Public anger grows against defense lawyers
By Feizal Samath
COLOMBO - A spate of brutal killings and rapes of women and children has
triggered growing public anger against lawyers appearing for the accused.
Apart from facing angry and hostile public protesters at courthouses
across the country, lawyers appearing for accused persons say they are
being intimidated by anonymous telephone threats. ''The whole issue is
getting out of control. Mass murderers have a right to be defended in a
court of law,'' argues lawyer Angelo Benedict, who believes the present
wave of agitation could ultimately lead to violence.
Some sociologists fear that as frustration and apathy over the justice
system increases, there could be an eruption of vigilante groups ready to
circumvent the law. ''With the public having no faith in the system,
people may resort to eye-for-an-eye ways of seeking justice and go after
criminals themselves. That could lead to anarchy,'' one sociologist, who
declined to be named, warned.
Courthouse protests and demonstrations against lawyers appearing for those
accused of violent crimes, particularly those against women and children,
have increased in recent times and prompted even judges to draw attention
to the crisis.
Justice P Edirisooriya, president of the country's Appeal Court, told the
annual convocation of the Bar Association last month that public protests
and attacks against lawyers should be condemned. ''We are not insensitive
to the sufferings of victims of crime any kind of crime, but the situation
is getting out of hand and lawyers are becoming targets for doing their
job,'' said a worried Upali Goonaratne, president of Sri Lanka's Bar
Association.
Human rights activists and victims have a different story. A public debate
- over the right of defense for accused persons - is also hotting up in
the country as skepticism over whether the perpetrators would get their
due in court, grows. ''The public is losing faith in the system because it
does not bring them justice. They are helpless,'' argues Nimalka Fernando,
a lawyer and human rights activist.
Citing one case, she said suspects detained for the murder and rape of a
12 year-old girl at Buttala in the northeast Monaragala district about
three weeks ago were released for lack of evidence. ''Where does that
place the parents of the child? What justice do they have against those
who killed their daughter?'' asked Fernando who is also president of the
Tokyo-based International Movement against Discrimination and Racism.
Local women carried out a protest in the Buttala courthouse against
lawyers appearing for the suspects. ''As a rights activist, I support
these demonstrations,'' she added.
According to latest available police figures, more than 400 children were
raped in Sri Lanka during the period January to September last year, up
from 271 cases in the same period in 1998. Two hundred more cases of grave
sexual abuse, sexual harassment and unnatural offences against children
were recorded during the same period. Incidents of violence against
children in the January-September period last year totalled 4,100 while
gender-related violence totalled 39,498 incidents.
According to the Police Bureau for the Protection of Women and Children,
307 women were raped in the January-September period last year, up from
221 in 1998.
Two years ago when a newly-married Indian woman, who arrived in Sri Lanka
on a honeymoon with her Sri Lankan husband, was brutally raped and
murdered, women took to the streets demanding justice for the victim and
protection against rapists. When the alleged rapists and killers were
found and tried, women carried placards in the courts demanding that
lawyers should not represent such persons.
Even some lawyers, outraged by the brutal killing, also demanded that
their brethren should not defend the alleged rapists. Justice was however
swift in that case with the rapists being quickly charged and convicted in
a highly publicized trial. But most people say that kind of efficiency
shown by legal authorities is lacking in other low-profile cases.
The killing of a young boy by some other youngsters in a southern town
last year, drew protest marchers who threw stones at the car of the lawyer
appearing for the accused and tried to manhandle him as he was escorted
into the courthouse. There were also scuffles as police stopped
demonstrators entering the premises and the victim's father had to calm
down the agitated protestors, many of whom were mothers.
Prof Siripala Hettige, respected sociologist at the University of Colombo
believes that part of the problem is due to what he calls ''the gap
between precept and practice'' that compels people to take the law into
their own hands. Politicians are corrupt, litigants are at the mercy of
lawyers, doctors are more concerned about money than caring for patients
and government officials don't care two hoots for a public they are
supposed to serve with dedication, he said.
President Chandrika Kumaratunga's People's Alliance government, mindful of
the problem, last year, tightened laws, increased punishment against
murderers and rapists and made bail conditions more difficult but that has
not stemmed crime.
Justice Minister Professor Gamini Lakshman Peiris, speaking at a media
workshop on crime reporting earlier this month, attributed the crime rate
to a number of reasons including a proliferation of arms and automatic
weapons.
Apart from this, police and the military have less time for criminal
activity as most state resources have since 1983 been directed towards
tackling a Tamil militancy in the north of the island country.
Bar association president Goonaratne says it is important for people to
understand that protests against lawyers could be counterproductive in
seeking justice against criminals. ''If lawyers are prevented from
appearing for the accused, the accused may be freed on the grounds that he
did not receive proper representation and then the victims and their
families won't get justice,'' he added.
Goonaratne says weaknesses in the justice system should be remedied
instead of attacking one part of the legal process. ''I agree we need to
cut down on laws delays and expedite trials but we can't penalize people
without a proper trial,'' he noted.