S'pore AGC files for contempt of court action against PM Lee's

Press Trust of India  |  Singapore 

Attorney-General's Chambers has filed an application to begin proceedings against Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong's nephew for contempt of over a post he put up on the country's judiciary.

The Attorney-General's Chambers (AGC) said it decided to act after Li Shengwu, 32, the eldest son of Lee Hsien Yang, and nephew of the Prime Minister failed to remove the post and to apologise by an extended deadline of 5pm yesterday.


In the post on July 15, which Li set to "friends only" privacy setting, but which was published by several websites and widely circulated on social media, he said foreign media had been cowed into self-censorship because of previous legal action.

He shared a link of a Journal newspaper article giving a summary of the recent dispute which saw his father and aunt Lee Wei Ling on one side, and his uncle, the Prime Minister, on the other, over their late father Lee Kuan Yew's home on 38, Oxley Road, off central business district.

The article was titled Singapore, "A Model Of Orderly Rule, Is Jolted By A Bitter Family Feud".

He also included a link to a 2010 New York Times commentary that was critical of the late Lee Kuan Yew and the government over what it deemed as censorship of the foreign press.

AGC, in its statement, said it issued a letter of warning on July 21 to Li.

In that letter, Senior State Counsel Francis Ng noted that the New York Times article described the government as "an authoritarian regime which aggressively uses the judicial system to silence its critics, even where such criticisms are fair or valid".

The article also described the late Lee Kuan Yew as the designer of "draconian press laws", which have been used to suppress legitimate criticism, he wrote.

Referring to Li's post, Ng said: "The clear meaning of the post, in referring to 'a pliant system', is that the judiciary acts on the direction of the government, is not independent, and has ruled and will continue to rule in favour of the Government in any proceedings, regardless of the merits of the case".

"This assertion is reinforced by your reference to, and clear endorsement of, the article," he added, referring to the New York Times story.

The AGC said it had given Li until 5pm on July 28 to delete the post.

Li then wrote to the AGC to request an extension of time till 5pm on August 4 to respond to the AGC's letter.

But he failed to purge the contempt and to apologise by the extended deadline, the AGC said.

In a post earlier yesterday, Li said the post was not an attack on the judiciary.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)