Last Updated : 19-06-2013 18:30

 
 

Editorial - A state devoid of accountability

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Every crime has a perpetrator. Likewise, every wrong doing has a culprit.  And then there are victims, who, in the current Sri Lankan context, are rendered absolutely helpless by the lack of transparency and accountability of the government high heads. Surrendering to the whims and incongruities of the former is clearly an anti-climax for a citizenry that has always prided itself when it comes to appointing the representatives for its governing bodies.
The long and short of the story of governing is that, once the people entrust their sovereignty to the hands of the so-called people’s representatives, they lose control over their actions; the strings are conveniently detached and the politicians become a powerful breed on their own.



In the face of every public inconvenience, the standard formula of rectifying errors is passing the ball onto so many courts, call for explanation from a few officials who are at the bottom of the ladder and counter attack the media and the public who closely follow the progress of such cases. Tying public officials to trees has become the way in which politicians show their sense of accountability to the public.
Be it the recent Z-score muddle, the ever-increasing crime rate or the  politically sponsored thuggery, the case always tends to end where the public becomes both the culprit and the victim. The decision-makers are only observers, or more like dozers in their cozy arm chairs.
Then there is  corruption.

In the absence of a proper apparatus to counter corruption, misappropriation of public funds and bribery have become part and parcel of the country’s monetary mechanism. The Right to Information Bill brought in by the UNP and obstructed by the government politicians for obvious reasons, would have brought the reins of the politicians back to the people’s hands.

In an ideal democracy, as the people who hold the sovereignty of the country, it should be them who are calling the shots. Just because ours is an adopted democracy with a hybrid constitution, it should not be the other way around. If we believe in people’s power, those who call the shots today, should be called for explanation.

Accountability is not something, people need to win through hunger strikes. It needs to be an inherent feature of any representational democracy. Sadly for us, our hunger strikes are bluffed. And the fear of justice of the privileged few has heavily overshadowed the people’s right to it.


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-0+3 # Calistus Jayatilleke 2013-01-05 16:05
Sadly, concepts such as responsibility and accountability have been consigned to the garbage dumps in this country now, with those elected by a not so intelligent bunch of voters claiming supremacy above all things by virtue of the fact that they occuypy a seat in the parliament. This fear factor is ingrained in the mindset of the ordinary public who had been conditioned to think of the present set-up of government as that headed by a King and a royal family just like in ancient days when the concept of King can do no wrong had been nailed into the heads of the subjects.
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