Sri Lanka’s Proposed Anti-terror Law Makes Dissent an Act of Terror
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In 2021, the United Nations came up with five recommendations that it thought were “necessary prerequisites to ensure the PTA is amended to be compliant with international law obligation.” They are:- Employ definitions of terrorism that comply with international norms;
- Ensure precision and legal certainty, especially when this legislation may impact the rights of freedom of expression, opinion, association, and religion or belief;
- Institute provisions and measures to prevent and halt arbitrary deprivation of liberty;
- Ensure preventive measures are in place to prevent torture and enforced disappearance and adhere to their absolute prohibition; and
- Enable overarching due process and fair trial guarantees, including judicial oversight and access to legal counsel.
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The ATB is seen as a response to the anti-government protests in 2022, Professor Jayadeva Uyangoda, a Sri Lankan political scientist, said recently speaking to the media in Colombo. In response to the economic crisis in the country, for the first time in Sri Lankan history, politically conscious citizens took to the streets and forced President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his brothers to step down. The protests reflected a general frustration with the political establishment in general. Recent opinion polls indicate that the left-wing, anti-austerity, and IMF-skeptical National Peoples Power (NPP) is the most popular political force in the country. Meanwhile, the Wickremesinghe government is enforcing IMF austerity measures as a part of the bailout package it received. Recent research by Boson University researchers has found that “the track record of IMF-mandated austerity has not lived up to its promise” despite the IMF’s claims that vulnerable populations in the recipient countries are sheltered from austerity via “measures to increase spending on, and improve the targeting of, social safety net programs.” Thomas Stubbs and Alexander Kentikelenis (2018), scholars from the University of Cambridge and the University of Oxford, respectively, found that social spending floors recommended by the IMF have not protected welfare from austerity. In 2021, Valentin Lang from the University of Mannheim proved causally that IMF programs result in relative and absolute income losses for the poor. Earlier, political scientist Brendan Skip Mark had shown that “IMF compliance leads to increased government violations of collective labor rights, increased violent anti-government protests, and increased repression of physical integrity rights.” Already Sri Lanka is witnessing strikes and industrial unrest that are crippling daily life. The Wickremesinghe government has been trying to break the unions by using existing draconian laws and by deploying the military to force worker compliance. Uyangoda told The Island newspaper that the ruling class was aware that their economic policies were likely to spark frequent protests and demonstrations. In response, they were attempting to preempt such events by bolstering their repressive capabilities and enacting oppressive laws. However, Uyangoda cautioned that such measures would only worsen the social crisis and fuel further unrest.