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Christian Science Monitor By Simon Montlake, Correspondent August 23, 2010
CUP of
tea in one hand, paperback in the other, Alan Shadrake sits down at a
shady table in the hotel courtyard. To the foreign tourists walking by,
he looks like one of them, another casual visitor flitting through this
tropical city-state.
But Mr Shadrake, a British journalist, isn’t free to leave town when he pleases. The book he carries, Once a Jolly Hangman: Singapore’s Justice in the Dock,
is his own, and its content has triggered a criminal investigation.
He’s already been charged for contempt of court for his bilious
criticism of how Singapore’s judiciary applies the death penalty. A
criminal defamation case is also pending.
The author is the
latest critic to fall foul of Singapore’s prickly rulers, who exert
strict controls on civil liberties in their squeaky-clean city. His
trial may shine a spotlight on the flaws in this system, at a time when
a new generation is beginning to question some of its high-handed ways.
There
is virtually no precedent for a successful legal defense on issues
deemed sensitive by Singaporean authorities. The US State Department
and human rights groups have repeatedly raised concerns over judicial
impartiality in political cases, such as ruling-party lawsuits against
the opposition.
If found guilty of "scandalizing the judiciary"
in his book, Shadrake faces a fine, a jail term, or both. But he
refuses to apologize in return for a lesser sentence and says he
prefers to defend himself in court when the trial resumes later this
month.
“I don’t care what they do to me. The more they do to me,
it proves what I say in the book. It will be another chapter in my
book,” says Shadrake, who divides his time between Britain and
Malaysia, where the book was published in June. He was arrested last
month after a private book launch in Singapore.
Implications of impropriety?
At
a July 30 hearing, prosecutors filed papers stating that Shadrake’s
book implied that Singapore's judiciary was “guilty of impropriety” and
succumbs to “political and economic pressures” in death penalty cases,
according to news reports.
Last year, Singapore’s High Court fined a Wall Street Journal
editor for publishing three articles that criticized the judiciary.
Other international publications have also faced legal action in
Singapore, often initiated by its founding leader, Lee Kwan Yew, or his
son, Lee Hsien Loong, the current prime minister. Prominent opposition
figures have also been sued for defamation, resulting in heavy damages
and, in some cases, bankruptcy.
Lee Kwan Yew, who holds the
title of Minister Mentor, has argued that legal action is necessary to
protect his reputation and that of Singapore, which styles itself as an
efficient, crime-free financial hub. Government officials point to
international surveys that rate its judiciary system as world-class.
But
critics say the government’s legal tactics against its opponents
undermines this much-vaunted reputation. In Shadrake’s case, the charge
of contempt is particularly troubling because Singapore doesn’t allow a
defense of fair comment or public interest, as is the case in libel law.
M.
Ravi, a criminal attorney who is defending Shadrake, says the charge is
widely used in Singapore. In 2008, three activists who wore T-shirts
showing judges as kangaroos were sentenced to short jail terms for
showing disrespect.
“They apply contempt of court to stifle dissent. They’ve gone overboard on this,” says Mr Ravi.
The truth may not matter
Alex
Au, a social activist, says Shadrake will face an uphill battle in
court, as the question of whether his allegations are true isn’t a
defense. By criticizing the judiciary as less than impartial, the book
represents an attack on the legitimacy of a paternalistic ruling elite.
“The criticism makes the offence, whether true or false… It's
an act of silencing,” says Mr Au, who is among a tiny band of
Singaporeans who publicly oppose the death penalty.
Singapore
imposes a mandatory death penalty for drug trafficking and has the
world’s highest per capita rate of executions, according to Amnesty
International. The actual number of people hanged is a state secret. In
2005, Singapore’s chief executioner – the ‘Jolly Hangman’ – told
Shadrake that he’d executed about 1000 people since 1959.
The
government has denied that Shadrake is being prosecuted because of his
opposition to the death penalty. “It is his violation of the laws of
Singapore which are [the issue],” the police said, according to
Bloomberg.
In his book, Shadrake argues that the poor and
uneducated are put to death while well-connected drug dealers and
foreigners from countries with diplomatic clout are spared. Many of his
arguments echo those in the US debate over capital punishment,
including inadequate legal aid.
But he also investigates the
2003 conviction of Vignes Mourthi, a Malaysian factory worker, for
selling heroin to an undercover cop. It later emerged that the
narcotics officer had raped a woman and then tried to bribe her not to
press charges. During his trial, the defense was not told of the
pending investigation of the officer, whose testimony helped secure the
conviction. Mourthi said a friend had tricked him into carrying the
drugs.
The officer was later found guilty of corruption and
jailed, but only after Mourthi’s execution, says Shadrake, who calls it
a miscarriage of justice. “This is judicial murder, cold-blooded
murder,” he says.
"Baseless allegations" or an inconvenient truth?
In
defense of the system, judicial spokesperson Li Jin Haw says that
Singapore must protect its courts from "baseless allegations that seek
to undermine public confidence" in their integrity and independence.
Ravi,
Shadrake’s lawyer, is currently seeking clemency for another Malaysian
sentenced last year to death by hanging. He also defended Mourthi
during his trial and appeal process and has kept in touch with the
executed man’s father.
On Aug 10, the father and a group of
Malaysian lawyers filed a petition at Singapore’s embassy in Kuala
Lumpur seeking a posthumous exoneration of Mourthi. Ravi accompanied
them, and pressed the case of his latest death-row client.
Undaunted
by the challenge of defending Shadrake, Ravi sees a bigger goal. “We’re
putting the entire judiciary on trial,” he says.
Meanwhile,
Shadrake’s book is selling well in neighboring Malaysia. Its original
print run of 2000 has long sold out. Most of the buyers, says Shadrake,
are Singaporeans whose interest has been pricked by his arrest.
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