By
The Sunday Times Political Editor
Besides polls conducted by the Department of Elections, perhaps the only other which assume an official character are elections to the Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL), the premier body representing the country’s lawyers.
Formed in 1974 with the incorporation of the Bar Council of Ceylon and the Incorporated Law Society of Ceylon, it is meant to be the spokes-body of the Un-official Bar with the Solicitor General from the Official Bar acting as the returning Officer for the election. The membership of the BASL includes judges, state counsel and private lawyers.
Even if they are classified as the ‘unofficial bar,’ like oxygen, they are a must for the survival of the official one — those lawyers from the State, as well as members of the judiciary. It is the harmonious blend of the threesome that ensures justice and fair play for the people. More importantly, they are the pivots on which the rule of law in a nation rests besides the now heavily politicised and increasingly undisciplined Police Department.
The climate for justice, fair play and the enforcement of the rule of law, there is little doubt, has changed for the worse. This was particularly so after the hurried December 2012/January 2013 impeachment of Chief Justice 43, Shirani Bandaranayake and the enthronement of CJ 44, Justice Mohan Peiris. The move angered even lawyers who were staunch supporters of the UPFA Government and triggered an international outcry. The shockwaves it created continue to reverberate here and abroad.
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