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British man to Makan 24 lashes of Rotan in Changi Hilton for drug offences. Guess the race? No, not AMDK!

Wayne Piew

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British man serving 20 years in jail in Singapore sentenced to 24 lashes
https://www.msn.com/en-sg/news/worl...otings-rises-to-24/ar-BBS7HzR?ocid=spartandhp
A British man already serving 20 years in prison in Singapore has also been sentenced to 24 lashes for drug offences, the harshest caning sentence that can be handed out in the country.
Ye Ming Yuen was first arrested in August 2016 and was convicted for seven drug offences.
The flogging sentence requires him to be tied, naked, to a wooden trestle and hit with a four foot long cane.
The Foreign and Commonwealth Office confirmed that Jeremy Hunt, Britain’s Foreign Secretary, had personally raised the case during a meeting with Vivian Balakrishnan, his Singaporean counterpart, earlier this month.
“We strongly oppose the use of corporal punishment, such as caning, in all cases,” an FCO spokesperson said.
“Our consular staff have been assisting a British man and his family since his arrest in Singapore in 2016”
The 29-year-old was originally facing the death penalty but the capital sentence charge was dropped because the weight of the drugs involved was below 500g, according to the Daily Mail.
BBS86n7.img

© Provided by Independent Digital News & Media Limited

His offences include two counts of repeat drug trafficking – one of 69g and one of 60g of cannabis.
Mr Yuen’s family have described his caning sentence as “a form of torture”.
He is serving his sentence at Singapore’s Changi prison.
 
STRIPPED AND FLOGGED British ex-public schoolboy at centre of major diplomatic row after being sentenced to naked caning for drug offences in Singapore
Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt has said Britain 'strongly opposes the use of corporal punishment' on London-born Ye Ming Yuen
By Erica Doyle Higgins
12th January 2019, 12:26 am
Updated: 12th January 2019, 1:30 am
A BRITISH ex-public schoolboy is at the centre of a diplomatic row after he was sentenced to naked caning in Singapore.
London-born Ye Ming Yuen has been sentenced to naked flogging and 20 years in jail after reportedly being convicted of seven drug offences, including trafficking.
INSTAGRAM / MING_SG
3
London-born Ye Ming Yuen has been sentenced to naked flogging
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The sentence has forced the intervention of Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt and officials who have insisted they "strongly oppose the use of corporal punishment".
Yuen, 29, who went to a £37,000-a-year Westminster school, will reportedly be stripped naked and strapped to a large wooden trestle.

According to the Daily Mail, his buttocks will be flogged 24 times with a 4ft-long rattan cane.
The punishment is the maximum caning sentence that can be handed out in Singapore.
INSTAGRAM / MING_SG
3
Yuen, 29, who went to a £37,000-a-year Westminster school, will reportedly be stripped naked and strapped to a large wooden trestle
It's reported Yuen was originally facing the death penalty but the capital charge was dropped because the net weight of the drugs involved was below 500g.
The club DJ is currently being held at Changi Prison and was first arrested over drug offences in August 2016, it's reported.

According to the report, his offences include two counts of "repeat drug trafficking" - one of 69g and one of 60g of cannabis. Another offence included drug trafficking of 15g of crystal meth.
Yuen, who achieved 11 GCSEs while at the Westminster School before falling in with the "wrong crowd, told the Mail: "I was misled in my youth, in an environment surrounded by drugs, to fall into the dark lure of addiction, oblivious to the hold it had on me."
INSTAGRAM / MING_SG
3
The club DJ's sister said the authorities don't give any advance warning of caning and said it is 'mentally torturous' as it 'could happen any day'
Yuen's sister told the paper that on two occasions prison guards went to impose his caning sentence in December "without warning" but he said it was against his human rights and they didn't proceed with the punishment.
But she said the authorities don't give any advance warning of caning and said it is "mentally torturous" as it "could happen any day".
Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt raised Yuen's case with Singapore's Minister for Foreign Affairs Vivian Balakrishnan while visiting the country last week, it's claimed, and Foreign Office officials have made representations on the British man's behalf.
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In a statement, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office said: "Our consular staff have been assisting a British man and his family since his arrest in Singapore in 2016. We strongly oppose the use of corporal punishment, such as caning, in all cases."
A spokesman for the Singapore High Commission in London told the Mail that Singapore uses the "strictest enforcement" and "severest penalties" in drug offences to protect the welfare of the public and to "raise our children in a safe oasis".
The Sun Online has approached the Foreign Office and and the High Commission for comment.
 
British ex-public schoolboy, 29, is at the centre of diplomatic row after Singapore sentences him to 'barbaric' 24 strokes of the cane on his bare buttocks over drugs offences

  • Ye Ming Yuen, 29, will be stripped naked and strapped to a large wooden trestle
  • The 29-year-old buttocks will be flogged 24 times with a 4ft-long rattan cane
  • London-born Yuen went to £37,000-a-year Westminster School in the capital
  • Has also been ordered to serve 20 years in jail after drug offences conviction

A British ex-public schoolboy is at the centre of a major diplomatic row after being sentenced to 24 strokes of the cane for drugs offences in Singapore.

The case has sparked a rift between Singapore and the UK, which traditionally have close ties.

It has also prompted the intervention of Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt and his officials, who made clear they ‘strongly oppose the use of corporal punishment’.


8416882-6582971-London_born_Ye_Ming_Yuen_29_has_also_been_ordered_to_serve_20_ye-a-1_1547243508686.jpg



London-born Ye Ming Yuen, 29, has also been ordered to serve 20 years in jail after being convicted of seven drug offences, including trafficking
London-born Ye Ming Yuen, 29, who went to £37,000-a-year Westminster School, will be stripped naked and strapped to a large wooden trestle.

Then his buttocks will be flogged 24 times with a 4ft-long rattan cane.

His ‘judicial corporal punishment’ –which will be inflicted by a ‘trained caner’ taught how to cause the most pain possible – is the maximum caning sentence that can be handed out in Singapore and could leave him scarred for life.

Yuen has also been ordered to serve 20 years in jail after being convicted of seven drug offences, including trafficking.

8416880-6582971-Yuen_pictured_at_school_29_who_went_to_37_000_a_year_Westminster-a-2_1547243510549.jpg



Yuen (pictured at school), 29, who went to £37,000-a-year Westminster School, will be stripped naked and strapped to a large wooden trestle.

He was originally facing the death penalty but the capital charge was dropped because the net weight of drugs involved was below 500g.

Last night Yuen’s family branded the caning sentence as ‘barbaric’ and ‘a form of torture’, and begged authorities in the former Crown colony – renowned for its no-nonsense approach to law enforcement – to grant him clemency.

Mr Hunt raised Yuen’s case with Singapore’s minister for foreign affairs, Vivian Balakrishnan, while visiting the country last week, and since then Foreign Office officials have made representations on Yuen’s behalf. Human rights groups have condemned Singapore’s use of the cane, saying it breaches the United Nations Convention Against Torture.

Yuen – first arrested over drugs offences in August 2016 – is being held at Changi prison. According to his family, who live in the UK, the only furniture he has in his cell, where he spends 22 hours a day, is a bamboo mat. He is allowed only two visits from family per month.

His younger sister, a 28-year-old development manager, said: ‘Without warning, the prison guards knocked on his cell to impose his caning sentence in early December. Ming exclaimed it was against his human rights. After hearing this, they did not proceed with the punishment.

8416878-6582971-Yuen_s_judicial_corporal_punishment_which_will_be_inflicted_by_a-a-3_1547243510549.jpg


Yuen's ‘judicial corporal punishment’ – which will be inflicted by a ‘trained caner’ taught how to cause the most pain possible. Pictured is a Changi prison officer using a dummy to demonstrate how inmates are caned.

‘The prison guards went to get him again two weeks later. Ming repeated the same explanation, and again the caning did not proceed.

‘The authorities do not give advance warning of caning which is mentally torturous. It could happen any day.’

Details of Yuen’s plight are outlined in his handwritten appeal submission, in which he asked for a reduced sentence of eight and a half years and 15 strokes of the cane.

Human rights groups say caning in Singapore is a violation of international law and breaches the United Nations Convention Against Torture.

They insist that although Singapore has not ratified the convention, the prohibition on torture and cruel inhuman treatment is universal, called a ‘jus cogens’ norm, which means no domestic law can contradict it.

In 2015, the International Commission of Jurists, a human rights group, condemned the Singapore Court of Appeal for declining to say caning was unlawful.

The court also said caning did not ‘breach the high threshold of severity and brutality that is required for it to be regarded as torture’.

Caning in Singapore is mandatory in dozens of offences including attempted murder and rape. Only medically fit men aged 16 to 50 are caned.

Offenders sentenced to death are not caned.

A former top club DJ in Singapore, his offences include two counts of ‘repeat drug trafficking’ – one of 69g and one of 60g of cannabis. Another offence included drug trafficking of 15g of crystal meth. In his failed appeal bid, he said: ‘Should a shorter sentence be imposed, it would allow me to remain useful in society.

‘I was misled in my youth, in an environment surrounded by drugs, to fall into the dark lure of addiction, oblivious to the hold it had on me.’ Before moving to Singapore in 2007, Yuen – the son of a marketing consultant from China and a Singapore-born marketing executive – was a pupil at Dulwich Prep School in South London and then Westminster School, whose alumni include Nick Clegg, Peter Ustinov and John Gielgud.

At Westminster School he gained 11 GCSEs – four A*s, six As, and one B. But while at the top public school he ‘got in with the wrong crowd’ and ended up in trouble with the Metropolitan Police.

In 2007, it emerged that Yuen was wanted by Scotland Yard over an alleged forged driving licences scam. A newspaper tracked him down to Singapore, where he reportedly admitted that he manufactured fake documents and sold them to pupils.

The Foreign and Commonwealth Office said: ‘Our consular staff have been assisting a British man and his family since his arrest in Singapore in 2016. We strongly oppose the use of corporal punishment, such as caning, in all cases.’

A spokesman for the Singapore High Commission in London said: ‘Singapore deals with the drug problem comprehensively with the strictest enforcement coupled with the severest of penalties to protect the welfare of the public and our collective aspiration to live and raise our children in a safe oasis.’
 
They should ban this inhumane punishment. The rotan or caning. Its a form of torture.
 
They should ban this inhumane punishment. The rotan or caning. Its a form of torture.
N these drug peddlers are doing society a favour n not giving undue hardship to its customers? N singkieland is really going down the dumps. Why don't just execute his as b4? He smuggled drugs twice. Should have just hang him. Cane him etc still have to feed him n give him medical care. Waste of resources
 
They should ban this inhumane punishment. The rotan or caning. Its a form of torture.
For such crimes it should just be execution. It's the best form of deterrent bcos he will not commit the crime again. N drugs destroys life.
 
This Chink is a serial criminal who has committed fraud back in 2007

Teen conman flees Britain after £100,000 fake driving licence scam
Saturday 11 August 2007 21:52

ES News Email

A former public school boy, wanted for a £100,000 forged driving licences scam, has been tracked down by The Mail on Sunday.
After we found him in Singapore, Ye-Ming Yuen, who went to £25,000-a-year Westminster School, admitted to us that he manufactured fake documents and sold them to pupils from other top fee-paying schools.
The forgeries enabled the teenagers to buy alcohol at pubs and off-licences by concealing their true age.
Scroll down for more
Ye-Ming Yuen fled Britain after making £100,000 from a fake driving licence scam
Detectives believe at least 4,000 licences - which are laminated and show up as fakes only when an ultraviolet light reveals the absence of a watermark - were produced over two years and sold for between £15 and £25 each.

So far, 40 have been recovered by police in Wimbledon alone after pupils were found in possession of them.
When police went to Yuen's family home in Putney, South-West London, they were told he had left for the Far East.
We found 18-year-old Yuen at Home Club, a Singapore nightclub where he has worked as a resident DJ under the name DJ Ming since April.
Were you a victim of the teenage conman? Tell us in readers' comments below...
Admitting he was the ringleader of the scam, he said he had done it to fund his party lifestyle.
He said: "I'm sorry for what I did. I regret it now. But it was such an easy way to make money and my friends and I were so desperate to get into the clubs.
"I was a slave to the club culture and so were all my mates but we did not have the money and were too young.
"The first driving licence I did for myself when I was 16, making myself two years older.
"Then I did one for a friend at Westminster. Soon there was a big market for them at £25 a time. Everybody wanted them."
The London-born teenager said he was now living with an uncle and doing a graduate course in advertising design.
Police in London heard about the market in fake driving licences after pubs and off-licences began confiscating the high-quality forgeries and handing them in last year.
When police questioned underage drinkers about where they had got them, one name kept cropping up.
Sergeant Adrian Sutherland said: "These were very good copies of driving licences done on a home computer.
"It seems the individual concerned had downloaded a template from the internet and added a photo and false details, including a false date of birth to make them over 18.
"Through questioning some of the teenagers we found with the fake licences we got a name but when we went to the address in May we found he had already gone to Singapore."
He added: "Most customers are from public schools in the Greater London area, although it is a problem that spans the whole of the south of England."
The teenagers found with the fakes have mostly been dealt with by reprimands.
Yuen, who transferred to Graveney School in Tooting, South-West London, after his GCSEs, lived with his family in a modest terrace house in Putney.
Scroll down for more
Ye-Ming Yuen said he invented the scam to fund his party lifestyle
He added: "Soon everybody wanted them. I was making about £1,000 a week but I was just being silly with the money.
"I spent lots of it on computer stuff and the rest on taking my friends out.
"They all knew I was rich so I was expected to pay most of the bills.
"I had to leave Westminster because my father (a Chinese national) lost a lot of money on some bad investments.
"When I finally left the country, after paying my air fare I only had £300 in my pocket."
A former Westminster classmate said: "I know he was making a lot of money out of it. The sale of ID cards goes on in every school I know of."
Under the 2006 Fraud Act, supplying an article for use in fraud carries a maximum penalty of ten years in prison.
A Metropolitan Police spokeswoman said: "We can confirm that officers are investigating the alleged production and supply of forged documentation."
 
British ex-public schoolboy, 29, is at the centre of diplomatic row after Singapore sentences him to 'barbaric' 24 strokes of the cane on his bare buttocks over drugs offences

  • Ye Ming Yuen, 29, will be stripped naked and strapped to a large wooden trestle
  • The 29-year-old buttocks will be flogged 24 times with a 4ft-long rattan cane
  • London-born Yuen went to £37,000-a-year Westminster School in the capital
  • Has also been ordered to serve 20 years in jail after drug offences conviction

A British ex-public schoolboy is at the centre of a major diplomatic row after being sentenced to 24 strokes of the cane for drugs offences in Singapore.

The case has sparked a rift between Singapore and the UK, which traditionally have close ties.

It has also prompted the intervention of Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt and his officials, who made clear they ‘strongly oppose the use of corporal punishment’.


8416882-6582971-London_born_Ye_Ming_Yuen_29_has_also_been_ordered_to_serve_20_ye-a-1_1547243508686.jpg



London-born Ye Ming Yuen, 29, has also been ordered to serve 20 years in jail after being convicted of seven drug offences, including trafficking
London-born Ye Ming Yuen, 29, who went to £37,000-a-year Westminster School, will be stripped naked and strapped to a large wooden trestle.

Then his buttocks will be flogged 24 times with a 4ft-long rattan cane.

His ‘judicial corporal punishment’ –which will be inflicted by a ‘trained caner’ taught how to cause the most pain possible – is the maximum caning sentence that can be handed out in Singapore and could leave him scarred for life.

Yuen has also been ordered to serve 20 years in jail after being convicted of seven drug offences, including trafficking.

8416880-6582971-Yuen_pictured_at_school_29_who_went_to_37_000_a_year_Westminster-a-2_1547243510549.jpg



Yuen (pictured at school), 29, who went to £37,000-a-year Westminster School, will be stripped naked and strapped to a large wooden trestle.

He was originally facing the death penalty but the capital charge was dropped because the net weight of drugs involved was below 500g.

Last night Yuen’s family branded the caning sentence as ‘barbaric’ and ‘a form of torture’, and begged authorities in the former Crown colony – renowned for its no-nonsense approach to law enforcement – to grant him clemency.

Mr Hunt raised Yuen’s case with Singapore’s minister for foreign affairs, Vivian Balakrishnan, while visiting the country last week, and since then Foreign Office officials have made representations on Yuen’s behalf. Human rights groups have condemned Singapore’s use of the cane, saying it breaches the United Nations Convention Against Torture.

Yuen – first arrested over drugs offences in August 2016 – is being held at Changi prison. According to his family, who live in the UK, the only furniture he has in his cell, where he spends 22 hours a day, is a bamboo mat. He is allowed only two visits from family per month.

His younger sister, a 28-year-old development manager, said: ‘Without warning, the prison guards knocked on his cell to impose his caning sentence in early December. Ming exclaimed it was against his human rights. After hearing this, they did not proceed with the punishment.

8416878-6582971-Yuen_s_judicial_corporal_punishment_which_will_be_inflicted_by_a-a-3_1547243510549.jpg


Yuen's ‘judicial corporal punishment’ – which will be inflicted by a ‘trained caner’ taught how to cause the most pain possible. Pictured is a Changi prison officer using a dummy to demonstrate how inmates are caned.

‘The prison guards went to get him again two weeks later. Ming repeated the same explanation, and again the caning did not proceed.

‘The authorities do not give advance warning of caning which is mentally torturous. It could happen any day.’

Details of Yuen’s plight are outlined in his handwritten appeal submission, in which he asked for a reduced sentence of eight and a half years and 15 strokes of the cane.

Human rights groups say caning in Singapore is a violation of international law and breaches the United Nations Convention Against Torture.

They insist that although Singapore has not ratified the convention, the prohibition on torture and cruel inhuman treatment is universal, called a ‘jus cogens’ norm, which means no domestic law can contradict it.

In 2015, the International Commission of Jurists, a human rights group, condemned the Singapore Court of Appeal for declining to say caning was unlawful.

The court also said caning did not ‘breach the high threshold of severity and brutality that is required for it to be regarded as torture’.

Caning in Singapore is mandatory in dozens of offences including attempted murder and rape. Only medically fit men aged 16 to 50 are caned.

Offenders sentenced to death are not caned.

A former top club DJ in Singapore, his offences include two counts of ‘repeat drug trafficking’ – one of 69g and one of 60g of cannabis. Another offence included drug trafficking of 15g of crystal meth. In his failed appeal bid, he said: ‘Should a shorter sentence be imposed, it would allow me to remain useful in society.

‘I was misled in my youth, in an environment surrounded by drugs, to fall into the dark lure of addiction, oblivious to the hold it had on me.’ Before moving to Singapore in 2007, Yuen – the son of a marketing consultant from China and a Singapore-born marketing executive – was a pupil at Dulwich Prep School in South London and then Westminster School, whose alumni include Nick Clegg, Peter Ustinov and John Gielgud.

At Westminster School he gained 11 GCSEs – four A*s, six As, and one B. But while at the top public school he ‘got in with the wrong crowd’ and ended up in trouble with the Metropolitan Police.

In 2007, it emerged that Yuen was wanted by Scotland Yard over an alleged forged driving licences scam. A newspaper tracked him down to Singapore, where he reportedly admitted that he manufactured fake documents and sold them to pupils.

The Foreign and Commonwealth Office said: ‘Our consular staff have been assisting a British man and his family since his arrest in Singapore in 2016. We strongly oppose the use of corporal punishment, such as caning, in all cases.’

A spokesman for the Singapore High Commission in London said: ‘Singapore deals with the drug problem comprehensively with the strictest enforcement coupled with the severest of penalties to protect the welfare of the public and our collective aspiration to live and raise our children in a safe oasis.’
This criminal is no Saint n is a serial criminal. The death sentence will ensure society is kept safer as he will never commit the crime again. Pommie land should relearn from singkieland on capital punishment n it might be a safer place. Poms have no right to lecture singkieland about capital punishment when it's own country is going down the dumps with high Crime, trailer park trash n terrorism
 
Key Player: Ming Yuen
Singapore's top DJ gives Mixmag Asia the what's what on Singapore
Ming-lg.jpg

  • Olivia Wycech
  • 31 March 2015
Ming Yuen – Singapore’ s best DJ according to Juice Magazine, former resident at Zouk, former head of entertainment at Canvas and former sidekick of Audrey Choy. That’s a lot of formers but Ming is up to new antics in the smallest big city in the world. Originally from London, his jump to Singapore has proven lucrative as he’s the man behind much of Singapore’s bustling scene in one way or another. That or you will see him at all the best parties at least. Witty and down to earth, Ming talked to Mixmag Asia about just how competitive the scene in Singapore is and all the different ways he contributes to it.
ming-sm.jpg

How did you get started in the music industry?
The earliest recollection I have of there even being a music industry must have been at 16, raving like a lunatic to Andy C at Fabric. That got me into DJing, after that it completely consumed my life. I would be hustling for money to blow on vinyl, waiting till the end of the night to hand over mix-tapes to the MC (to little avail) wondering how everything worked.
At 17, I made the decision to leave behind my friends and family on an adventure that would take me to the opposite side of the world where I officially began my career in nightlife. My uncle owned a club in Singapore, and after deciding that London was getting a bit too indulgent, I packed my bags, shipped my vinyl, and said bon voyage.
The rest you can say is history.
What is the biggest impact or change you’ve made on the music industry in Singapore?
I like to think that when I left the UK, I brought a little bit of it with me. It’s quite commercial here. Now it’s EDM, before it was hip-pop, or top 40s.
Firstly, I’d like to point out, I hate the term ’underground’. But that’s where I made my mark, either fronting nights or behind the scenes supporting others across a spectrum of genres, trying to emulate the culture that I believe clubbing is all about. Bringing people together through music.
Besides that, in one word, I’d say, bass.
What is the most challenging thing about doing events in Singapore?
Competition. For such a small country, especially in smaller venues, there tend to be a lot of clashes where two, three or even more clubs will have forked up a sizeable sum to pay a DJ and at the end of the day, either all events suffer, or one prevails.
Externally we’re competing with other countries, and have to either pay slightly higher fees to cover the opportunity costs of the artist, or wait for the festival period where there’s a free-for-all, and one wrong booking could kill you.

What are you most proud of?
I’m not really a proud person, although I do love recognition, attention and generally think I’m the best. But most probably the most delightful surprise I received was winning the title of the country’s best DJ by Juice Magazine – the go-to publication on local nightlife. It was particularly an achievement because it was always the veterans of the scene who would cop it, but I had only been around for three years.
You were recently with Canvas for a spell, how did it come about and why did you leave?
Canvas is a creative space that operates primarily as a club and exhibition venue. It originally began as an off-shoot of the Bed Supperclub group (BKK) and was later brought to Singapore in a joint venture with Home Club. I was part of the transitioning team, joining as the Head of Entertainment.
It’s hard to describe what Canvas is. Partly because it is so many things, and partly because it isn’t. It literally is a blank Canvas. The architectural quirks, audio-visual technologies and permanent fixtures are there. Everything else is modular, as the space takes on its own life from week to week, catering to the needs of the community, which is something I’m a big believer in.
Originally I imagined Canvas to be the venue that preserved the quirks and nuances that existing within the scattered sub-cultures of the Island, re-building a group of like-minded individuals and pretty much letting the club write its own legacy. Unfortunately being the impatient idealistic visionary that I am, once it was clear that I wasn’t able to share my vision as well as I write it, and after a couple of “I got your back bro”/ “No, I doubt you even have one to support yourself, “, kind-of-exchanges, I amicably resigned and had a long $20,000 think about why counting cards turns out not to be that profitable.
ming-sm-2.jpg


What are you up to now that you’re not working regularly with Canvas?
Finding myself and fucking LinkedIn.
I’m not the easiest person to work with, but at the pinnacle of my frustration at Canvas, which in reality was more akin to a shallow three month ascent of miscommuni-stration (I made that word up), I was receiving a lot of anti-career propaganda, and when LinkedIn bombards you with articles such as ‘Ten reasons why you shouldn’t settle for comfort in your mid twenties’ or ‘Unengaged employees lower morale, if that’s you, leave’, one tends to listen.
Having not saved a single cent in the past forever, I’m ironically trying to cut down on DJing so often, but the curiosity between A/V and its role in a positive clubbing experience still lingers, so I’ve been brushing up on my motion graphic/ web/ interactive design work.
I still do a few parties, I recently had T.Williams over to play at a really intimate venue here, Kilo Lounge, which has got me thinking, ‘big DJs, small rooms’ , as the vibe was amazing there.
But currently I’m fucking LinkedIn… Not sexually, or in any metaphorical/physical way at all – just that if you do want to resign, they could at least have informed me, that money should exist in my bank and a preferably a new job with it.
What is your personal music policy when it comes to bookings your events?
It always depends on the purpose of the venue, as well as the individual. At Canvas because the club was new, most of the bookings would fit within the broad appeal, highly marketable, but not so expensive side of the House & Techno spectrum. When you’ve built up a night month after month, then you bring in the guilty pleasures.
It’s all about balance and a good angle that can be spun around the event. I like to have a good mix of up and coming artists, as well as your established pioneers falling short of the top 100 DJs list.
I’ll set a lot of personal costings and budgets that automatically rule out half of the acts I’d love to see here, and I tend to possess a bias for UK acts, but one rule is, the DJ has to be able to DJ.
I’ve had gigs where ‘Artist X’ is booked on the merit of the amazing tracks under their discography who’ve gone on to clear the dance floor, as well as cult-celebrities not being able to operate a CDJ.

What’s your typical day in Singapore like?
My day doesn’t end, and it’s never typical. During the early stages of Canvas, we had a very small team that had to cope with double the workload. Now it’s the more or less the same. My team shrunk to me, I wake up at my desk around 9am, save the work done overnight, and either walk opposite the road to the apartments for a nap, or head back to work.
I’m still looking for something that makes me happy, so if you’re an opinionated, open-minded, female placed at the cusp of the nightlife industry and a somewhat normal life, enjoy Game Of Thrones and risotto, please email me at [email protected].
 
Details of Yuen’s plight are outlined in his handwritten appeal submission, in which he asked for a reduced sentence of eight and a half years and 15 strokes of the cane.
Human rights groups say caning in Singapore constitutes torture
Human rights groups say caning in Singapore is a violation of international law and breaches the United Nations Convention Against Torture.
They insist that although Singapore has not ratified the convention, the prohibition on torture and cruel inhuman treatment is universal, called a ‘jus cogens’ norm, which means no domestic law can contradict it.
In 2015, the International Commission of Jurists, a human rights group, condemned the Singapore Court of Appeal for declining to say caning was unlawful.
The court also said caning did not ‘breach the high threshold of severity and brutality that is required for it to be regarded as torture’.
Caning in Singapore is mandatory in dozens of offences including attempted murder and rape. Only medically fit men aged 16 to 50 are caned.
Offenders sentenced to death are not caned.
A former top club DJ in Singapore, his offences include two counts of ‘repeat drug trafficking’ – one of 69g and one of 60g of cannabis. Another offence included drug trafficking of 15g of crystal meth. In his failed appeal bid, he said: ‘Should a shorter sentence be imposed, it would allow me to remain useful in society.
‘I was misled in my youth, in an environment surrounded by drugs, to fall into the dark lure of addiction, oblivious to the hold it had on me.’ Before moving to Singapore in 2007, Yuen – the son of a marketing consultant from China and a Singapore-born marketing executive – was a pupil at Dulwich Prep School in South London and then Westminster School, whose alumni include Nick Clegg, Peter Ustinov and John Gielgud.
At Westminster School he gained 11 GCSEs – four A*s, six As, and one B. But while at the top public school he ‘got in with the wrong crowd’ and ended up in trouble with the Metropolitan Police.
In 2007, it emerged that Yuen was wanted by Scotland Yard over an alleged forged driving licences scam. A newspaper tracked him down to Singapore, where he reportedly admitted that he manufactured fake documents and sold them to pupils.
 
Key Player: Ming Yuen
Singapore's top DJ gives Mixmag Asia the what's what on Singapore
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  • Olivia Wycech
  • 31 March 2015
Ming Yuen – Singapore’ s best DJ according to Juice Magazine, former resident at Zouk, former head of entertainment at Canvas and former sidekick of Audrey Choy. That’s a lot of formers but Ming is up to new antics in the smallest big city in the world. Originally from London, his jump to Singapore has proven lucrative as he’s the man behind much of Singapore’s bustling scene in one way or another. That or you will see him at all the best parties at least. Witty and down to earth, Ming talked to Mixmag Asia about just how competitive the scene in Singapore is and all the different ways he contributes to it.
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How did you get started in the music industry?
The earliest recollection I have of there even being a music industry must have been at 16, raving like a lunatic to Andy C at Fabric. That got me into DJing, after that it completely consumed my life. I would be hustling for money to blow on vinyl, waiting till the end of the night to hand over mix-tapes to the MC (to little avail) wondering how everything worked.
At 17, I made the decision to leave behind my friends and family on an adventure that would take me to the opposite side of the world where I officially began my career in nightlife. My uncle owned a club in Singapore, and after deciding that London was getting a bit too indulgent, I packed my bags, shipped my vinyl, and said bon voyage.
The rest you can say is history.
What is the biggest impact or change you’ve made on the music industry in Singapore?
I like to think that when I left the UK, I brought a little bit of it with me. It’s quite commercial here. Now it’s EDM, before it was hip-pop, or top 40s.
Firstly, I’d like to point out, I hate the term ’underground’. But that’s where I made my mark, either fronting nights or behind the scenes supporting others across a spectrum of genres, trying to emulate the culture that I believe clubbing is all about. Bringing people together through music.
Besides that, in one word, I’d say, bass.
What is the most challenging thing about doing events in Singapore?
Competition. For such a small country, especially in smaller venues, there tend to be a lot of clashes where two, three or even more clubs will have forked up a sizeable sum to pay a DJ and at the end of the day, either all events suffer, or one prevails.
Externally we’re competing with other countries, and have to either pay slightly higher fees to cover the opportunity costs of the artist, or wait for the festival period where there’s a free-for-all, and one wrong booking could kill you.

What are you most proud of?
I’m not really a proud person, although I do love recognition, attention and generally think I’m the best. But most probably the most delightful surprise I received was winning the title of the country’s best DJ by Juice Magazine – the go-to publication on local nightlife. It was particularly an achievement because it was always the veterans of the scene who would cop it, but I had only been around for three years.
You were recently with Canvas for a spell, how did it come about and why did you leave?
Canvas is a creative space that operates primarily as a club and exhibition venue. It originally began as an off-shoot of the Bed Supperclub group (BKK) and was later brought to Singapore in a joint venture with Home Club. I was part of the transitioning team, joining as the Head of Entertainment.
It’s hard to describe what Canvas is. Partly because it is so many things, and partly because it isn’t. It literally is a blank Canvas. The architectural quirks, audio-visual technologies and permanent fixtures are there. Everything else is modular, as the space takes on its own life from week to week, catering to the needs of the community, which is something I’m a big believer in.
Originally I imagined Canvas to be the venue that preserved the quirks and nuances that existing within the scattered sub-cultures of the Island, re-building a group of like-minded individuals and pretty much letting the club write its own legacy. Unfortunately being the impatient idealistic visionary that I am, once it was clear that I wasn’t able to share my vision as well as I write it, and after a couple of “I got your back bro”/ “No, I doubt you even have one to support yourself, “, kind-of-exchanges, I amicably resigned and had a long $20,000 think about why counting cards turns out not to be that profitable.
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What are you up to now that you’re not working regularly with Canvas?
Finding myself and fucking LinkedIn.
I’m not the easiest person to work with, but at the pinnacle of my frustration at Canvas, which in reality was more akin to a shallow three month ascent of miscommuni-stration (I made that word up), I was receiving a lot of anti-career propaganda, and when LinkedIn bombards you with articles such as ‘Ten reasons why you shouldn’t settle for comfort in your mid twenties’ or ‘Unengaged employees lower morale, if that’s you, leave’, one tends to listen.
Having not saved a single cent in the past forever, I’m ironically trying to cut down on DJing so often, but the curiosity between A/V and its role in a positive clubbing experience still lingers, so I’ve been brushing up on my motion graphic/ web/ interactive design work.
I still do a few parties, I recently had T.Williams over to play at a really intimate venue here, Kilo Lounge, which has got me thinking, ‘big DJs, small rooms’ , as the vibe was amazing there.
But currently I’m fucking LinkedIn… Not sexually, or in any metaphorical/physical way at all – just that if you do want to resign, they could at least have informed me, that money should exist in my bank and a preferably a new job with it.
What is your personal music policy when it comes to bookings your events?
It always depends on the purpose of the venue, as well as the individual. At Canvas because the club was new, most of the bookings would fit within the broad appeal, highly marketable, but not so expensive side of the House & Techno spectrum. When you’ve built up a night month after month, then you bring in the guilty pleasures.
It’s all about balance and a good angle that can be spun around the event. I like to have a good mix of up and coming artists, as well as your established pioneers falling short of the top 100 DJs list.
I’ll set a lot of personal costings and budgets that automatically rule out half of the acts I’d love to see here, and I tend to possess a bias for UK acts, but one rule is, the DJ has to be able to DJ.
I’ve had gigs where ‘Artist X’ is booked on the merit of the amazing tracks under their discography who’ve gone on to clear the dance floor, as well as cult-celebrities not being able to operate a CDJ.

What’s your typical day in Singapore like?
My day doesn’t end, and it’s never typical. During the early stages of Canvas, we had a very small team that had to cope with double the workload. Now it’s the more or less the same. My team shrunk to me, I wake up at my desk around 9am, save the work done overnight, and either walk opposite the road to the apartments for a nap, or head back to work.
I’m still looking for something that makes me happy, so if you’re an opinionated, open-minded, female placed at the cusp of the nightlife industry and a somewhat normal life, enjoy Game Of Thrones and risotto, please email me at [email protected].

Funny, he did not mentioned about his running away from the law in London.
 
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