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Alan Shadrake not deterred by arrest

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SHADRAKE: I’d do it all again. British Weekly Exclusive

SINGAPORE: Former British Weekly writer Alan Shadrake, who is facing two years in jail for penning an expose of the Singapore justice system, was in defiant mood this week when we contacted him for an exclusive interview.
“I’d write that book again,” Alan told us on Thursday, after undergoing a ten-hour grilling from the city state’s Criminal Investigation Department into his book: Once a Jolly Hangman, Singapore Justice in the Dock.

“I don’t believe in backing down from bullies,” Shadrake said, who is best known to BW readers as the author of the long-running and controversial column Shooting From The Lip.

Everything I wrote (in the book) was true and when I go to court I intend to give as good as I get.”

The 75-year-old author was granted bail on Monday after 24 hours in jail following the high-profile launch of the new book. He could face two years in jail for defamation because of his allegations of institutionalised injustice in the Singapore’s legal system – specifically its application of the death penalty, which many international observers consider to be merciless and arbritary.

The country’s Attorney-General has now served Shadrake with a contempt of court order, saying that the book impugns the impartiality, integrity and independence of the judiciary.

Shadrake told reporters he was freed after a local activist posted bail of 10,000 Singapore dollars ($7,240) for him.

“I’m feeling pretty shaken at the moment,” said Shadrake, whose case is to be heard in court on July 30.

His passport has been impounded to prevent him from leaving Singapore until the case is resolved.



The book they don't want you to read...


Shadrake revealed that he hade made the decision to go back to Singapore for the book’s launch after extensive consultation with famed legal scholar Francis Seow – himself a former Singapore Solicitor-General and now perhaps the country’s most famous dissident and opponent of Prime Minister Lee Kwan Yew. Mr. Seow is now an American citizen and a visiting fellow at Harvard Law School.

“The legal advice I received was that provided I had extensive evidence to back up the claims I make in the book – which I do – then the CID here would have a very hard time making anything stick,” said Shadrake.

“Although they are giving me a very gruelling time here – every day I am interrogated for eight to ten hours, often covering the same ground - I would write the book again in a heartbeat. I am not allowed to have an attorney to be present when I am questioned. But I’m not going to be cowed. I’m looking forward to my day in court.

“I feel I am making history with this book. I have had messages of support from all over the world. I have the British government, Amnesty International and the Committee to Protect Journalists on my side and I’m hopeful I will prevail.

“Everything I have written is true. There is a wave of change coming in this country. It’s time for Lee Kwan Yew to stop running Singapore like his own private fiefdom.”

In his book, Shadrake examines the history of the death penalty in Singapore and exposes its unequal and frequently merciless aplication. The books alleges that foreigners and the wealthy are less likely to receive the death penalty. Perhaps most embarrassingly for the Singapore authorities, Shadrake scoops an interview with Singapore’s former chief executioner, Darshan Singh. In an article Shadrake wrote for The Australian newspaper in 2005 – but which has since been removed from its website – Singh is “credited with being the only executioner in the world to single-handedly hang 18 men in one day – three at a time”.

Amnesty International earlier urged Singapore’s government to immediately release the elderly author.

“Singapore uses criminal defamation laws to silence critics of government policies,” Donna Guest, Amnesty’s Asia Pacific Deputy Director, said in London.

“The Singapore government should release Shadrake at once.”

She added: “If Singapore aspires to be a global media city, it needs to respect global human rights standards for freedom of expression… Singapore should get rid of both its criminal defamation laws and the death penalty.”

Amnesty International said last year that Singapore was “estimated to have one of the highest per capita execution rates in the world.”

It said Singapore had executed at least 420 people since 1991, adding that the number was probably higher as “not all sentences and executions are reported publicly”. Singapore, which has one of the lowest crime rates in the world among its five million population, has retained the death penalty since its days as a British colony. Convicts are still executed by hanging.
 
Civil or criminal contempt of court? :D

btw, is the book still available for sale in SG?
 
Just buy them at malaysia's bookstores.
Whatever books banned by Sinagapore will be available in Malaysia and vice versa.

The new cross-border (book) trade between Malaysia and Singapore


I see a new trend forming that demonstrates another good side of free trade.

Late last year, when author Barry Wain unveiled his book ‘Malaysian Maverick: Mahathir Mohamad in Turbulent Times’, Malaysian Home Ministry went panic. The book apparently exposes many political excesses and hypocrisies in the 22 years of Mahathir rule. By implication, it also spells trouble for the ruling BN. But the home minister Hishamuddin has no guts to ban the book outright. He decided to play dirty, by withholding the few hundred copies of the book at Port Klang. His excuse was to review the book before clearing it for distribution.

And it took them months to read the 368 pages. Such is Malaysian government efficiency, which is commonly known. Of course we all know they simply sat on it or used the books as paperweight. But during those months, with the publicity created from the dirty trick, the rakyat got even more curious. Suddenly the book found its way to reach the customers – Malaysians got their copies from the book stores in Singapore. It sold like hot cake and many Singaporean booksellers could not stop grinning. Singapore has, in this case, made contribution to the freedom of Malaysians.

(For the record, similar dirty tricks were applied to two other books: ‘Where is Justice?‘ edited by Nathaniel Tan and John Lee, and ’1Funny Malaysia’ by Zunar. Subsequently ’1Funny Malaysia’ was banned months later, whereas ‘Where is Justice?’ is hard to find in book stores after nationwide intimidation by the ministry officials.)

And now it’s the time for Malaysia to reciprocate. Two days ago a British author Alan Shadrake was arrested in Singapore for alleged criminal defamation. His crime? Writing the book ‘Once a Jolly Hangman: Singapore Justice in the Dock’! Interestingly, Alan Shadrake seems to do to Singapore authorities what Barry Wain did to Malaysian. The book is never banned by the authority. It was available for a while in some book stores and one of the largest book stores, Kinokuniya. But later after a few days from the Media Development Authority, book stores obediently removed the books from the shelves. Still, the book is not banned. But it has landed the author in police custody now.

That development has certainly catapulted the book to prominence now. I am sure that’s the last thing the authorities in Singapore want. Their bet is the compliant book stores in Singapore. As long as the people can’t access the book, the death penalty issues raised by the author will go unnoticed. But they forget that they cannot touch the Malaysian book stores! So now the article reporting the book launch has explicitly mentioned that the book is available from the MPH at Johor Bahru City Square, the nearest book store from Singapore border. Booksellers in Malaysia, time for your contribution to the freedom of Singaporeans now, and make money from it. (In fact, the book is available online from Kinibooks.)

If you have difficulty accessing the book, you can almost read its main points from the great review done by Yawning Bread. The most alarming point raised by the book, as summarised by Yawning Bread, is as follows:

What emerges is a very unflattering pattern of inconsistent “justice”, the dispensation of which is compromised in three important ways:

1. When foreign governments have clout over our economic interests and are willing to use that clout, their citizens will not face the death penalty;

2. When local citizens come from rich, well-connected families, or when a case threatens to involve others from this stratum of society, a way is found to avoid having them face the death penalty or even severe penalties;

3. When the state is convinced that an accused who is poor and “low-class” is guilty, and provided that exception no. 1 above does not apply, due process is less important than putting him on the fast-track to the noose.

Malaysia and Singapore are just simply two funny, intertwined brothers. Can’t find it here? Just cross the border and get it. Good simple free trade, but keep our freedom away from the Big Brother, hopefully.
 
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Malaysia and Singapore are just simply two funny, intertwined brothers. Can’t find it here? Just cross the border and get it. Good simple free trade, but keep our freedom away from the Big Brother, hopefully.

Banned books are popular. The more you ban, the ban people want to read.:D
 
Malaysia and Singapore are just simply two funny, intertwined brothers. Can’t find it here? Just cross the border and get it. Good simple free trade, but keep our freedom away from the Big Brother, hopefully.

Banned books are popular. The more you ban, the ban people want to read.:D

Exactly. The curiousity factor and the online factor never buzzed through their thick skulls. Now the whole world knows of this two books intended for different markets but have to be obtained from different countries. Bravo for their respective dumbing downs, we might still stand a chance.
 
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