Bhushan Contempt Case: SC’s Ruling Will Have a Chilling Effect Beyond India’s Borders

Previously, lawyers in Sri Lanka cited Indian precedents to make their case. They may now look to India for cautionary and not inspirational guidance.

The recent judgement by the Indian Supreme Court which held prominent advocate Prashant Bhushan guilty of contempt of court will have a ‘chilling effect’, a term used authoritatively by the Warren Court to protect First Amendment rights of speech and expression in the US, beyond India.

It has grave resonance in countries like Sri Lanka which have a history of stifling dissent through the device of contempt.

Bhushan was found guilty of ‘scandalising the court’ on a suo motu consideration of two tweets, the first highlighting the chief justice riding a motorcycle belonging to a politician of the ruling party without wearing a mask, while the apex court was under lockdown for three months. His second tweet remarked that the court had a role in destroying democracy in India during the last six years, ‘without the formal declaration of an Emergency’ and the role of the last four CJIs in this regard.

The news was received with incredulity in Colombo primarily due to our bewildered wonderment as to how tweets, generally thought to be the medium of less intelligible conversation, could be adjudged of such an awful impact by the Indian Supreme Court as to “shake the very foundation of constitutional democracy”. But after the initial amazement subsided, serious questions regarding the substantive impact of this ruling were raised.

Justifiably alarmed, lawyers in India are calling for a repeal of criminal defamation and contempt laws, arguing that these stem from colonial legacies criminalising dissent. These discussions are of great interest in Sri Lanka which repealed criminal defamation provisions in the Penal Code in 2002 after protests by media and civil society over arbitrary convictions of senior editors who had incurred the displeasure of the government.

On contempt, we have pressed for a law prescribing inter alia that substantial prejudice must be caused to the administration of justice for contempt to ensue rather than what may be offensive to one or more individuals, even a chief justice as the case may be. Indeed, lawyers in Sri Lanka had commonly cited Indian precedents to make their case, including the seminal Mulgaonkar case in 1978 concerning the citation of contempt against the Indian Express for criticism of decisions during the Emergency.

Also read: Contempt, the Press and the Judiciary: A Tale from Another Time

In declining to proceed, Justice Krishna Iyer’s words for the majority were prescient:

“Justice is not hubris; power is not petulance and prudence is not pusillanimity, especially when judges are themselves prosecutors and mercy is a mark of strength, not a whimper of weakness…”

Yet the Bhushan ruling sets that thinking awry. Despite enacted law limiting judicial discretion and using its constitutional power to move in contempt, the bench seems to have concluded that Bhushan had levelled a “malicious, scurrilous, calculated attack” with extraordinary ease, distinguishing the Mulgaonkar principles as not applicable.

Bhushan’s defence that he had critiqued individual judges and not the administration of justice was dismissed on the basis that the tweets were directed against the institution of the court and the office of the chief justice. The bench remarked that Twitter was used by millions of people and that the impact of his tweets was considerable. If this reasoning is adopted elsewhere in the region, Twitter users who robustly comment on the conduct of judges will need to be wary. There will not be only a “chilling effect” but a positively freezing inhibition on public scrutiny of the judiciary.

Of equally grave note was the court’s decision to stop the attorney general in his tracks during the hearing when the attorney general attempted to establish that not only Bhushan but even judges of the Supreme Court themselves, had made adverse remarks about the court. This is not reassuring at all.

The Sri Lankan Supreme Court Complex. Photo: Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Indeed, there is a sense of anguish as I observe the outrage over this case across the Palk Straits. We have also asked that familiar question: where does a citizen treated unjustly go for redressal when the Supreme Court itself commits the injustice?

On one occasion, the chief justice of Sri Lanka, with an unprecedented political controversy swirling around himself, sentenced a lay litigant to one-year rigorous imprisonment for speaking loudly in court while reading the provisions of the constitution. Having no scope for review since this was the chief justice’s decision, I took the case to a committee of international jurists on the individual communications procedure under the Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

Also read: The Prashant Bhushan Contempt Case is About Power and Politics, Not Law

As Sri Lanka had ratified the protocol, resort to that procedure was possible when the apex court was alleged to have infringed upon the covenant. The committee decided – in Fernando vs State of Sri Lanka, Contempt of Court, Communication No 1189/2003, 31, March, 2005 – that the court had overreached its authority and concluding that both, the process followed and the finding of contempt, violated international law. But to go beyond one’s own judiciary to plead for relief is no happy circumstance.

For these questions do not concern individuals but the most basic of constitutional liberties; the right to criticise, sometimes even rudely, caustically and satirically. And the concern here is not about a single lawyer – however esteemed he may be in the defence of civil liberties as Bhushan is in India.

Freedom of expression does not mean gently tiptoeing around fierce public controversy. The court is more than the individual judge who believes himself or herself to be unfairly maligned. It is for that precise reason that the enormous power of contempt should not be, as Lord Denning remarked, used by judges to ‘uphold their own dignity… that must rest on surer foundations.’

Truly there is sadness on our part in the wake of the Bhushan ruling. Sri Lanka may now look to India for cautionary and not inspirational guidance.

Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena is a civil liberties advocate, a columnist for The Sunday Times, Colombo and served on a Bar Council nominated committee in 2011 which drafted a Contempt of Court Act for Sri Lanka   

Sri Lankan Finance Minister Protests Anti-Muslim Remarks of Top Buddhist Monk

As per media reports, the chief prelate of the Asgiriya Chapter called for a boycott of all Muslim-owned businesses, alleging that they were working to “sterilise” the Sinhala population. 

New Delhi: Three days after a top Buddhist monk stated that he condones the stoning of Muslims, Sri Lankan finance minister Mangala Samaraweera on Wednesday strongly came out against the statement and said that “true Buddhists” should unite against the “Talibanization” of the religion.

However, there has been no other vocal condemnation from other politicians, including from the top leadership.

In fact, Sri Lankan president Maithripala Sirisena on Tuesday took part in a religious ceremony to consecrate relics presided over the top monk who had preached social boycott and physical violence against Muslims.

The sermon by chief prelate of the Asgiriya Chapter of Buddhism Warakagoda Sri Gnanarathana was made on June 15, but reported in the media a few days later.

Also read: Sri Lanka: Hundreds of Muslim Refugees Flee Negombo as Communal Tensions Flare Up

As per media reports, the chief prelate called for a boycott of all Muslim-owned businesses, claiming that they were working to “sterilise” the Sinhala population. 

“Don’t buy from those shops. The young people who ate from those shops, I think, will not be able to have/lose their children. You should know this,” he said.

His remarks came after a nationalist Sinhala paper had claimed last month that a Muslim doctor had “sterilised” over 4,000 Buddhist women.

The monk did not name the doctor, but asserted that women devotees wanted him stoned.

“Such traitors should not be allowed to stay free. Some upasaka ammas (women devotees) said he should be stoned to death. I don’t say that, but that is what should be done. If one of our people did that to the other community, we will slice them. Laws and rules are not necessary. We should unite as Sinhala-Buddhists. We should not look at colours and vote. We should elect people who think of the (Sinhala) race and the country,” he stated.

Incidentally, the Sri Lankan news portal EconomyNext reported that the senior-most police officer of North-western province, whose wife worked in the same hospital as the muslim doctor, was being probed for fuelling the rumours to cause “racial hatred”. Till now, “no evidence” has been unearthed by ongoing investigations of the accusations of sterilisation against the doctor, as per another report.

On Wednesday morning, Sri Lankan finance minister Samaraweera was one of the few political voices who protested stridently against the remarks of the senior Buddhist monk.

There have been no statements yet from President Sirisena or the Sri Lankan prime minister.

The situation in Sri Lanka has a parallel to its larger South Asian neighbour, India, where political leaders, including Prime Minister Narendra Modi have similarly remained silent through communally-tinged remarks of ruling party politicians.

In Sri Lanka, Buddhist monks are part of the political mainstream. They have also seen as leading the front in fanning majoritarian Sinhala sentiments.

Also read: Sri Lanka Should Not Turn a Blind Eye to the Ascent of Wahabi Extremism

The island nation has only been at peace over the last decade, after the Sri Lankan military defeated the Tamil Tigers group after a 26-year-old campaign. The civil war began as a result of long-term tensions over discriminatory official policies and finally broke out after devastating riots against minority Tamils in 1983.

Following the May 21 Easter Sunday bomb attacks which was carried out by an Islamist terror group, there have been a series of riots targeting the Muslim community in the Indian Ocean country.

A view of the damage at St. Sebastian Catholic Church, after bomb blasts ripped through churches and luxury hotels on Easter, in Negombo, April 22, 2019. Photo: Reuters/Athit Perawongmetha

A parliamentarian monk from United National Party (UNP) went on a hunger strike demanding the resignation of two Muslim Governors and minister for having links to the suspects. Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) general secretary Gnanasara Thero, who had been pardoned by President Sirisena, had also threatened to join the campaign if the governors were not fired.

No proof has been shown so far for the allegations, which has been strenuously denied.

Nine Muslim ministers and the two governors resigned in first week of June in a joint move to protest the ‘victimisation’ of the community, even though they had red-flagged the perpetrators to security authorities.

Even then, Samaraweera had been among the lone voice to express caution.

The resigned Muslim ministers had also met the senior monk as part of efforts to reach out of the politically influential Buddhist clergy.

The communal aftermath of the Easter Sunday attack is also enmeshed in the jostling between political parties with the presidential elections scheduled towards the end of this year.

As per media reports, the main target of the campaign against the Muslim ministers is minister Rishad Bathiudeen, who did not ally with Mahinda Rajapaksa to give him parliamentary majority after President Sirisena made him prime minister in October 2018. Sirisena had to reinstate UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe as prime minister, with the Supreme Court also terming his actions as unconstitutional.

Incidentally, the sermon of the chief prelate had begun with an endorsement of Chamal Rajapaksa as the next presidential candidate, even though the opposition has not yet taken a decision. Warakagoda Sri Gnanarathana had previously also held the UNP responsible for “destroying” Sri Lanka.

Lanka SC Upholds Court Order Restraining Rajapaksa From Acting as PM

Rajapaksa has so far failed to prove his majority in the parliament.

Colombo: Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court Friday refused to stay a court order restraining Mahinda Rajapaksa from holding the office of Prime Minister until it fully heard the case next month, prolonging the political uncertainty plaguing the country for nearly two months.

The apex court’s latest ruling came a day after it unanimously declared that the dissolution of the parliament by President Maithripala Sirisena was “illegal”, in a body blow to the embattled leader, whose controversial decisions plunged the island nation into an unprecedented political turmoil.

The Supreme Court decided that a Court of Appeal order issued against the appointment of Rajapaksa as Prime Minister and against his Cabinet from holding office will stand, Colombo Gazette reported.

Also Read: Sri Lanka Top Court Rules Parliament Dissolution as Illegal in Setback for President

The appeal filed by Rajapaksa will be taken up for hearing on January 16, 17 and 18.

The apex court asked all parties to provide written submissions within three weeks.

The Appeal Court on December 3 issued notice and an interim order against Rajapaksa and his Government, preventing them from acting as Prime Minister, Cabinet and Deputy Ministers.

The order was issued in a case filed by 122 lawmakers against Rajapaksa and his new government.

Rajapaksa and the members of the purported government filed the appeal against the Court of Appeal’s interim injunction that restrained them from functioning in their respective posts.

The United National Front (UNF) said that the order means Rajapaksa cannot be Prime Minister and so the former cabinet must be reinstated.

UNF parliamentarian Ajith Perera said that the President must now appoint Ranil Wickremesinghe as Prime Minister.

Also Read: Ousted Sri Lankan PM Wickremesinghe Gets Majority in Parliament Vote

Sri Lanka is going through a major political crisis since October 26 when President Maithripala Sirisena, in a controversial move, removed Wickremesinghe and installed ex-strongman Mahinda Rajapaksa in his place.

Parliamentarians of Wickremesinghe’s UNP, Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and Tamil National Alliance on November 23 filed the petition in the Court of Appeal challenging Rajapaksa on continuing to hold the office of Prime Minister after a no-confidence motion was passed in Parliament against him.

Sirisena, after sacking Wickremesinghe on October 26, dissolved Parliament and called for a snap election on January 5.

However, the Supreme Court overturned his decision and halted the preparations for snap polls.

Wickremesinghe and Rajapaksa both claim to be the prime ministers with the former claiming that his dismissal is invalid because he still holds a majority in the 225-member parliament.

Prior to the crisis, Wickramasinghe’s UNP had the backing of 106 parliamentarians while Rajapaksa and Sirisena combine had 95 seats.

Rajapaksa has so far failed to prove his majority in the parliament.

The President has said that due to sharp personal differences with Wickremesinghe, he would not reappoint him as the Prime Minister.

However, Wickremesinghe’s UNP claims that Sirisena will be left with no choice as he would be the man who will command the confidence in the House.

(PTI)

Sri Lanka Top Court Rules Parliament Dissolution as Illegal in Setback for President

“President can’t dissolve parliament before four-and-half years,” Supreme Court Judge Sisira de Abrew said.

Colombo: Sri Lanka‘s Supreme Court on Thursday ruled President Maithripala Sirisena’s decision to dissolve the parliament ahead of its term as illegal, in a setback for the embattled leader in his face off with an elected premier.

Sirisena dissolved the parliament on November 9 and called a general election for January 5, days after sacking Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and naming opposition leader Mahinda Rajapaksa to the post.

Also Read: Sri Lanka President Signs Papers to Dissolve Parliament With Effect from Midnight

But the court rejected that decision. “President can’t dissolve parliament before four-and-half years,” Supreme Court Judge Sisira de Abrew said.

The court verdict means parliamentary elections will be held as scheduled after February 2020 and raises the possibility of Wickremesinghe reinstated as prime minister since his coalition enjoys a majority in the parliament.

(Reuters)