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‘I was thrown in jail and a mental institution, then deported from Singapore… for not wearing a Covid-19 mask’

tobelightlight

Alfrescian
Loyal
https://www.rt.com/op-ed/533288-singapore-citizen-deported-covid-rules/




Don’t like wearing masks? Neither does Benjamin Glynn. But his refusal to wear one, on account of his failure to accept Singapore’s right to make them legally mandatory, saw him treated like a terrorist, as he tells RT.
The return leg of Benjamin Glynn’s daily commute turned his life upside down. Violent arrests, a prison sentence and time in a mental institution followed, but he vowed, “I would do it all again, I don’t regret anything.”
Living in Singapore, the Brit and his partner decided to return home with their two kids, booking flights for May 31. On keen runner Glynn’s final day at work, he went for a run with colleagues, followed by a few drinks. On the train home, a passenger videoed him not wearing a Covid mask – contrary to the local rules – and uploaded it to citizen journalism website Stomp.
Twenty-four hours later, the police knocked on his door, demanding he come to the station. Glynn said, “I was happy to have a chat with them. I just thought it would be a conversation and I could go talk to them on the Monday, but they insisted they had to take me then. I objected to that as it was so late; it was my daughter’s fifth birthday. But that’s when the nightmare began.”
Things turned ugly, and officers used batons which led to an ambulance being called due to Glynn bleeding from his knees, elbows and shoulders.
He spent the rest of the weekend in holding cells, which he described as “horrendous.” There was a concrete floor with no bedding and the lights were on constantly. Tiredness had him hallucinating, before he was finally granted bail.

The rest of the family flew to the UK, but he had to remain for a scheduled court date on July 23. And worse was to follow. He explained, “On July 19, five of them [police] came bursting into my room. I hid in the bathroom and recorded it on my phone. They gave me no choice and dragged me out.”
It was at this point things turned “quite dark.” Bail was revoked; Glynn was back in the concrete police cells and then transferred to Changi prison.
He continued, “I’m probably the only person in the history of Singapore who was happy about going to prison. I thought it can’t be any worse. But I still had no bed, it was a thin bamboo mat on the floor and itchy blanket.”
Throughout all of this, Glynn had been clear – he admitted not wearing a mask on the train. But by now he was facing four charges; two of not wearing a mask, one for being a public nuisance and one for using threatening language to the police.
He said, “I admitted the whole time that it was me not wearing a mask. My defence was based on the law and who has jurisdiction over who. Is it a criminal action or is it a civil regulation breach?”
He accepts that employers have the legal right to tell their staff to wear masks, but does not agree the state can issue such demands legally.
Several of his comments in court attracted attention, wrongly giving the impression he wasn’t taking his predicament seriously. That was despite him attending some appearances in handcuffs, ankle bracelets and chained to a chair.
Glynn added, “I was quite aware of the law and what a crime is, and isn’t. But I just assumed that because Singapore was a British colony and the British set up their legal system, they would have some respect for common law. But it turns out they have absolutely zero recognition for the living man or living woman.”
ALSO ON RT.COMUK citizen set to be deported from Singapore after being handed prison sentence for refusing to wear a mask
Glynn asking the judge three times at one hearing to name which law states the public must wear masks seemingly angered the authorities, and he was sent to the Institute of Mental Health for psychiatric assessment.
That was even tougher than Changi prison, where at least he was able to read and have personal items.
Glynn said, “It was a horrible cell with a small grille, no windows, and I wasn’t allowed anything – no toilet paper, books or toothbrush. I just had two weeks of staring at a wall in the isolation ward, where the really poorly people with mental problems are.
“This is how they deal with people who challenge their legal system and government, but it’s not just in Singapore – I’m sure people in other countries have also been accused of having mental problems if they refuse to comply with the Covid regulations.”

Throughout the process, the judiciary offered him deals to plead guilty. But Glynn refused them all, explaining, “That’s not really how justice works, you don’t condemn someone to prison before the trial and sweet talk them out of it.”
In the end, he was found guilty on all charges but had served enough time, so was deported a few days later. And even that became a saga, because as he was brought to the gate in shackles, KLM – with whom Glynn had bought his original ticket – refused to take him. Singapore Airlines did the same, but the British High Commission said he could travel on British Airways.
The nightmare ended when the jet’s wheels touched down at Heathrow, but Glynn feels he has been unfairly portrayed, particularly given that what sparked the secret video was him assisting an elderly gentlemen onto the train, who had been struggling to breathe in his mask. After helping the man to a seat, Glynn was approached by others about not wearing one himself. “I’ve been treated in my opinion like some sort of terrorist and as a criminal.” he said.
ALSO ON RT.COMFukushima nuclear plant to construct UNDERSEA tunnel to release a million tons of treated water
While he would not wish to relive the incident, Glynn does feel it exposed bigger issues. He said, “It was unfortunate but I was standing up for my rights. I don’t believe in wearing masks. I stood up for my rights not to wear a mask, which is recognised in every major country apart from Singapore by the sounds of it. My case has highlighted a lot of unfairness in the Singapore legal system.”
And while he claimed he had been “psychologically tortured,” he’s keen to put it behind him, saying, “I’m not some crazy freedom fighter who wants to neglect my family or my career to keep on doing this.”
Glynn has been lambasted in some quarters but has also received lots of messages of support. So, what does he take away from this bizarre experience?
“I think it showed Singapore is not safe, and the police have no respect or regard for human rights,” he claimed.
After spending a week in the countryside since returning home, Glynn appears relaxed and ready to move on. He admitted, “It’s just so good to be back on English soil and the land of the free.”
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Fucking fake Christian land of the dirty white trash BE.

East Asia is not for the faint hearted where society come first is the norm....

Society rights come first before individual rights.... conform... fuck back to your land of filth and violent society of rubbish bin syndrome....
 

dredd

Alfrescian
Loyal
1630372051368.png
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Try this in courtroom... he will be thrown to jail.... then he learn the meaning of this is the law.... contempt...
 

dredd

Alfrescian
Loyal
He's not the only one to be jailed for not wearing a mask.

Going to court without face mask gets Oregon man arrested and jailed, officials say​

BY SUMMER LIN
JUNE 26, 2020 01:21 PM

A Sweet Home, Oregon, man was arrested after he didn’t wear a face mask to his court appearance and tried to leave after the judge said the mask was required, media outlets report.

John Kulbeth went to municipal court for a traffic charge on Wednesday, and after a court clerk said he needed to wear a face mask, he refused and stood in court with his daughter, The Statesman Journal reported.

“When I checked into the clerk’s window, the clerk promptly told me, ‘Well you need to have a face mask.’ I was confused and said, ‘Well I don’t and I’m not going to because I have enough breathing issues as it is.’ She goes, ‘Well the judge is going to disagree with that,’” Kulbeth said in an interview on the Lars Larson radio show.

Judge Larry Blake saw that Kulbeth wasn’t wearing a mask and said he would hold him in contempt of court if he didn’t put one on, Kulbeth said on the radio show.

“I said, ‘I have enough respiratory issues as it is but I’m more than willing to come back another day,’ and he didn’t like that idea,” Kulbeth said. “So finally I said, ‘Fine, I’ll just leave.’”

Kulbeth told The Statesman Journal that he was discharged from the Army for breathing problems a decade ago and told the judge that he would leave. He was arrested by Sweet Home Police Chief Jeff Lynn, who said that the judge issued a warrant for his arrest, according to the publication.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced that people in Multnomah, Clackamas, Washington, Hood River, Marion, Polk and Lincoln counties would be required to wear face coverings in public, with exceptions for “those with a medical condition that prevents them from using a face covering or children under the age of 12,” KATU reported. Sweet Home is in Linn County.

Ray Towry, Sweet Home city manager, confirmed to KGW8 that Blake asked Kulbeth to wear a mask and he refused.

“[Blake] said, ‘You need to wear a mask,’ and again [Kulbeth] refused,” Towry told the station. “The judge said, ‘Well you don’t really have a choice,’ essentially. And Mr. Kulbeth said, ‘Well then I’m just going to leave,’ and he left.”

Kulbeth said he was arraigned in jail, with another court date scheduled for July 22.

“He said, ‘When you come back on July 22, if you’re not wearing a face mask or you don’t have a doctor’s note saying you’re not legally required to wear a face mask, you’re going to go to jail again,’” Kulbeth told the radio show. “He said you’re going to go to jail again and you face 30 days.”

Citing Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines, the Oregon Health Authority recommends that people wear face coverings in public and in businesses.

More than 2 million people have been infected with COVID-10 and more than 124,000 people have died in the U.S. as of June 26, according to Johns Hopkins University.
 

LordElrond

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
https://www.rt.com/op-ed/533288-singapore-citizen-deported-covid-rules/




Don’t like wearing masks? Neither does Benjamin Glynn. But his refusal to wear one, on account of his failure to accept Singapore’s right to make them legally mandatory, saw him treated like a terrorist, as he tells RT.
The return leg of Benjamin Glynn’s daily commute turned his life upside down. Violent arrests, a prison sentence and time in a mental institution followed, but he vowed, “I would do it all again, I don’t regret anything.”
Living in Singapore, the Brit and his partner decided to return home with their two kids, booking flights for May 31. On keen runner Glynn’s final day at work, he went for a run with colleagues, followed by a few drinks. On the train home, a passenger videoed him not wearing a Covid mask – contrary to the local rules – and uploaded it to citizen journalism website Stomp.
Twenty-four hours later, the police knocked on his door, demanding he come to the station. Glynn said, “I was happy to have a chat with them. I just thought it would be a conversation and I could go talk to them on the Monday, but they insisted they had to take me then. I objected to that as it was so late; it was my daughter’s fifth birthday. But that’s when the nightmare began.”
Things turned ugly, and officers used batons which led to an ambulance being called due to Glynn bleeding from his knees, elbows and shoulders.
He spent the rest of the weekend in holding cells, which he described as “horrendous.” There was a concrete floor with no bedding and the lights were on constantly. Tiredness had him hallucinating, before he was finally granted bail.

The rest of the family flew to the UK, but he had to remain for a scheduled court date on July 23. And worse was to follow. He explained, “On July 19, five of them [police] came bursting into my room. I hid in the bathroom and recorded it on my phone. They gave me no choice and dragged me out.”
It was at this point things turned “quite dark.” Bail was revoked; Glynn was back in the concrete police cells and then transferred to Changi prison.
He continued, “I’m probably the only person in the history of Singapore who was happy about going to prison. I thought it can’t be any worse. But I still had no bed, it was a thin bamboo mat on the floor and itchy blanket.”
Throughout all of this, Glynn had been clear – he admitted not wearing a mask on the train. But by now he was facing four charges; two of not wearing a mask, one for being a public nuisance and one for using threatening language to the police.
He said, “I admitted the whole time that it was me not wearing a mask. My defence was based on the law and who has jurisdiction over who. Is it a criminal action or is it a civil regulation breach?”
He accepts that employers have the legal right to tell their staff to wear masks, but does not agree the state can issue such demands legally.
Several of his comments in court attracted attention, wrongly giving the impression he wasn’t taking his predicament seriously. That was despite him attending some appearances in handcuffs, ankle bracelets and chained to a chair.
Glynn added, “I was quite aware of the law and what a crime is, and isn’t. But I just assumed that because Singapore was a British colony and the British set up their legal system, they would have some respect for common law. But it turns out they have absolutely zero recognition for the living man or living woman.”
ALSO ON RT.COMUK citizen set to be deported from Singapore after being handed prison sentence for refusing to wear a mask
Glynn asking the judge three times at one hearing to name which law states the public must wear masks seemingly angered the authorities, and he was sent to the Institute of Mental Health for psychiatric assessment.
That was even tougher than Changi prison, where at least he was able to read and have personal items.
Glynn said, “It was a horrible cell with a small grille, no windows, and I wasn’t allowed anything – no toilet paper, books or toothbrush. I just had two weeks of staring at a wall in the isolation ward, where the really poorly people with mental problems are.
“This is how they deal with people who challenge their legal system and government, but it’s not just in Singapore – I’m sure people in other countries have also been accused of having mental problems if they refuse to comply with the Covid regulations.”

Throughout the process, the judiciary offered him deals to plead guilty. But Glynn refused them all, explaining, “That’s not really how justice works, you don’t condemn someone to prison before the trial and sweet talk them out of it.”
In the end, he was found guilty on all charges but had served enough time, so was deported a few days later. And even that became a saga, because as he was brought to the gate in shackles, KLM – with whom Glynn had bought his original ticket – refused to take him. Singapore Airlines did the same, but the British High Commission said he could travel on British Airways.
The nightmare ended when the jet’s wheels touched down at Heathrow, but Glynn feels he has been unfairly portrayed, particularly given that what sparked the secret video was him assisting an elderly gentlemen onto the train, who had been struggling to breathe in his mask. After helping the man to a seat, Glynn was approached by others about not wearing one himself. “I’ve been treated in my opinion like some sort of terrorist and as a criminal.” he said.
ALSO ON RT.COMFukushima nuclear plant to construct UNDERSEA tunnel to release a million tons of treated water
While he would not wish to relive the incident, Glynn does feel it exposed bigger issues. He said, “It was unfortunate but I was standing up for my rights. I don’t believe in wearing masks. I stood up for my rights not to wear a mask, which is recognised in every major country apart from Singapore by the sounds of it. My case has highlighted a lot of unfairness in the Singapore legal system.”
And while he claimed he had been “psychologically tortured,” he’s keen to put it behind him, saying, “I’m not some crazy freedom fighter who wants to neglect my family or my career to keep on doing this.”
Glynn has been lambasted in some quarters but has also received lots of messages of support. So, what does he take away from this bizarre experience?
“I think it showed Singapore is not safe, and the police have no respect or regard for human rights,” he claimed.
After spending a week in the countryside since returning home, Glynn appears relaxed and ready to move on. He admitted, “It’s just so good to be back on English soil and the land of the free.”
What a pussy. Is Glynn aware that SG is no longer a colony? He just spoilt it for the majority of angmohs who want to just respect the rules of the country. Was there any angmoh with him in the courtroom? As far as I remember there were a couple of SPG bitch
 

tobelightlight

Alfrescian
Loyal
i watch it halfway and he said that he was hit by a baton from the police. Is this how a first world country behave??? oh my god. The police can be sued for this totally. People has the right to say no to the police.
 

tobelightlight

Alfrescian
Loyal
The police are lawless and no respect to the people regard of the law. The police and the govt is not suitable to be the enforcer of the law. In this regard they are very 3rd world. no difference from hooligans. This make Singapore NOT a safe place to live in.

Totally agree on this point.
 

tobelightlight

Alfrescian
Loyal
This guy ask the judge what law in the country that state that he has to put on a mask. Total silence from judge and when he ask the third time, the judge say some crap and cut him off. And he was then sent from one cell to the next. What the hell is that? is this how law is being enforced? oh my goodness.
 
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