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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Court decision expresses rifts in ruling circles
Media censorship in Sri Lanka ruled invalid then reimposed
By Dianne Sturgess
18 July 2000
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this version to print
At the end of last month the Sri Lankan Supreme Court effectively
overturned the stringent media censorship imposed by the government
of President Chandrika Kumaratunga. On the following day the Peoples
Alliance (PA) government restored the censorship measures. Both
the court decision and its reversal reveal sharp divisions in
ruling circles over the government's emergency regulations promulgated
on May 3 following the army's defeats at the hands of the separatist
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
A panel of three judges unanimously brought down a decision
on June 30 nullifying the appointment of the government censor
or Competent Authority in response to a fundamental
rights petition filed by the newspaper group, Leader Publications,
challenging the closure of the Sunday Leader and associated
Sinhala language newspapers.
The Supreme Court ruled that in appointing the censor the government
had failed to submit its decision to parliament for review within
seven days as required by law. As a result the censor's decision
to shut down the Sunday Leader on May 22 was a nullity
and of no force or avail in law. It also ordered the government
to pay the Leader group $1,300 in court costs.
By ruling on a legal technicality rather than on any question
of legal principle, the Supreme Court left the door open for the
government to reimpose media censorship, which it did just a day
later. When the emergency regulations were promulgated it became
mandatory for all mediaboth domestic and foreignto
submit their reports to the Competent Authority prior
to publication or broadcast.
The blanket censorship provoked protests from journalist and
media groups both in Sri Lanka and internationally. On June 5,
the government lifted the requirement that foreign correspondents
submit their reports to the censor. The new censorship measures
once again extend to both domestic and foreign media but do not
require pre-publication vetting.
However, the scope of the new censorship is just as sweeping.
The measures ban any material which would in the opinion
of the Competent Authority be prejudicial to the interests of
national security or the preservation of public order or the maintenance
of supplies and services essential to the life of the community
or inciting or encouraging persons to mutiny, riot or civil commotion
or to commit the breach of any law for the time being in force.
The narrow technical nature of the court decision deliberately
ensures that governments, both present and future, would be able
to impose the most draconian forms of censorship. According to
the ruling, What is in issue is not the existence of circumstances
warranting the bringing into operation part II of the Public Security
amendment ordinance. It found that [the] rights and
freedoms of the citizens under ordinary laws may be disregarded
and also that the purposes of the emergency regulations were legitimate.
It should come as no surprise that the Supreme Court construed
its decision as narrowly as possible. A more significant question
is why the judges in the midst of a severe political crisis for
the government found in favour of the newspapers at all. In fact
cases abound in which the courts have justified the arbitrary
acts of the state apparatusfrom rape, torture and looting
by the police and army to the lengthy detention without trial
of hundreds of Tamils accused of being LTTE suspects.
There has been considerable tension between the judiciary and
the PA government for some time now. The ruling PA alliance has
regularly complained that the opposition United National Party
(UNP) stacked the courts with their appointees during their 17
years in office. Just a few days before the censorship decision,
11 judges wrote to the President asking her to retract her accusation
that a Supreme Court judge had taken bribes to let off LTTE suspects.
A few months ago the newspapers highlighted the President's decision
to appoint a person involved in a scandal as the Chief Justice.
But the decision to rule in favour of the Leader group must
reflect far more significant tensions within ruling circles over
the policy of the Kumaratunga government towards the war and the
imposition of emergency regulations in particular. In a narrow
sense, there are certainly those, particularly in the opposition
parties, who are concerned that the blanket media censorship will
be used to stymie any campaign against the government during parliamentary
elections due to be held later in the year. The Sunday Leader
newspaper is associated with Gamini Dissanaike who was the UNP's
presidential candidate in 1994, before he was murdered during
the campaign by a suicide bomber.
But more fundamentally, there are sections of the ruling classboth
in Sri Lanka and internationallywho are concerned that the
emergency regulations, including the press censorship, will stoke
up popular indignation and hostility towards the war and further
destabilise what is already a highly volatile political situation.
Kumaratunga and the PA coalition came to power in 1994 promising
to end the unpopular war but intensified the military operations
against the LTTE and placed new economic burdens onto the backs
of the working class.
US Undersecretary of State Thomas Pickering hinted at concerns
over the impact of the emergency regulations when he said during
his visit to Colombo in May that the censorship regime might turn
out to be counter-productive. A visiting delegation
from the Committee for the Protection of Journalists (CPJ) based
in New York met recently with leading government ministers and
called for an end the censorship. The US ambassador Shaun Donnelley
played a role in organising a meeting between the leader of the
CPJ delegation and a prominent UNP representative.
It is under these political circumstances that the Supreme
Court decided to fire what amounts to a warning shot across the
bow of the PA government while preserving the ability of the state
to continue to restrict basic democratic rights.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government and opposition agree
on a shaky plan for a negotiated end to the war
[12 July 2000]
What business does the US have with the
Sinhala chauvinists in Sri Lanka?
[6 July 2000]
Sri Lanka
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