Monday Dec 16, 2024
Saturday, 17 December 2022 00:00 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
The National Peace Council in a statement called for the setting up of a constitutional council to reflect the country’s plural character.
Following is the full statement.
The restoration of the Constitutional Council has been the most positive feature of the 21st Amendment to the constitution which repealed the 20th Amendment that over-concentrated power in the Executive Presidency.
The constitutional council is meant to be a politically bipartisan institution that has members of the Government and Opposition together with politically non-partisan members of civil society. The positive expectation is that the constitutional council will contribute to the strengthening of the State and its agencies to act in the best interests of the country.
However, the manner of appointment of the three members who will represent civil society is a cause for concern. The procedure that the Government has advertised is to call for personal applications from those who are interested in applying to be members of the constitutional council.
Persons of eminence and integrity who have distinguished themselves in public or professional life and who are not members of any political party as indicated in the guidelines for appointment may not wish to submit their applications.
The National Peace Council believes that this procedure needs to be supplemented by a process of nominations. Civil society organisations should be given the opportunity to nominate their choice of members of civil society to be considered for appointment to the constitutional council.
In the context of Sri Lanka’s plural society we believe that the selection of the civil society representatives on the constitutional council should be based on the principle of inclusiveness. The decisions of State authorities need to be sensitive to the diversity and pluralism in Sri Lankan society, the focus of which is ethnicity and religion, but which also includes caste, gender, physical disability, occupation and regions among others.
The most urgent need today is unity among both the political leadership and unity among the people so that the entire country can act as one force to overcome the economic and developmental crisis it is presently trapped in. We call for the constitutional council to be selected soon so that the task of state-building and nation-building may take place without delay.