Sri Lanka: Constitution and Separation of Power
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
AHRC-STM-229-2012
November 15, 2012
A Statement from the Asian Human Rights
Commission
Sri Lanka:
The Procedure In Article 107 Of The Constitution Is
Incompatible With Principle Of The Separation Of Powers And
With The ICCPR Article 14 Says The UN Special
Rapporteur
The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers, Gabriela Knaul in a statement issued yesterday (November 14, 2012), stated that, "......the procedure for the removal of judges of the Supreme Court set out in article 107 of the Constitution of Sri Lanka allows the Parliament to exercise considerable control over the judiciary and is therefore incompatible with both the principle of separation of power and article 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights." Ms. Knaul also said, "The irremovability of judges is one of the main pillars guaranteeing the independence of the judiciary and only in exceptional circumstances may this principle be transgressed," the Special Rapporteur underscored, expressing her uneasiness with the procedure of impeachment of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Dr. Bandaranayake, launched before the Parliament on 1 November 2012.
"Judges may be dismissed only on serious grounds of misconduct or incompetence, after a procedure that complies with due process and fair trial guarantees and that also provides for an independent review of the decision," she stressed. "The misuse of disciplinary proceedings as a reprisals mechanism against independent judges is unacceptable."
The procedure set out in Article 107 of the
Constitution is as follows:
(2) Every such judge shall
hold office during good behaviour, and shall not be removed
except by an order of the President made after an address of
Parliament supported by a majority of the total number of
Members of Parliament (including those not present) has been
presented to the President for such removal on the ground of
proved misbehavior or incapacity:
Provided that no resolution for the presentation of such an address shall be entertained by the Speaker or placed on the Order Paper of Parliament, unless notice of such resolution is signed by not less than one-third of the total number of Members of Parliament and sets out full particulars of the alleged misbehavior or incapacity.
(3) Parliament shall by law or
by Standing Orders provide for all matters relating to the
presentation of such an address, including the procedure for
the passing of such resolution, the investigation and proof
of the alleged misbehavior or incapacity and the right of
such judge to appear and to be heard in person or by
representative.
The incompatibility of the ongoing
impeachment attempt by the government against the Chief
Justice, Dr. Shriyani Bandaranayake arises from the
following reasons:
1. The impeachment is motivated by
political reasons as the Chief Justice, with some other
judges has delivered some judgements that the government
does not agree with and therefore is not for any exceptional
circumstances due to which a judge can be removed.
2.
The procedure contained in Article 107 and the related
Standing Orders do not comply with due process and fair
trial guarantees and also does not provide for an
independent review of the decision.
Yesterday the
government Parliamentary Select Committee had its first
meeting and on that day itself, issued the charges to be
handed over to the Chief Justice giving her only one week to
reply.
The guarantees of fair trial require that the inquiry into the charges should be conducted by judicial officers and all the procedural requirements for the making of a proper response by the Chief Justice are provided. However, under Article 107 it is the Select Committee which consists of parliamentarians and not judicial officers who will conduct the inquiry. From that very fact the Select Committee will not be in a position to provide for the requirements of a proper hearing as required under the principles of fair trial.
The Asian Human Rights
Commission in several of its statements on the impeachment
has stated that it is an attempt to destroy the independence
of the judiciary and make it a branch of the executive.
Under the principle of the separation of powers the
judiciary is a separate branch of the government and is
independent from the executive legislature. What is now
happening is to end the character of the judiciary as a
separate branch of the state and to subordinate it to the
executive.
Read this statement
online
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About
AHRC: The Asian Human Rights Commission is a regional
non-governmental organisation that monitors human rights in
Asia, documents violations and advocates for justice and
institutional reform to ensure the protection and promotion
of these rights. The Hong Kong-based group was founded in
1984.
ENDS