained how the crisis coupled with the growing diesel shortage could compel the government to increase electricity tariffs by as much as 18 percent next week. MP Marikkar said that they were eagerly waiting to see who backs Jayakody at the expense of the government during the upcoming vote on the no-faith motion.
There had been a previous case of a sitting minister being charged under the Bribery Act in respect of corruption perpetrated as a government servant. MP Rahman said that they intended to intensify the ongoing campaign against the government on the strength of the unprecedented corruption case and the outcome of the no-faith motion. “Of course, they have the numbers to defeat our no-faith motion. But, in doing so, they end up with egg on their face. That is the reality,” Rahman said, adding that those responsible for waste, corruption and irregularities whichever political parties they represented shouldn’t expect special status.
MP Rahman alleged that the CIABOC granted special status to Minister Jayakody. All those who had been indicted previously were first called to the CIABOC, recorded their statements and then arrested, handcuffed and produced in court. The media was afforded the opportunity to cover their humiliation, MP Rahman said, but in this case the powers that be paved the way for the accused to receive indictments directly from the Colombo High Court.
“Let us see whether the Bar Association of Sri Lanka responds to this development,” MP Rahman said.
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