Friday, December 19, 2008

Dr Michael D Barr: "Singapore is at heart a corrupt dictatorship"

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Another confirmation of what everyone is saying. Which is, Singapore is Lee Kuan Yew's dictatorship which he manages principally through a corrupt and compliant judiciary. Can we expect another round of defamation and contempt of courts lawsuits, or is it only in cases where the victim is helpless? That is, if he is within Singapore?

Dr. Barr has done a great service to the people of Singapore. Thank you. And so has Mr. Francis Seow for writing the book. Thank you.

Gopalan Nair 39737
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Beyond Suspicion? The Singapore Judiciary
Pacific AffairsFall 2008: Vol 81, Number 3
ProQuest Asian Business and Reference pg. 494
Review by Dr Michael D Barr
Flinders University, Australia

BEYOND SUSPICION?

The Singapore Judiciary By Francis T. Seow; with a foreword by Gary Woodard. New Haven (Connecticut) : Yale University Southeast Asia Studies, 2006. xxii, 405pp. (Tables.)
US$26.00 paper. ISBN 0-938692-87- 9.

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FRANCIS Seow's third book is a savage and unmerciful critique of Singapore's judicial system. He provides convincing evidence that the Singapore court system is basically the play-thing of former Prime Minister (currently Minister Mentor) Lee Kuan Yew, through which he toys with and destroys his enemies at his leisure; corrupting the Bench, the legal profession, the police and the profession of journalism on the way through. The case presented by Seow – which is overwhelming drawn from the intimate detail of a single legal battle – demonstrates beyond reasonable doubt that Singapore is at heart a corrupt dictatorship separated from Third World dictatorships primarily by its national income and the cleverness of the techniques by which it manipulates institutional power.

It is a damning indictment that could have been much more powerful if Seow had resisted the temptation to indulge in childish name calling and heavy-handed didacticism. These acts of self-indulgence dominate the first part of the book and are never far away in the rest. Their main impact, as far as I can see, is to give defenders of the Singapore system and of Lee Kuan Yew the excuse they need to dismiss the book as 'just another anti-Singapore rant'. Seow's arrogant style was probably perfected while he was part of the system he is now critiquing (having been Lee's choice for the position of Solicitor-General in the 1980s), but if the reader can put these defects aside it will become clear that this is a deeply disturbing story of manipulative and duplicitous behaviour on the part of Lee Kuan Yew as he set out to use a quiescent judicial and legal fraternity to destroy an innocent man, along with his wife and his lawyer.

The man in question is Tang Liang Hong who had the temerity to question the procedure by which Lee Kuan Yew and other notables (including his son and the current prime minister, Lee Hsien Loong), were cleared of any suggestion of impropriety when they accepted million dollar discounts from a property developer. Much of the book is concerned with the political and public relations machinations by which Tang was caught up in Lee's web of retaliation, but in this review it must be sufficient to relay just a few of the most salient facts to give the reader a sense of the book.

For instance, what are we to make of a legal system that gives a defendant a couple of hours (literally) to find a solicitor, a translator (since she could speak no English), and prepare and present a defence in court to a procedure about which she had literally no understanding? Or where a judge sits in judgement on a case where he himself is implicated as a recipient of one of the real estate discounts that started the whole procedure, and who had previously worked for the family law firm of the primary litigant (Lee Kuan Yew)? Or where a judge (not the same judge) can receive many sets of documents, each hundreds of pages thick and so badly copied and paginated as to substantially illegible and unreadable, and yet two and a half hours later bring down a legal judgement based on his considered legal interpretation of the implications of their contents? Or where a summons to chambers is issued by an appellant's lawyers rather than by the court, but the court upholds it? Or where evidence that proves beyond all reasonable doubt the innocence of the defendant is not only refused admission in court, but all record of its existence is expunged from the record?

Seow has drawn primarily on court documents for his evidence, having been supplied with a complete set (included documents later expunged from the record) by Tang Liang Hong, who is now a de facto exile from Singapore. Fully the last third of the volume is occupied by transcriptions of some of the most damning court documents, including a fair sample of documents where Lee Kuan Yew and his allies condemn themselves by their own words. (Seow delights in using Lee's own words to demonstrate his capriciousness and duplicity. At one point he was even able to cite Lee as his primary source to sustain his charge that Lee was the arch-manipulator of the proceedings. Seow tends to overplay his hand when using this technique, but Lee's arrogance and peremptory choice of words do rather lend themselves to ridicule.)
This is a powerful book, but it could have been much more.

Dr Barr :Lecturer in International Relations, School of Political and International Studies, Flinders University School Director of Studies (B.A) School Ethics Research Adviser Deputy Chair, Faculty of Social Sciences Undergraduate Standing Committee.
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7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for putting up this revealing but truthful review of F Seow's book " The S'pore Judiciary" by Prof Barr.May I inform readers that they can also purchase this book in JB and KL easily?
Gopal, u know who I am.......If I'm still alive and kicking, I will personally lead a troupe of democrats and decent pple to welcome you back at Changi airport in the near future after the toppling of dictator LKY and his lackeys including the judiciary. Change will come soon.....have patience!

Gopalan Nair said...

Thanks for the kind words, but on a lighter note, if I ever came back while he is still around, I will end up in another building not far from that airport. Changi Prison!

Gopalan Nair

Gopalan Nair said...

Has Lee Kuan Yew finally given up on defamation lawsuits and contempt of court actions? This scathing attack against the Singapore judiciary by Dr. Barr is posted as a comment on the Singapore Democratic Website by me in the article "Latest Hooray" of December 19, 2008.

Even if I am beyond the reach of Lee Kuan Yew in California, Dr. Chee and the Singapore Democrats are within the reach of his clutches. Will he charge them for contempt, which the report by Dr. Barr clearly is in the Pickwikian sense or rather the Singaporean sense,or has he finally realised that this suing business doesn't work.

Anonymous said...

Providing proof beyond reasonable doubt regarding a judicial *system* based on a *single* case?

Oh please. You are a stupid person.

Anonymous said...

Dear Gopalan,

I have a deep suspicion that LKY's control of the judiciary is used to hide the failure of the CPF scheme. Like Madoff, the failed investments of the people's money may have resulted in a kind of 'ponzi' scheme. This, and LKY's dirty political tricks will result in his eventual downfall.

Usually, the demographics of Singapore will speed up this process where retirees' CPF withdrawals will deplete the reserve, but Singapore is 'importing' citizens.

Hopefully, I will be proved right.

Wish you a Merry Christmas and Happy 2009

Anonymous said...

Oh, and I forgot to add that it helps trmendously when people like Francis Seow, the SDP, and yourself document the antics that take place in our kangaroo courts: it helps us to make the analysis and document it similarly.

Anonymous said...

No doubt I would love to witness the downfall of LKY while he is still alive.
However, my prediction is that he will be "gone" within a year. But his not very bright son will have to bear the brunt of his dad's misdeeds.