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Breaking: Arrest allegation made against WP's Luke Koh

zeroo

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When you want to occupy public office, you must not have a "dark history".

These were the words of a reader who felt a wider audience should be made aware of a candidate's history.

The reader, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, felt the public should know that Mr Luke Koh, WP candidate for Nee Soon GRC, had been arrested before in connection with an acrimonious divorce.

Marriage records show Mr Koh has been married twice.

The New Paper understands he was arrested on Sept 16, 2012, after scaling the fence at his relative's landed property. An altercation ensued and the police were called in.

Mr Koh had been attempting to gain access to his family, who were then living at the relative's home.

WARNING

He was subsequently given a police warning for criminal trespass and breaching a personal protection order (PPO), which had been taken out against him earlier.

Under current laws, vulnerable adults - including wives and parents - who are at risk of abuse by family members can apply for a PPO, a court document requiring the abuse to stop. It forbids the abuser from further harming the victim and allows the police to arrest the abuser if the abuse continues.

Mr Koh's ex-wife and relatives declined to comment when approached.

TNP asked the reader why the 2012 incident is relevant now. The reader said that Mr Goh now wants to ascend to public office.

He said: "A person who wants to hold public office cannot have that kind of history behind him."

Why not alert the WP instead of the media?

"Why should I? It is a failure on their part if they do not exercise due diligence," he said.

He said he would have alerted the media if Mr Koh had belonged to any other party, too.

When approached, Mr Koh said personal matters were out of bounds and directed all questions to the WP spokesman.

The New Paper e-mailed the party and asked: How does WP respond to the reader's charge that the party had failed to exercise due diligence?

TNP followed up with a call to the WP spokesman but the party was not able to reply by press time.

Experts: Personal attacks on candidates may become norm if...

Even before campaigning for General Election 2015 started, political parties called for a clean fight focusing on issues, not personalities.

They argued for the speeches to be forward-looking, not about dredging up the ghosts of the past.

That utopian dream vanished even before Nomination Day on Sept 1.

An e-mail was sent to the media suggesting that an opposition candidate had been involved in an affair with a student in 2007.

The story of the allegation was published online and later edited to include the candidate's denial.

Days later, a newspaper apologised to the candidate for that report.

Once again, the call was repeated: Do not dredge up the past.

Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) chief Chee Soon Juan was more specific, saying that campaigning should steer clear of personal attacks.

In a July 27 entry on his blog, Dr Chee said of the imminent election: "In the interest of conducting a robust but positive campaign in the coming General Election, let us focus on the issues.

"My colleagues and I in the SDP promise to, in football parlance, play the ball not the man."

But the focus on the man was swift.

On Nomination Day, Ms Sim Ann, a member of the People's Action Party (PAP) team for Holland-Bukit Timah, highlighted Dr Chee's dispute with his former mentor, veteran politician Chiam See Tong, claiming that Dr Chee had kicked him out of the SDP in 1993.

Netizens, too, were not done. Videos of Mr Chiam's speech in Parliament in which he criticised Dr Chee went viral on social media.

The claims and counterclaims continued at rallies.

On the Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council saga, both Workers' Party (WP) and the PAP have accused each other of misrepresenting the facts.

Singapore Management University law don Eugene Tan told The New Paper that while such strong words featured prominently this GE, they might ultimately not sway voters' opinions.

Said Prof Tan: "When mentioned in the heat of the hustings, people may just see it as rhetoric or grandstanding."

What could be more damaging are attacks on the candidates' personality, added Prof Tan.

ALLEGATIONS

Since the start of the election season, many members of the public have sent the media a buffet of allegations involving candidates.

There was one that detailed how one candidate had behaved like a gangster with a taxi driver.

Another raised a candidate's alleged arrest after a home intrusion. (See report right.)

Another questioned a candidate's position on gay rights and his association with a religious movement that opposed a Pink Dot event.

Said Prof Tan: "As the stakes get higher, individuals might feel tempted to resort to these tactics because they feel it might deliver a fatal blow to the candidate's electability."

Observers said when a person aspires to hold public office, he can expect to be the subject of public scrutiny. Even over past indiscretions.

National University of Singapore political scientist Reuben Wong said these methods exist because Singapore's emphasis on an office-holder's moral standing is unique in the world.

Said Prof Wong: "It has something to do with the Lee Kuan Yew legacy, in which people have a puritanical ideal of who their leaders should be. It is a strange, almost Victorian, legacy.

"People (in Singapore) wouldn't expect a CEO to quit because of his indiscretions, but they would if a political leader did it."

Prof Wong and Prof Tan warn that such "character assassinations" may become the norm in future elections because they are a proven tactic.

They pointed out the incidents in 2012 involving WP's Yaw Shin Leong and PAP's Michael Palmer.

Both were former MPs who had to vacate their seats that year due to scandals involving extramarital affairs.

Said Prof Wong: "People see that it is effective (to create a scandal), so they will continue using the tactic as long as it works... that is how politics can turn personal."

Do such strategies work?

NUS sociologist Tan Ern Ser said: "An election is a zero-sum game; hence, some people would use whatever methods available to discredit their opponents, with the hope of putting them out of action, preferably from the start."

People (in Singapore) wouldn't expect a CEO to quit because of his indiscretions, but they would if a political leader did it.

- NUS political scientist Reuben Wong

- See more at: http://www.tnp.sg/news/singapore-ne...ade-against-wps-luke-koh#sthash.WKSI14qP.dpuf
 
Voters in opposition held electorates should henceforth BOYCOTT ALL PA activities and make them redundant.

When the PAP is no longer the govt, DISBAND the PA and blacklist and remove all PA leaders inclusive of relatives/in laws.
Form a new Singapore Citizens Association (SCA) to replace the hated PAP infested PA.


A lot of other organisations got to be cleansed of the pus, rot and corruptions injected by PAPs.
Especially the law courts and the media

But first get the fucking PAPs out

Now is not the time to rest.
You have all the rest that you want after the elections.
Keep fighting hard and give no quarters
Keep talking to all your friends and relatives and neighbours
Keep talking to them how PAP screwed us Singaporeans up so they can laugh all the way to their banks
GIVE NO QUARTERS
TAKE NO PRISONERS
KICK OUT ALL THE FUCKING PAPs


"If I lose one or more of my Heavyweight Ministars in a freak election, we will be Finished!"

Nobody dare to talk this kind of garang talk anymore? :rolleyes:


Is there even one PAP ministar who is not a clown or a flea weight Minister?
The combined efforts of all the PAP ministars cannot match the productivity of a 85 year old collecting cardboard , and thats done only as exercise

BUM_2599.jpg


Can any of the PAP bastards point out just one heavy weight PAP minister, and what the fuck he had done to claim that title of heavy weight?

Not even one can be named?

Then that fucking statement about Heavyweight ministers just another of the fucking lies PAP have been giving all of us together with their usual lies

KICK OUT ALL THE CORRUPT ROTTEN PAP BASTARDS


The tsunami to cleanse Stinkapore into Singapore is building up
But do not take it easy
Continue your efforts all the way and make it happen

Please be statesmen
Keep your eye on the ball.
The worse enemy of Singaporeans is the corrupt rotten PAPs trying to create their Stinkapore
We are in the battle of our life and your family lifes and for Singapore.
Regardless which party affiliation, WP, SDP, RP, NSP ,SPP or any other party or Independent
Do not run down any oppositions
Keep your eye on the ball
Support ALL OPPOSITIONS
Attack the PAP and only the PAP as they are the rotten bastards
Fight for Singaporeans Singapore


Singaporeans man your battle stations!
Singapore needs you now!

Put your support for Singapore on Facebook
Twitter to your friends
WhatsApp to your friends
Get a tsunami of support for Singapore Singaporeans


OPPOSITIONS ARE THE DIFFERENT FACES OF THE TRUE SINGAPORE
PAP IS THE FACE OF SEPTIC OVERFLOWING TOILET BOWLS AND CORRUPTIONS AND OF STINKAPORE




Cleanse PAP Stinkapore into Singaporeans Singapore.
Vote only opposition
Vote out all the fucking corrupt PAPs


This fight is not just your voting for opposition, any opposition against the PAP
Singaporeans must do much more than just relying on their single vote.
Give them the money to support them in the fight.
Give them your time and energy to support them in the fight
They fight for you Singaporeans
They fight our common enemy
They fight the PAP and cronies, corrupt and rotten to the core, who stole over 180 billions from Singaporeans, and intent on stealing even more from us.


Support Opposition, any Opposition, all Opposition
Regardless if they have primary school, or O levels or A levels or PhD
Regardless if they wear singlets, or tuxedos
Support Opposition, any Opposition, all Opposition
Regardless if they wear slippers, or wear sneakers or shoes
Support Opposition, any Opposition, all Opposition
Even if a rat crawl out of a sewer and stand as Opposition
Even if a cockroach with 6 legs and 2 long feelers at the head become Opposition
They will be much better for Singaporeans than the fucking corrupt perverted PAPs who only think of laughing all the way to their banks and back from the banks
Under the fucking PAP, Singaporeans are the 4th class citizens in their own land stolen from them by PAP
PAPs are the 2nd class citizens with the Lee family as the first class aristocrazies
Fts are taken in as the 3rd class citizens kicking singaporeans into the 4th class and sinkies good only to go head down down and arseholes up high high to be fucked and tiewed by PAPs laughing all the way to their banks.

 
His offences baru peanuts and small boys' type, compared to what the ministers are doing daily - robbing the people of S'pore.
 
Which fcuker go and smear WP? For fcuk?? Sembawang was already safe!!!!! Fcuk!!

Now grassroots quaking in fear that some bloody opposition guy may suddenly want to discuss about shanmugam's divorce or some other PAP's personal issue.
 
dirt and filth will always be there
skeletons in closet also kana taken out
if you want to be a politician
make sure you are damned
damned squeaky clean and even that
a little dust on your white shirt
can still stain your future and your chances

pap are all spotlessly clean
they are all good and honest men
they are truthful and they are upright
they speak with humility and confidence
they dress well and they dress with utter simplicity

I think all the PAP present themselves very well
Singaporeans will not be fooled by the OPPO outbursts and theatricals
on polling day , they will all wake up, and vote for the PAP!!!
 
Man with a dark history of fxxking up his own family, is his own problem.

Man with a clean history but fxxk up my family, is my problem.

:D
 
theonlinecitizen
1 hr ·
On gutter politics and election coverage. As Cherian George commented: "The real scandal here is not what one candidate did, but what reporters in our government-supervised national media are being made to do and why."

Gutter journalism: The New Paper “chut pattern”

As Dr George points out, The New Paper runs an analysis piece next to the Luke Koh story as if to say they’re merely covering the issue of personal attacks and gutter politics. (The online version is even more blatant, leading with Koh’s story.)

This sort of wink-wink-nudge-nudge gutter journalism should have no place in Singapore. Was the journalist – we don’t know which journalist, as there is no byline – ordered to write the piece? If so, who ordered it? Which editor made the decision to publish such a piece, and for what reason? Would this have been done for a PAP candidate? (Remember how we were all asked to respect the privacy of Michael Palmer?)

If a paper wants to take a stand, it should have the guts to do it via an editorial, like the papers in the United Kingdom do. Declare openly for a party. Explain why. And let the readers judge you for it. Don’t pretend you’re highlighting an interesting story or important point for voters to be aware of, and oh by the way, here’s some shit we dug up on an opposition candidate. Just FYI.

Of course, in the media climate that Singapore has, where the incumbent government is able to determine key positions within organisations like Singapore Press Holdings, we would simply have every mainstream paper publishing editorials exhorting Singaporeans to vote PAP.

Which leads us to the bigger problem: the lack of press freedom in Singapore. Although websites have flourished online providing us with alternative perspectives and more opposition voices, the traditional outlets still continue to dominate in terms of news-gathering and reach. The number of Singaporeans – particularly from the older generation – who continue to get their news from the television and newspapers is not insignificant.

Although there have been observations that mainstream media coverage of opposition parties and rallies have generally improved since before the days of social media, Singapore still has a long way to go before the mainstream media can truly become a platform for mature and informed discussion.

http://www.theonlinecitizen.com/2015/09/gutter-journalism-the-new-paper-chut-pattern/
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tharman_Shanmugaratnam

[h=3]Legal charge and conviction[edit][/h]While serving as Economic Director of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) in 1993, Tharman was charged under the Official Secrets Act (OSA) in a case involving the release of Singapore's 1992 second-quarter flash projections to a research director, Raymond Foo, and economist Manu Bhaskaran, of Crosby Securities, and to journalists Kenneth James and Patrick Daniel of the Business Times.[SUP][9]
[/SUP]
The OSA case, which stretched over more than a year, was reported extensively in the Singapore press. Tharman contested and was eventually acquitted of the charge of communicating the GDP growth flash projections. Senior District Judge Richard Magnus then introduced a lesser charge of negligence, because the prosecution's case was that the figures were seen on a document that he had with him at a meeting with the private economists which he had attended with one of his colleagues. Tharman contested this lesser charge too, and took to the witness stand for a few days.

The court nevertheless convicted him together with all the others in the case, including the editor of Business Times newspaper which published the figures. Tharman was fined S$1,500, and the others S$2,000. As there was no finding that he knowingly communicated any classified information, the case did not pose any hurdle to his subsequent appointment as the Chief Executive of the MAS.
 
http://news.asiaone.com/news/singapore/pap-member-josephus-tan-debunks-talk-him-running-elections

PAP member Josephus Tan debunks talk of him running for elections - See more at: http://news.asiaone.com/news/singap...lk-him-running-elections#sthash.O67ulbUC.dpuf

He was a teen gangster, his bad drinking habits often landing him in trouble.

His life-changing moment came when he was 22, after he flew into an alcoholic rage.

"I nearly threw my girlfriend off the balcony but my father wrestled me to the ground and slapped me twice," he said."That woke me up.

It was my best of times, also my worst of times."His father died of multiple cancers two years ago."I went to Phuket to grieve soon after he died," said Mr Tan.

"That was where I tattooed two line from his favourite song, Nella Fantasia, on my forearms."'Io sogno d'anime che sono sempre libere' which is Italian for 'I dream of souls that are always free' and 'Pien' d'umanità in fondo all'anima' which means 'Full of humanity in the depths of the soul'.

"For his help in Chong Pang, Mr Tan was awarded a Certificate of Appreciation by Law and Foreign Affairs Minister K. Shanmugam, who is also a Member of Parliament for the ward. - See more at:

http://news.asiaone.com/news/singap...lk-him-running-elections#sthash.O67ulbUC.dpuf
 
np_20150909_jeluke-oh5_994496.jpg



When you want to occupy public office, you must not have a "dark history".

These were the words of a reader who felt a wider audience should be made aware of a candidate's history.

The reader, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, felt the public should know that Mr Luke Koh, WP candidate for Nee Soon GRC, had been arrested before in connection with an acrimonious divorce.

Marriage records show Mr Koh has been married twice.

The New Paper understands he was arrested on Sept 16, 2012, after scaling the fence at his relative's landed property. An altercation ensued and the police were called in.

Mr Koh had been attempting to gain access to his family, who were then living at the relative's home.

WARNING

He was subsequently given a police warning for criminal trespass and breaching a personal protection order (PPO), which had been taken out against him earlier.

Under current laws, vulnerable adults - including wives and parents - who are at risk of abuse by family members can apply for a PPO, a court document requiring the abuse to stop. It forbids the abuser from further harming the victim and allows the police to arrest the abuser if the abuse continues.

Mr Koh's ex-wife and relatives declined to comment when approached.

TNP asked the reader why the 2012 incident is relevant now. The reader said that Mr Goh now wants to ascend to public office.

He said: "A person who wants to hold public office cannot have that kind of history behind him."

Why not alert the WP instead of the media?

"Why should I? It is a failure on their part if they do not exercise due diligence," he said.

He said he would have alerted the media if Mr Koh had belonged to any other party, too.

When approached, Mr Koh said personal matters were out of bounds and directed all questions to the WP spokesman.

The New Paper e-mailed the party and asked: How does WP respond to the reader's charge that the party had failed to exercise due diligence?

TNP followed up with a call to the WP spokesman but the party was not able to reply by press time.

Experts: Personal attacks on candidates may become norm if...

Even before campaigning for General Election 2015 started, political parties called for a clean fight focusing on issues, not personalities.

They argued for the speeches to be forward-looking, not about dredging up the ghosts of the past.

That utopian dream vanished even before Nomination Day on Sept 1.

An e-mail was sent to the media suggesting that an opposition candidate had been involved in an affair with a student in 2007.

The story of the allegation was published online and later edited to include the candidate's denial.

Days later, a newspaper apologised to the candidate for that report.

Once again, the call was repeated: Do not dredge up the past.

Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) chief Chee Soon Juan was more specific, saying that campaigning should steer clear of personal attacks.

In a July 27 entry on his blog, Dr Chee said of the imminent election: "In the interest of conducting a robust but positive campaign in the coming General Election, let us focus on the issues.

"My colleagues and I in the SDP promise to, in football parlance, play the ball not the man."

But the focus on the man was swift.

On Nomination Day, Ms Sim Ann, a member of the People's Action Party (PAP) team for Holland-Bukit Timah, highlighted Dr Chee's dispute with his former mentor, veteran politician Chiam See Tong, claiming that Dr Chee had kicked him out of the SDP in 1993.

Netizens, too, were not done. Videos of Mr Chiam's speech in Parliament in which he criticised Dr Chee went viral on social media.

The claims and counterclaims continued at rallies.

On the Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council saga, both Workers' Party (WP) and the PAP have accused each other of misrepresenting the facts.

Singapore Management University law don Eugene Tan told The New Paper that while such strong words featured prominently this GE, they might ultimately not sway voters' opinions.

Said Prof Tan: "When mentioned in the heat of the hustings, people may just see it as rhetoric or grandstanding."

What could be more damaging are attacks on the candidates' personality, added Prof Tan.

ALLEGATIONS

Since the start of the election season, many members of the public have sent the media a buffet of allegations involving candidates.

There was one that detailed how one candidate had behaved like a gangster with a taxi driver.

Another raised a candidate's alleged arrest after a home intrusion. (See report right.)

Another questioned a candidate's position on gay rights and his association with a religious movement that opposed a Pink Dot event.

Said Prof Tan: "As the stakes get higher, individuals might feel tempted to resort to these tactics because they feel it might deliver a fatal blow to the candidate's electability."

Observers said when a person aspires to hold public office, he can expect to be the subject of public scrutiny. Even over past indiscretions.

National University of Singapore political scientist Reuben Wong said these methods exist because Singapore's emphasis on an office-holder's moral standing is unique in the world.

Said Prof Wong: "It has something to do with the Lee Kuan Yew legacy, in which people have a puritanical ideal of who their leaders should be. It is a strange, almost Victorian, legacy.

"People (in Singapore) wouldn't expect a CEO to quit because of his indiscretions, but they would if a political leader did it."

Prof Wong and Prof Tan warn that such "character assassinations" may become the norm in future elections because they are a proven tactic.

They pointed out the incidents in 2012 involving WP's Yaw Shin Leong and PAP's Michael Palmer.

Both were former MPs who had to vacate their seats that year due to scandals involving extramarital affairs.

Said Prof Wong: "People see that it is effective (to create a scandal), so they will continue using the tactic as long as it works... that is how politics can turn personal."

Do such strategies work?

NUS sociologist Tan Ern Ser said: "An election is a zero-sum game; hence, some people would use whatever methods available to discredit their opponents, with the hope of putting them out of action, preferably from the start."

People (in Singapore) wouldn't expect a CEO to quit because of his indiscretions, but they would if a political leader did it.

- NUS political scientist Reuben Wong

- See more at: http://www.tnp.sg/news/singapore-ne...ade-against-wps-luke-koh#sthash.WKSI14qP.dpuf

fucker. Like you re loyal to your wife meh?
 
[video=youtube;NXcJL7f0Mw8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PLFdz1z4d8v5l4ZCp9BXfvtgRxb9kCLXQ0&t=216&v=NXcJL7f0Mw8[/video]
 
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