Enough is enough Mangala tells Mahinda

Monday, 1 August 2016 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

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Presidential commissions, including those appointed by Mahinda Rajapaksa such as the LLRC and Paranagama Commissions, have received complaints from the tens of thousands of family members of those who have gone missing due to conflicts in the North and South. 

Untitled-4Even today, years after the guns have gone silent, on a daily basis mothers bearing hardship and financial burden go from one government office to another, from police station to army camp, in a desperate search for their sons. 

The mothers’ backgrounds are different but their grief is the same. For example, there are those whose sons were forcibly conscripted by the LTTE, those whose sons participated in the 1987 insurrection and those mothers whose sons joined the army, but for whom all that is left are three letters - MIA. 

In fact, even today in my constituency of Matara, there are mothers who come to me searching for their long disappeared sons. These mothers hope against hope that their children are alive and at the very least, to put the past behind, they need to know how, where and why they died. During the meetings that we had with families of the missing from across the country over the last few months, there were mothers of soldiers who came to us asking us to at least find a small bone fragment of their missing sons so that they can find closure. 

As the LLRC notes, this anguish is something that we as Government have an urgent responsibility to address. We need to provide the families of the missing and disappeared with the truth and we need to provide them with relief.

During former President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s regime all that was done was window-dressing to dupe the international community. But now, in his opportunistic fashion, my former friend Mahinda is trying to score political points at the expense of the grieving mothers and at the expense of future generations. 

But before I expose the list of factual inaccuracies and lies that constitutes his statement on the Office of Missing Persons, it is important to know the background of his statement, especially on this topic. 

As all those who have read my Open Letter to Mahinda are aware, in the early 1990s, no one’s voice was louder than his in articulating the tears of the mothers of the missing in Parliament, in the Courts and even at the UNHRC in Geneva. 

‘Hypocrite’ on human rights

In fact, speaking in Parliament after a visit to Geneva on 25th October 1990, he boldly proclaimed: “If the government is going to deny human rights, we should go not only to Geneva, but to any place in the world, or to hell if necessary, and act against the government. The lamentation of this country’s innocents should be raised anywhere.” 

On the same day, he said, “I took the wailings of this country’s mothers. Do I not have the freedom to speak about them?” At another point he was arrested at the airport for trying to take 533 documents to Geneva containing information on thousands of disappearances and his fundamental rights case was heard at the Supreme Court. 

Not only did Mahinda voice their sorrow, he also succeeded in getting the world to act. Soon after his visit, the international community imposed conditions on aid. In the same Parliamentary debate quoted above, he boasted, “We asked the donors countries as to why conditions cannot be imposed when giving aid. That was the request we made. It is what has been fulfilled today.” These words speak for themselves and there is no need therefore for me to recount Mahinda’s words and action after he became President, to demonstrate what a hypocrite he has become. 

In hindsight, we now know that this supposed lion of human rights was opportunistically using people’s suffering for political expediency. This was also evident when he and UN Secretary-General Ban-Ki Moon agreed to an accountability process in their 2009 Joint Communique, which was later made into a formal commitment to the entire international community via the 2009 Geneva resolution when Dayan Jayatilleke was Sri Lanka’s ambassador in Geneva. It is the subsequent failure to investigate these allegations and, if they are found to be true, punish the few miscreants in high positions who may have acted unprofessionally that prevented us from clearing the name of the armed forces as an institution. It is this failure, that was the true betrayal of the armed forces. 

In case some still think that Mahinda’s statement on the Office of Missing Persons is not just the latest case of his misleading opportunism, I will briefly demonstrate, point by point, that Mahinda’s statement on the Office on Missing Persons is pure humbug. 

“1. The Office of Missing Persons will not be a part of Sri Lanka’s State law enforcement and justice system, but an independent body incorporated by parliament which gives its members the power to function outside the normal rules and regulations that guide state institutions.”

Untitled-3OMP functions

The Bill outlines four main functions for the OMP: 

(i) Searching and tracing of missing persons, (ii) clarifying the circumstances in which such persons went missing and their fate, (iii) making recommendations to relevant authorities in order to reduce incident of missing and disappeared persons, (iv) identifying proper avenues of redress. As such, it is not a law-enforcement or judicial agency but a truth-seeking investigative agency. 

Created by Parliament, the OMP is like the Bribery Commission and Human Rights Commission which responded to specific needs in society. Salient points of the legislation include:

The findings of the OMP shall not give rise to any criminal or civil liability.

Like the other independent commissions, the OMP’s seven members will be selected by the Constitutional Council.

The members of the OMP and the officers and staff of the OMP, shall be deemed to be “public servants” for the purposes of the Penal Code, the Bribery Act and the Evidence Ordinance.

The salaries of OMP members will be determined by Parliament and will be charged on the Consolidated Fund.

The OMP must be audited by the Auditor General in terms of Article 154 of the Constitution.

The OMP must submit annual reports to Parliament, and those reports will be made public.

“2. Even though it is described as an ‘office’ the proposed OMP will be a tribunal for all practical purposes which can examine witnesses, issue summons and hold hearings. Its officers can enter without warrant, at any time of day or night, any police station, prison or military installation and seize any document or object they require for investigations. Anyone who fails or refuses to cooperate with the OMP may be punished for contempt of court.”

The Office of Missing Persons is a truth-seeking investigative agency. It does not make judgements on disputes. In fact, the legislation states that “the findings of the OMP shall not give rise to any criminal or civil liability.” Its primary function is to establish whether a missing person is dead or alive and, if they are dead, discover when, how and where they died. 

Other government agencies, including the Human Rights Commission, Commissions of Inquiry and Parliament’s Petitions Committee, have similar powers and similar provisions relating to contempt for failure to cooperate. 

For example, the Petitions Committee is empowered by Section 128 of Parliament’s Standing Orders to “summon before it and question any person, call for and examine any paper, book, record or other document and to have access to stores and property.” In addition to these powers, by statute, the Human Rights Commission also has the power to “enter at any time, any place of detention, police station, prison or any other place in which any person is detained by a judicial order or otherwise, and make such examinations therein or make such inquiries from any person found therein, as may be necessary to ascertain the conditions of detention of the persons detained therein.”

Similarly, the OMP only has powers to enter places of detention. It can, however, make an application to the magistrate to issue a warrant for the Police or the OMP to search any premises suspected to contain evidence relevant to an investigation being conducted by the OMP.

3. The seven ‘members’ of the OMP are to have experience in fact finding and expertise in human rights law and international humanitarian law which means that the appointees will for the most part be representatives of Western funded NGOs or those who have worked with Western sponsored international war crimes tribunals.

Conflict of interest

As noted above, OMP members will be experts in human rights appointed by the Constitutional Council. The bill explicitly prevents any conflict of interest. It says that if a member “is found to have a conflict of interest, which in the opinion of the President, formed on the recommendation of the Prime Minister made in consultation with the Speaker and the Leader of the Opposition, conflicts with his duties as a member of the OMP”, then he or she will be removed by the President. 

Unlike Mahinda, the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration does not appoint tea-traders as ambassadors, astrologers as working-directors of state banks or wharf-clarks as de facto foreign ministers. It is persons of eminence and integrity that will be appointed. 

4. According to Section 21 of the draft legislation, the OMP will have the power to receive funding directly from any foreign source.

The legislation states that “the State shall provide the OMP with adequate funds to enable the OMP to discharge the functions assigned to it by this Act. Such funds shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund.” 

However, due the corruption, disastrous economic management and debt the Rajapaksas left behind, the Government may not be able to allocate enough money to deal with the tens of thousands of cases of missing persons. Therefore, like other government agencies, the OMP will be able to secure technical and financial assistance from abroad. This funding will be completely transparent and, as noted above, it will be audited by the Auditor-General. 

It is ironic that Mahinda Rajapaksa, who entered into many agreements for foreign funding, brought down foreign judges like Justice Bhagwati for the IIGEP in 2006 and whose crony, Wimal Weerawansa, depends on funds from abroad should make foreign funding an issue. 

5. The OMP can acting on its own, enter into agreements with foreign persons or organisations concerning its work.

Corporate bodies are empowered to enter into agreements with foreign parties. All these agreements will be subject to Sri Lankan law, oversight and the Constitution. 

6. The ‘members’ of the OMP can establish units and divisions and delegate their powers and functions to those entities. They can also can appoint and dismiss staff and consultants. It is not specified in the draft law that the members or staff of the OMP have to be Sri Lankan citizens.

The OMP will require technical expertise that is not available in Sri Lanka. This is why previous governments, including Mahinda’s, have brought down foreign investigators and forensic experts such as those from Scotland Yard or legal experts like Desmond de Silva, Geoffrey Nice and Edward Crane. Many other such bodies around the world use foreign experts and it would be self-defeating not to benefit from their expertise. In fact, at this time when the UK is in turmoil, it is their central bank head, a Canadian, who is providing desperately needed stability and confidence. 

Obtaining foreign technical assistance will, in the long run, help to build the capacity of local personnel who will benefit from training especially in such areas as forensics, and in future, Sri Lankan experts in these areas will be in a position to provide and share knowledge with other countries which require such expertise. 

However, the Constitutional Council is bound by the Act to “ensure that the composition of the OMP reflects the pluralistic nature of the Sri Lankan society”. Therefore, it is clear that the bill intends for a Sri Lankan process with foreign expertise as and when necessary. 

7. Complaints can be received not only from relations and friends of missing persons but from any interested party both local and foreign.

Citizen safety and welfare

Any Sri Lankan citizen going missing is a tragedy. It is the government’s duty to investigate and determine the fate of any of its citizens who are missing. We are responsible for the safety and welfare of our citizens. This is a primary duty of the State. If citizens go missing we must find them or find out what happened to them. Therefore, the government welcomes any information that could alert us to the fact that a Sri Lankan citizen is missing and any information that could help discover what happened to them. 

8. Government bodies at all levels including the armed forces and intelligence services are mandatorily required to render fullest assistance to the OMP and the provisions of the Official Secrets Act will not apply to the proposed institution.

The Bribery Commission, Human Rights Commission, Presidential Commission of Inquiry, Parliamentary Committees and many other bodies have similar provisions and powers. There is nothing new or unusual. The OMP merely has the required powers it needs to fulfill its duties. 

9. According to Section 12 (c) (iii) the OMP can admit as evidence any statement or material disregarding the criteria laid down in the Evidence Ordinance.

The purpose of the Evidence Ordinance is to govern the law relating to evidence in judicial proceedings. The OMP however is not a judicial body and it does not seek to make a judicial pronouncement with regard to a civil or criminal matter. As repeatedly noted above, all it is meant to do is to locate a missing person, or, if they are dead, establish the circumstances of their death. Therefore, as the OMP’s function is a truth-seeking one and it should have as much information as possible available to it, its procedures should not be as onerous as the courts, which are of course empowered to judge and punish. The Human Rights Commission and Commission of Inquiry also empower those bodies to entertain statements notwithstanding the Evidence Ordinance. 

10.   The provisions of the Right to Information Act will not apply to the work of the OMP. No court, not even the Supreme Court can order any officer of the OMP to submit to courts any material communicated to him in confidence.’

The purpose of having an exclusion of the Right to Information Act is to ensure that those who know the fate of missing or disappeared persons can transmit that information without fear. This is necessary because the OMP is a mechanism designed to discover the truth of a missing person’s fate and not act as a prosecutorial or judicial body. 

However, as per Section 14A of the Constitution, only information that is communicated in confidence will be excluded from the provisions of the RTI Act. All other information will be subject to the Right to Information Act. 

Enough is enough. The people have had enough of your opportunism and lies. They are tired of your grandiose statements. They want action. They want an end to corruption, impunity and division in society, they want democracy, reconciliation and development. 

There are enough issues where this government could benefit from constructive criticism and from new ideas to solve longstanding problems. Please abandon your expediency and take the country forward by being part of a constructive opposition. And even if you can’t do that, you could at least have the courage to appear in Parliament during important debates like the debate on the Geneva resolution. I hope that this time, when we debate the OMP bill, you will speak. Then the people will be able to weigh up your deception against our facts and decide for themselves. 

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