Singapore Democrats

Home News Singapore Singapore goes after Dow Jones again
Singapore goes after Dow Jones again Print Email
Saturday, 13 September 2008

Asia Sentinel

The island republic’s attorney general files contempt charges against the Wall Street Journal Asia for unfavorable editorials

In January of 1984, JB Jeyaretnam, Singapore’s then-lone opposition member of parliament, and mortal enemy of then-Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, was acquitted by Senior District Judge Michael Khoo in a Singapore court of making a false declaration about the accounts of his Workers’ Party.

Shortly after that, Senior District Judge Khoo lost his job and was unceremoniously moved to the attorney-general's chambers, widely considered to be a much lower posting. The Jeyaretnam episode is the last time on record that a high-profile case ever went against any members of Singapore’s ruling Lee family or the government.

Given this unbroken record of legal victories, the Singapore government looks set to attempt to improve on it, filing contempt of court charges against the Wall Street Journal Asia for three articles published in June and July that “impugn the impartiality, integrity and independence of the Singapore judiciary,” according to the complaint. “These allegations and insinuations are unwarranted.”

One of the editorials concerned a 72-page report by the International Bar Association that has become an embarrassment both to the government and the Lee family. In a court case against the embattled opposition leader Chee Soon Juan, Lee Kuan Yew testified under oath that the Singapore Law Society had received a laudatory letter from the association, praising Singapore’s judicial system. Instead, the 72-page report, titled “Prosperity versus individual rights? Human rights, democracy and the rule of law in Singapore,” makes 18 recommendations which the association urges the Singapore government to implement as a matter of priority.

Singapore’s government, the report continues, “is currently failing to meet established international standards in these areas.” Reports of opposition candidates being targeted for criticizing the government, it says, “are of significant concern and threaten democracy and the rule of law in Singapore.” It describes an “apparent climate of fear and self-censorship surrounding the press in Singapore,” and that the “increasing tendency for high profile and respected publications to pay large out-of-court settlements to avoid litigation with PAP officials and the continued run of success within in-court claims is worrying.”

The Journal’s editorial called the report a 'good primer' on Singapore's use of defamation suits against opposition politicians and the foreign press.

Christine Glancey, the managing editor of the newspaper, now owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp., said she would have no comment and referred all questions to Robert Christie, Dow Jones corporate spokesman in New York. The contempt charges, and another case hanging fire in Singapore against the Far Eastern Economic Review, another Dow Jones publication, are rapidly becoming a test of News Corp’s nerve. It is the first time News Corp, which in the past has shown little stomach for taking on governments, has come up against the immovable object that is the Singapore regime, as other publishers have, usually to their sorrow.

The decision to file contempt charges comes a few days after another Singapore judge, Justice Woo Bih Li encouraged lawyers for the Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and his father, Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew, to amend their defamation petition against the Far Eastern Economic Review to make sure they included Woo’s own more defamatory reading of an article about the two ministers. Woo’s ruling, two years after the filing of the original charges, appeared to be unprecedented.

Singapore and the Lee family have long been famous for suing journalists, both foreign and domestic – and they have never lost a suit in Singapore. The Far Eastern Economic Review was a favorite target. The media watchdog organization Reporters Without Borders ranks Singapore 140th out of 167 countries surveyed in terms of freedom of the press. The country has been kicking foreign journalists out for writing critical articles about the republic since the early 1970s.

An official enquiry requested by Jeyaretnam into allegations of executive interference in judiciary appointments in the wake of Khoo’s demotion found that there was no truth to the claims. In fact, Justice T S Sinnathuray, the sole commissioner who examined the case, said: "The wholly unfounded allegations of Mr Jeyaretnam (of executive interference) were scandalous statements that should never have been made."

http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1432&Itemid=31

Share this article:
Facebook Technorati Stumble It! Newsvine Reddit Del.icio.us Digg This!
Comments (8)
  • anon - Did LKY win elsewhere
    Did LKY + gang manage to sue and win elsewhere?
  • mikee - what do you think?
    Bully knows their territories well.
  • Anonymous
    Though the article is objective in its reports... but not in favor of Lee... he sues using money he made off Singaporeans for his own vendetta.

    It's understandable as PAP = Singapore.. so kudos to that.
  • Tan Tai Wei
    'Virtuous' cycles, like their vicious counterpart, can have no end, also.

    Thus, consistent with established practice, Asia Sentinel has now to be sued for making the above comments, to 'protect Singapore government's reputation'.

    And, of course, you can't stop everybody from commenting on this suit too, and also others that have to follow. So, the suing has to keep going on, indefinitely.

    The moral? There can be no end to the suing if government chooses to be hypersensitive and stretch its interpreting of commentaries to give them a libellous meaning.

    And it's done at great public expense of court time and personnel, it distracts our very highly paid 'leaders' from their jobs, and it leads to public apathy, being so predictable and boring.

    Indeed, the very suing and winning would, in the eyes of those whose suspicions government wants to allay, only increase their suspicions.
  • Anonymous - Not worth it..
    All this fighting against democracy and 'fixing' opposition is surely taking a toll on LKY's health.

    LKY, Why can't you just sit back and retire gracefully....loosing sleep over for a country that has grown up and can take care of itself is simply not worth it.

    Doing so will do more harm than good to you.
  • Anonymous
    By attempting to sue such international giants, the PAP do half the work for the SDP in raising awareness about the situation here :)

    Gotta love the PAP for making such 'wise' decisions. HAHA!
  • Paul - Clogging up the courts
    [quote=Tan Tai Wei]
    And it's done at great public expense of court time and personnel, it distracts our very highly paid 'leaders' from their jobs, and it leads to public apathy, being so predictable and boring.
    [/quote]

    Good. Let's do more of it. How much more do you think it will take to clog up the courts? I know that it might not sound terribly responsible but don't you think we should play the government at its own game?
  • Kangaroo Hater - Contempt? Or just plain contemptuous?
    I have never known "contempt of court" charges to apply in any occurrence outside court proceedings; editorials in a newspaper would fall into the category of "outside court proceedings"

    Would a lawyer care to comment?

    Having said that, I wonder why foreign publications even bother to report on Singapore, a country that is heavily dependant on the outside world for its survival, and whose national economy has a neglible impact on the world economy.

    The only loser in a news blackout on Singapore in foreign publications would be Singapore itself. Singapore is so tiny that no mention of it in the world arena will quickly enough lead to the world forgetting that it even exists.

    We can say goodbye to new investments and business when that happens.

    And it will ultimately be the fault of the Singapore government.
Please login or register to post your comments.
 

Act Now

Support Democracy!
Please Donate
Read:The party that stands up for you
More options to donate
 

SDP Publictaions

Magazine Support SDP , buy our 30th Anniversary Magazine here

minsal
pdf
link

 

Danny the Democracy Bear

Now available online here!

 
Singapore Democrats on Facebook
Banner
Banner

Awesome Words

By the skillful and sustained use of propaganda, one can make a people see even heaven as hell or an extremely wretched life as paradise.

Adolf Hitler
Banner

News feeds

Singapore Democrat News
Joomla Templates by JoomlaShack