Features
What will the NPP do in the future?
Will it drop the NPP dress and become the original JVP?
If so what will be their JVP inspired policies? They have cleverly not told us. We have questions but no answers. Trying to understand the JVP’s policies is a hard task.
The JVP policies have been at best vague. But we know they are a Marxist Leninist party and are likely to lean towards their traditional policies . As they have not been in power as a government we have no knowledge of what they will do as a government.
The big question is why did people support the NPP when there were more questions than answers about their future policies?
A little story
I must relate a little story that sheds a little light. Many moons ago just after the first JVP uprising I was a visiting lecturer in Economics at the Colombo campus. Following traditions at Cambridge where I did my degree, I invited small groups for a drink and chat. I did not pointedly ask them whether they were JVP, but asked them why students were supporting the JVP. Their answer was simple. Our problems are not being addressed under the present system, and so we need to get rid of it and have a JVP government.
My next question was what will the JVP do when they come into power. They really had no answer ,and they shuffled their feet and shrugged their shoulders and said they will decide when they were in power. Their thinking is not far off from my reasons for supporting AKD and voting for him. Our country is riddled with corruption from the top to the bottom. We will never create sustainable growth until we purge the country of corruption. AKD is the only person dedicated to carrying out this task and so I support him and vote for him.
The face of Communism is changing
The JVP is a Marxist Leninist party. But now Communism has got a face change.
Ho Chi Minh the famous founder of Communist Vietnam said: “Socialism means ,first of all, to make sure that the people are free from misery, everyone has a job, everyone has enough to eat and wear, and has a happy life.
Socialism is to make sure that the people become rich ,and the country becomes prosperous. Socialism means to make sure that the people are increasingly happy, have access to education, are given medical treatment, can take rest when they are old, while bad customs and habits are gradually eradicated.
Socialism means to make sure that our people from all nationalities enjoy welfare and their offspring are increasingly happier. It is the aim of socialism to improve peoples material and cultural conditions, and all this must be built by the people”
Ho Chi Minh :complete works vol 10 .
The JVP/NPP are not answering key questions
The NPP is a hybrid, and not a pure Marxist party. So far they have shied away from unambiguously answering some key questions. Do they have plans to take over all land and redistribute it in accordance with their policies on land ownership? Will they take over all private industries and businesses? Do they plan to end multi-party democracy, and have a single party rule?
We wait anxiously for a clear unambiguous statement from AKD..
Lessons from other countries
Any new Marxist group that comes in to power, if they are wise, should look and learn from other countries that went down the route of capturing political power, through one means, or the other, and who were then left scratching their heads about what they should do. A good case study is Vietnam, now a booming economy.
Vietnam
A life long Communist, Ho Chi Minh is revered as the father of the nation. He was the leader of the Vietnamese Communist Party until he passed away. He led two campaigns that created Vietnam. The first was to get rid of the French colonial masters in the north and then to orchestrate the bloody campaign to liberate the south, which task was fully completed only after his death. The journey of creating a communist country started in the north with a blistering campaign of land reform. The 1981 constitution formally nationalized all land.
During the period 1975 to 1985 Vietnam pursued a centrally planned model. But afterwards all was not well and the economy was struggling and in 1982 at the party congress, whilst defending central planning, a program of concessional reforms was approved. This did not solve their problems and create a booming economy, and therefore in 1986 the government introduced a major reform program.
It explicitly recognized the failure of the central planning system. The government in 1987 issued a statement “the State encourages and accepts the long term existence and positive effects of the family, individual, and private economies active in production and services; it guarantees the rights to property, to inherit, and to legal income for people active in these sectors; it accepts their legal incorporation/identity and equality before the law in their production and business activities”
The liberalization program continued and under the new law in 1988, (deemed the most liberal in South East Asia) all sectors of the economy were open to foreign investors.
State control of agriculture was reduced, farmers were free to sell their produce on the open market, import duties on industrial inputs were removed, price controls were limited to a few sectors, approval was given to privatize state firms. Progressively all vestiges of central government control of the economy disappeared. It was the end of Marxism and its derivative communism. However the most interesting feature of Vietnam was the complete dismantling of everything resembling communism.
The dominant role of the state controlling everything, steadily disappeared. However the Communist Party did not disappear and the country continued to be controlled by the Communist Party and Vietnam remains a Communist country. Interestingly all corruption did not disappear. One but the last President appointed by the Communist Party was removed for corruption. His successor also appointed by the Communist Party was also removed because of corruption.
Lessons from Vietnam
Even under a government appointed and controlled by the Communist Party there can be private enterprise, and every opportunity given for it to prosper. A communist government need not have a centrally planned and controlled economy. These early concepts of Marxism were discarded by the Communist Party of Vietnam…
Lessons from the JVP uprisings
The core of the NPP is the JVP, a Marxist Leninist group. This includes AKD. They believed in revolution. Have they changed and genuinely given up the belief that Marxism-Leninism is the compass, but also the sun shedding light on the path to final victory to socialism and communism? It is interesting to note that the NPP borrowed from communist language the word COMPASS as their political symbol.
The JVP got nowhere with their two uprisings. Has the Marxist Leninist members of the JVP, abandoned the journey indicated by the compass to communism?There is not even a whiff of Marxism Leinnism in their manifesto. There are references to past corruption – “governance will shift from the control of a few corrupt elite families to a peoples government.”
It is good to remember what Ho Chi Minh wrote “There are persons who have fought enthusiastically, have remained faithful, fearless of danger; hardships and the enemy and have rendered meritorious services to the revolution. But once they have some powers, they would become deceitful, wasteful and extravagant, corrupt and bureaucratic,and unconsciously commit crimes against the revolution.” NPP be aware!!
The NPP manifesto, “A Thriving Nation A beautiful life”sets out in 30 pages what the NPP will do. They will carry out (at a very rough count) something like 1,800 programs ,to create a “Thriving Nation, A beautiful Life.”It has clearly been written by bright clever theoretical people who have never executed any projects in their lives. Executing any project is a long and difficult process. Will the NPP manifesto have the same sad end as Gotabaya’s Vistas of Prosperity and Splendour? He had put together the Viyathmaga team of bright intelligent people to put together his Vistas of Prosperity. But the same team were not able to finish the task and execute the grand ideas. Will the same thing happen to the NPP manifesto? In all probability it will. There is no way that such a large draft of ideas/concepts/plans can be implemented.
If the opposition is on its toes it can give a number to each item in the Thriving Nation document and insist on getting a progress report from the government. Then the only option for AKD is to distance himself from the this litany of failed projects and contend that his mission is only as stated under the heading “The Country is for Anura”. Here he says “A key initiative of the NPP will be the effort to build a unified Sri Lankan nation”.
What is missing in the manifesto?
There is no overall economic vision. Every country needs one which is then divided into segments and cascaded into the country.
Arguably there are two economic visions that must be pursued regardless of the colour of the party in power. One is to revitalize all economic activity in the thousands of villages that constitute our country. The other as I said in an article many years ago, is that “Tourism is our oil well!”
We are a country of thousands of villages. That’s the heartland of our country, that’s where the poverty lies. That’s where people do not have two meals and often struggle to find one meal . They need roads for children to go to school, drinking water and economic support for agriculture and fisheries and the traditional and new industrial activity in these village areas. When we have thousands of prosperous villages we will become a prosperous country. Tourism can play a large role in the development of our villages.
Before we build more highways that are of no use to the people in the villages, we must provide cold storage facilities to prevent large quantities of vegetables and fish having to be discarded.
We have had well paid (and well connected) people rushing around the world (with no success) to bring business to this useless piece of reclaimed land called Port City .Sri Lanka with thousands of acres of land, reclaiming land at a huge cost and adding to our debt burden is a sad joke. But not withstanding our politicians continue to rush around looking for business for Port City. They are now down to giving this horrendously expensive reclaimed land for a Japanese restaurant.
They should stop this type of nonsense of rushing around doing a variety of things like building highways of no benefit to our hungry villages and start rushing around to bring economic activity to our villages. If they don’t, hungry people in villages who only see on nearby main roads streams of expensive cars, may well feel that they need to change those that govern them. That will be the third revolution!!
Tourism
Before oil was found the Middle East was sand and more sand, Bedouins and camels. Tourism can do the same thing for us. We are blessed with the sea all around us, and hills and waterfalls and jungles and wild life. We are barely scratching the surface of the opportunity. It has been strangled by bureaucrats, whose knowledge of marketing could probably be described on the back of a stamp.
Our garment industry is a good example of what can be achieved if it’s left to the business people who know the industry. It’s high time a similar approach is taken with tourism. It has been strangled by a combination of politicians and bureaucrats ,whose prime motive was to sniff out an opportunity to make a few bucks.
The opportunity!
Thailand had 28 million tourists, and even little Singapore had I believe 12 milion. It can become our oil well.
There are two economic objectives that should be pursued. Develop the thousands of villages and develop tourism. Do not be distracted with the hundreds of things to create a beautiful life.
(Lalith de Mel was a main Board Director of Reckitt Benckiser plc.and the first Sri Lankan on the main Board of a top 100 company in the UK. He also lived many years in Singapore and was responsible for developing their business in Asis and the far East.)
by Lalith de Mel
Features
How the ‘Lost Tribes of Israel’ help in understanding Mid-East peace issues
Reports that the Israeli authorities have given the ‘go ahead’ for the repatriation and integration into the Israeli populace of some survivors in parts of India from what are described as the ‘Lost Tribes of Israel’, bring up a subject that merits continuous and focused research. The contemporary observer of international politics seeking to understand more thoroughly the factors fueling the Middle East conflict and the crucial role identity issues play in it would, no doubt, be the biggest beneficiary of such research.
In the global South in general there has hitherto been a tendency to soft peddle what may be called ‘the Israeli side of the story’. While the situation of the Palestinians has generated wide-spread empathy for them and very rightly so, an understanding of the causes prompting the Israelis to think and act as they do has gone comparatively unaddressed. This is a glaring lacuna in Southern scholarship in particular on the Middle East question. But if the international community is to pave the way for even a measure of reconciliation in the region the points of view of both sides to the conflict need to be more thoroughly understood.
A news report on page 3 of this newspaper on December 12, 2025 titled, ‘ Israel is moving Lost Tribe Jews from India’, is compulsory reading for those seeking to understand the history of Israel in its essentials. Going by Biblical History in particular the stark truth is that the Israelis were as persecuted as the Palestinians. It could be said that this process began in ancient times even before the birth of Jesus Christ a little over 2000 years ago.
The Old Testament of the Bible is essential reading for an understanding of the history of the Israelis, who are also referred to as ‘The Chosen People of God’. It is a history replete with persecution, mind-numbing war and suffering. The Israelis were continually harassed, subjected to extreme suffering and were displaced from the land they were settled in; which roughly corresponds to today’s Palestinian territories.
The Books of the Old Testament tell us that right through ancient times the Jews, today’s Israelis, suffered displacement, particularly at the hands of the then regional powers, Egypt, Persia and Assyria, and were taken captive to the lands of the conquerors or were reduced to slavery in their own territories. Consequently, displaced Jews escaped to the most distant parts of the world. This is how they happened to be in India as well. However, the fact to note is that the Jews were at one time a settled community with territories of their own.
What is exemplary about the Israeli or Zionist state that was established in 1948, under the overlordship of the old imperial powers, such as Britain, is that it invited the Jews spread virtually all over the world to return to their homeland, the Zionist state. Accordingly, as the report of December 12 reveals, the remnants of the Jewish tribes in India, for example, numbering some 5,800 persons, are being taken back to Israel from India’s Mizoram and Manipur states. Also of note is the fact that the Jews were originally members of 12 tribes, which figure thought-provokingly corresponds to Jesus’ 12 apostles.
According to the news report, these repatriation moves by the Israeli state are not bereft of some strategic motives, such as the strengthening of the Israeli presence in areas bordering Lebanon, for example, which are seen as vulnerable to Hizbollah attacks. The repatriation moves are also interpreted as part of efforts to ‘Judaize’ the Galilean region in particular with a view to reducing the Arab-Islamic presence there, since these areas are also home to a considerable number of Arabs. Since the possibility of friction between the Israeli settlers from India and the Arabs cannot be ruled out, we could very well be seeing the prelude to stepped-up ethnic cleansing exercises by the Israeli state in these security-sensitive border areas.
The larger problem for the international community, given this backdrop, is ‘ where we could go from here’ with regard to making forward moves towards realizing even a measure of peace and reconciliation in the Middle East. The Israeli state is doing well to open its doors to the returning Jewish diaspora readily but given the current power configurations in Israel, transitioning to Middle East peace could remain a distant prospect.
To ascertain why peace remains elusive in the region one would need to factor in that the Netanyahu regime in Israel is of a Far Right orientation. Such regimes usually keep countries internally divided and virtually at war with themselves by exploiting to their advantage, among other things, identity issues. The settlement of persons hailing from ‘Lost Israeli Tribes’ in security-sensitive regions offers the Netanyahu regime the latest opportunity to pit one community against the other in these regions and thereby consolidate its influence and power over the Jewish majority in Israel.
Ethnic-cleansing exercises orchestrated by the Israeli centre take this process to a ‘new high’ and are based on the same destructive reasoning. Basically, the underlying logic is that the Jewish nation is under constant attack by its rivals and should be on a constant war footing with the latter.
Unfortunately the US is at present not doing anything constructive or concrete to further the cause of a fair Middle East peace. Its peace effort in the region has, to all intents and purpose, run aground; presuming that the US was, indeed, intent on pursuing a Middle East settlement. Nor is the US bringing pressure to bear on Israel to make some headway towards some sort of solution. In the absence of these essential factors the Middle East is bound to remain in a state of war.
While it ought to be granted that the Jews have a long history of persecution and victimization, the Israeli state is not doing its citizens any good by keeping these harrowing memories alive for the purpose of power-aggrandizement and by following a policy of pitting one community against the other. While the Jewish legacy of victimhood needs to be abandoned, the Jewish people would be doing themselves immense good by guarding against voting into office Right wing governments that thrive on the ruthless exploitation of identity issues.
Features
Presidential authority in times of emergency:A contemporary appraisal
Keynote Address Delivered at the International Research Conference of the Faculty of Law, University of Colombo, on 12 December 2025.
1. The Policy Dilemma
One of the great challenges of modern public law is to reconcile traditional principles relating to the rule of law and the separation of powers with the exigencies of crises which threaten the destruction of society itself. To what extent must protective mechanisms developed by systems of law over the ages give way to the need for physical survival in the throes of life-threatening crises? What is the right balance to be struck, as a matter of public policy?
The classic statement is by John Locke, who insisted that, in emergencies, the government should have legally unfettered power “to act according to discretion, for the public good, without the prescription of the law, and sometimes even against it” (Second Treatise of Government). This is an ancient idea which goes back to Roman times, when Cicero, in his famous oration, Pro Milone, declared: “Inter arma silent leges” (“Amid the clash of arms, the laws are silent”).
This received expression in the present century in the work of Carl Schmitt, who insisted that “The sovereign is he who decides on the state of exception” (Political Theology:Four Chapters on the Concept of Sovereignty). According to him, not only is the sovereign’s authority untrammelled during emergency, but the declaration of emergency is his right alone, dependent solely on the exercise of his subjective judgment. This unqualified power springs from the supreme law of nature—-the safety of the people.
Judicial pronouncements across the world explicitly reflect this point of view. Justice Story, on behalf of the Supreme Court of the United States, famously declared: “The question arises, by whom is the exigency to be judged and decided? We are all of opinion that the authority to decide whether the exigency has arisen, belongs exclusively to the President, and that his decision is conclusive upon all other persons” (Martin v. Mott).In Ghulam Sarwar v. Union of India, Subba Rao CJ, speaking for the Supreme Court of India, observed: “The question whether there is grave emergency is left to the satisfaction of the Executive, for it is obviously in the best position to judge the situation”.
There is, however, equally emphatic opinion to the contrary. Khanna J, in a celebrated dissent, was scathing in his denunciation of the opposite approach: “The position would be that, so far as executive officers are concerned, in matters relating to life and personal liberty of citizens, they would not be governed by any law, they would not be answerable to any court, and they would be wielding more or less despotic powers” (Additional District Magistrate, Jabalpur v. Shivakant Shukla).
These competing postulates have been articulated with equal passion.
II. A Landmark Pronouncement by the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka
The Supreme Court of Sri Lanka had recently to deal with this issue frontally (Ambika Satkunanathan v. Attorney General). This is a watershed decision because, for the first time in our legal history, the Supreme Court held that an Acting President of the Republic had violated the fundamental rights of the People, enshrined in the Constitution, by the declaration of a State of Emergency.
The circumstances against the backdrop of which this historic ruling was made, are well known. A serious depletion of foreign reserves resulted in a severe shortage of basic amenities like fuel, cooking gas, electricity, staple food items, and medicine. In the context of an unprecedented default in the repayment of foreign loans and significant depreciation of the rupee, extended power cuts and galloping inflation led to acute economic hardship. These circumstances culminated in unrest on a scale never seen before on the Island.
Violence included the brutal murder of a Member of Parliament, the torching of residences of the Prime Minister and more than 70 other political personalities, forcible occupation of the Presidential Secretariat, the President’s official residence and the Office of the Prime Minister, with almost a million people gathered in Colombo demanding the resignation of the President. The elected President had fled the country, and a date had been set for an urgent meeting of Parliament to elect the President in accordance with procedure spelt out in the Constitution. An unruly mob had encircled Parliament, threatening to prevent this meeting from taking place. This was the situation in which Acting President Ranil Wickemesinghe declared a State of Emergency.
He did so in terms of provision in the Public Security Ordinance, which empowered him to take this action, if he was of opinion that this was “expedient in the interests of public security and the preservation of public order, or for the maintenance of supplies and services essential to the life of the community”(section 2).
The decision was that of a divided Supreme Court. The majority consisted of Murdu Fernando CJ and Yasantha Kodagoda J, while there was a vigorous dissent by Arjuna Obeyesekere J. The minority held that the circumstances warranted the opinion entertained by the Acting President, while the plurality declared themselves prepared to make this assumption. This, then, was common ground. The difference of opinion pertained to another vital issue.
Once the Acting President (hereinafter referred to as the President), had reached this conclusion, he had four optional courses of action available to him:
(i) He could have recourse to the routine law, principally the provisions of the Penal Code and the Criminal Procedure Code, to deal with the situation;
(ii) He could invoke Part III of the Public Security Ordinance, which would enable him to take particular actions such as calling out the Armed Forces to supplement the Police, prevent public gatherings on highways and in the vicinity of bridges and other specified locations, and declare curfew. These measures could be taken, short of proclamation of a State of Emergency;
(iii) He could take the “drastic step”, under Part II of the Public Security Ordinance, to bring into force the provisions contained within that section, in terms of which an Emergency could be declared, applicable to the whole Island;
(iv) While declaring an Emergency under Part II, he could confine its operation to particular parts of the Island.
This is where the difference of opinion between the plurality and the minority of the court manifested itself. The majority was of opinion that the President’s satisfaction relating to the existence of objective conditions justifying declaration of Emergency did not automatically entitle him to go the full length of bringing into being a nationwide Emergency under Part II, but obligated him further to consider whether measures of a more limited nature, contemplated by Part III, would be sufficient to deal effectively with the situation.Failure to do so, according to their ruling, would involve a breach of the Constitution.
By contrast, the minority was convinced that “Once the President has come to the conclusion that a state of public emergency exists, there is no purpose in mandating a consideration of other options”, and that “Requiring the President to embark on whether the ordinary laws or other various provisions or options would be adequate to deal with a public or national emergency, would be unreasonable and an unprecedented step”. On this basis, the minority held that the President’s actions were entirely within the Constitution, and entailed no liability for contravention of fundamental rights.
A great deal hinged, in practical terms,
on the divergence between these points of view.
III. Categories of Emergency: Uniform or Disparate Rules?
Contemporary trends in the law acknowledge marked differences in scale, intensity, and duration among types of emergency which precipitate varying degrees of government paralysis.
South African law incorporates one comprehensive definition of a State of Emergency, capable of invocation when “the life of the nation is threatened by war, invasion, general insurrection, disorder, natural disaster, or other public emergency” (Constitution, Article 37(1)(a)). Preferable, by far, is the position under the Emergencies Act of Canada, which recognises four different kinds of emergencies— natural disasters, threats to public order, international emergencies, and states of war (Section 18(2)). This enables different degrees of Parliamentary scrutiny and control.
The Constitution of India provides another example of this approach. Article 352 envisages a threat to the security of India or any part of the country by reason of war, external aggression or armed rebellion, while Article 356 contemplates a failure of constitutional government in any Indian state, and the context of Article 360 is jeopardy to the financial stability or credit of India.
In the spectrum of gravity, peril to the very existence of the state, in the degree present in the Sri Lankan situation, attracts the highest concern. In circumstances of potential government breakdown, “facile distrust” is not the recommended counsel. The courts of India have cautioned that “When there is a crisis situation, it is necessary to trust the government with extraordinary powers in order to enable it to overcome such crisis” (Bhagvati J. in Shivakant Shukla).
Undue concern about a lawless situation, typified by unbridled executive power, is not realistic. Emergency legislation has rightly been characterized as “extra-legislative legislation”. Far from there being a legal vacuum, systems of law have furnished practical safeguards, while enabling public order to be maintained.
One of these is the imaginative “super-majority escalator” technique, characteristic of South African law. Only a simple majority of Parliament is required to approve a State of Emergency operative for a maximum period of 21 days, and to extend it up to 3 months. Beyond that, a 60% majority is compulsory for further extensions (Article 37). Here, then, is a successful reconciliation of competing objectives.
Article 16 of the Constitution of the Fifth Republic in France empowers the President to determine not only the sufficiency of conditions warranting the declaration of a State of Emergency, but also its appropriate duration. Restraints on Presidential power in France are weak because the President, although required to consult the Conseil Constitutionel (Constitutional Court), is not bound by its advisory opinion, in the event of contrary advice.
Relative amplitude of Presidential power in emergency situations in France has been justified by a prominent French jurist, François Saint-Bonnet, on the basis that the curtailment of emergency powers at the disposal of the Executive carries the risk of deprivation of the very tools which the government finds indispensable to combat the threat.
Germany’s Basic Law, although wary of emergency powers because of the harrowing experience of Article 48(2) of the Constitution of the Weimar Republic, which paved the way for the rise of Hitler, nevertheless does not balk at recognizing “internal emergencies” which enable intervention by the Executive, albeit subject to control by the Federal Parliament.
Constitutional provisions in different jurisdictions, irrespective of the approach selected, envisage substantial executive power in times of emergency, curtailed by surveillance on the part of the elected Legislature.
IV. Restraints on Judicial Intervention
The decided cases in many countries are replete with examples of indicia which concede to the Executive great latitude in these contexts. The recurring feature is the urging of restraint in the exercise of judicial review in keeping with a suitably benign construction, consistent with constitutional standards. This is reflected in unimpeachable academic authority, as well.
It has been insisted that executive decisions “should be taken seriously as a bona fide attempt to solve whatever social problem they set out to tackle”(Aileen Kavanagh).The caution has been administered that judges should exercise great caution before concluding that the government has violated constitutional rights(Prof. T. R. S. Allan) and,in public emergencies threatening the life of the nation, elected officials should be permitted “to err, if at all, on the side of safety”(Lord Bingham).The courts “should resist the temptation to substitute their own preferred solutions to questions of public policy”(Allan).
This is so, for a number of reasons. One of them is that the public authority is entitled to latitude because it has “a kind of responsibility to advance the public interest that a court does not have”(Brooke L.J.).This is reinforced by other considerations. For instance, possession of special expertise by the executive authority is an important factor.
The nature of the subject matter, for this very reason, has a vital bearing on the issue. Judges have been conscious that “the more political the question is, the more appropriate it will be for political resolution, and the less likely it is to be an appropriate matter for judicial decision”(Lord Bingham).
A responsible and representative system of democratic governance brings into sharp focus “the degree of democratic accountability of the original decision maker, and the extent to which other mechanisms of accountability may be available”(Murray Hunt).Basic values of constitutionalism identify Parliamentary controls as infinitely preferable, in this regard, to judicial intervention.
This has to do with the nature and legitimate confines of the judicial function. Mirza Beg J, speaking for the Supreme Court of India, has candidly conceded that “the judicial process suffers from inherent limitations”(Shivakant Shukla).This is essentially because a court “can neither have full and truthful information, nor the means to such information”(Chandrachud J in Shivakant Shukla),especially in respect of classified information.
An absolute imperative is that the distinction between judicial review and substitution of judgment must be scrupulously observed. Admittedly contextual, this principle is of overriding significance because it is “wrong to expect executive bodies to replicate the style of analysis adopted by courts in determining allegations of violation of rights”(T. R. S. Allan).
It is crucial for the rule of law that the dividing line between these two distinct functions should not become inadvertently blurred. It is not necessary for the public authority to address itself to the same legal arguments as the court(Court of Appeal of England in the Begum case),the judicial function being restricted by the consideration that “the court is usually concerned with whether the decision maker reached his decision in the right way, rather than whether he got what the court might think to be the right answer”(Lord Hoffmann).
The raison d’etre underpinning executive intervention in these extraordinary situations should be constantly borne in mind. The reality is the absence of a practical substitute. “Neither the legislature nor the judiciary is capable of swift, energetic action, which leaves the executive by default as the authoritative body”(David Dyzenhaus).For this inescapable reason, there has been constant emphasis that executive actors “should not be deterred from engaging in the very activity needed,and contemplated, to deal with the crisis”.
The overarching object of policy is the preservation of public confidence. “The faster and more effective the response, the smaller the overall damage to society, as a whole. The best way for government to respond to these fears is to do something large and dramatic to reassure the populace”(Bruce Ackerman).
The weight attaching to these elements of public policy is self-evident. (To be continued)
By Professor G. L. Peiris
D. Phil. (Oxford), Ph. D. (Sri Lanka); Rhodes Scholar,Quondam Visiting Fellow of the Universities of Oxford, Cambridge and London; Former Vice-Chancellor and Emeritus Professor of Law of the University of Colombo.
Features
90th Anniversary of LSSP and leftism in Sri Lanka
The Lanka Sama Samaja Party was formed on the 18th of December 1935. Its four leaders were Dr. N. M, Perera, Dr. Coivin R, de Silva, Philip Gunewardena and Leslie Goonewardene, who also became the General Secretary. (Prior to this, in 1933, the Wellawatte Mills strike first led to their getting together in action). It must be mentioned that The LSSP was the first properly constituted political party in the country. It was also the first genuine Left party and its political philosophy was based on Marxism-Leninism. It took the name ” Sama Samaja”, which means ” Equal Society”, as, at that time, the people in Sri Lanka were unfamiliar with the terms Socialism and Communism. It was quickly accepted by the people and, despite the use of state power and thuggery against the LSSP by the local capitalist class, backed by the British rulers, the Party rapidly gained popularity among the people. In the General Election of March 1936 Dr. N. M. Perera was elected to represent the Ruwanwella electorate and Philip Gunawardena the Avissawella electorate. Unfortunately, Dr. S. A. Wickramasinghe was unable to retain Akuressa, which he had won in the 1931 Election, and Leslie Goonewardene failed to win Panadura due to the use of caste and money unfairly against him. Leslie, throughout his political career, refrained from descending to such a low level of politics But the LSSP stand helped in the process of uniting and politicisation of the people which was necessary to generate the confidence of the people in their ability to win Complete Independence through the democratic process.
Throughout its history a major role in the success of the LSSP was its provision of support to the struggles of the working class to win its rights. Dr. N. M. Perera formed the Ceylon Federation of Labour and, as its President, he organised the trade union movement to focus on winning their genuine demands as a class. He negotiated with the employers and won many demands across the table, and resorted to strike action as a last resort. He won the respect of both employees and employers as a leader who did not misuse the trade unions for personal vendettas. He used Parliament in a responsible manner to fight on behalf of the workers, while informing the public who suffered as a result of the strikes that the demands were just, and winning their support as well. The LSSP unions have maintained these values and continue to serve the working class
The LSSP was aware of the problem of poverty leading to hunger as a major factor that affected the life of a majority of our people. A survey done at the MRI, about two years ago, showed that 63% of families had an income below the poverty line. They could not have three adequate meals per day. Some had two meals and others only one that met their nutritional needs. The children and mothers were particularly vulnerable. The malnutrition level in that study was 14.3%. But the situation appears to be worse now. The Suriyamal Movement led NM to one of the worst affected areas, Kegalle. The focus was on malaria eradication, but they had to also address the problem of poverty and hunger. Rice, dhal and coconut sambol were provided. NM came to be known as “Parippu Mahaththaya” as a result. The LSSP is reviving the Suriyamal Movement which has become an urgent need after the Climate Change. Any help will be welcome.
We celebrate Independence Day alone, but India also celebrates Republic Day. It is the latter that gave India sovereignty, without which independence is empty. They won it within three years, with Ambedkar drafting the Republican Constitution. The LSSP kept on pressing for it but the comprador capitalist class, led by the UNP, kept delaying as they were happy with Dominion status. The LSSP joined the SLFP and CP to form the coalition government, led by Sirimavo Bandaranaike, in 1970, and Dr. Colvin R. de Silva was made the Minister of Constitutional Affairs. He finally drafted the Republican Constitution in 1972. Sri Lanka took 24 years to do this and we can hold our heads up as we are now politically a truly independent sovereign nation. But we remain a poor underdeveloped country with widespread unemployment and underemployment, especially among the youth. The number of those in poverty is rising while the rich are becoming super rich. The rich/poor gap is widening and it may explode. It is sad to see that Sri Lanka is far away from the Welfare State that the LSSP, led by Dr. Perera, strove to build. As Minister of Finance, he kept the cost of living down, balanced the Budget and did not tax the poor. He had a high direct tax on those who could afford to pay this. Unlike now, the priority was given to use the limited forex to buy essential medicines,not luxury vehicles.
As Minister of Science and Technology, I started the Vidatha Movement to provide the technology and finance for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) countrywide, one centre headed by a science graduate in each division. I am told that more than 50,000 entrepreneurs have emerged marketing their products sustainably. More than one thousand are exporting their products. I appeal to the NPP government to continue to support them. We must develop into an industrial nation if we are to emerge from poverty. I and the LSSP will give all support. By the way, our armed forces can defend our country. We do not need American forces.
by Prof. TISSA VITARANA
(Leader and General Secretary, LSSP)
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