Official Secrets Act cannot be adopted to declare HSZs says HRCSL
COLOMBO – The Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL) has upbraided the Ranil Wickremesinghe government for adopting the Official Secrets Act to declare High Security Zones (HSZs), saying such a declaration grossly violates the fundamental rights of the people.
In a sternly worded statement issued on Monday (26), the Commission expressed its deep concern about the government’s move, saying the notion that High-Security Zones can be declared under the Official Secrets Act was a fallacy without any justification or basis.
Reiterating that the Official Secrets Act cannot be adopted to declare High-Security Zones, the HRCSL advised the government to direct the withdrawal of the gazette bearing No.2298153 dated September 23 and to take measures to ensure that national laws follow the accepted international and national human rights norms and standards, and to preclude declarations that violate those norms and standards.
President Wickremesinghe on Friday (23) declared several key locations in Colombo, including Parliament, court complexes, the President’s Secretariat and the homes of military top brass among others, as high security zones, banning any kind of protest or agitation in sites or premises near to it.
The move, similar to restrictions imposed during the days of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), prevents even parking of cars in any of the areas near the premises of key government buildings.
Significantly some of the designated locations were the sites for large public agitations that forced the resignation of the then President Gotabaya Rajapaksa in July. President Wickremesinghe has taken a tough line against activists who forced his predecessor to flee the country. Shortly after he took power, troops dismantled a long-running protest site outside the president’s office and arrested hundreds of people that had participated in demonstrations.
Police on Saturday (24) arrested 84 youth, including activists of the radical Socialist Youth Front and used tear gas and water cannons to disperse hundreds demonstrators barely 24 hours after the government declared the city centre a “high security zone”, outlawing protests in the vicinity.
Sri Lanka’s influential bar association condemned the declaration of the HSZs and ban of protests saying it seriously undermined freedom of expression and assembly.
The edict “seeks to significantly curtail the liberty of the citizen, without any reasonable or legal basis,” it said in a statement.
Sri Lanka endured months of acute food and fuel shortages, extended blackouts and runaway inflation after running out of foreign currency to finance essential imports this year.
-ENCL
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