Straits Times, Front Page, 22 May 1987

 

Andrew Loh

Read also: “Marxist plot” revisited by Singapore Window.

And: Singapore is holding 12 in “Marxist Conspiracy” by The New York Times.

In May 1987, the government of then-Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew accused 22 church workers and social workers of being part of a plot to topple the Singapore government. The local media called it a “Marxist Conspiracy” and named former student union leader, Tan Wah Piow, as the “mastermind”. Vincent Cheng was alledged to be the man whom Tan Wah Piow, who had left Singapore for England in 1976, tasked to build up a network of “conspirators” in Singapore.

Codenamed “Operation Spectrum”, the Internal Security Department (ISD) swooped in on the 22 (in two different operations, in May and June) and arrested and detained the accused under the Internal Security Act (ISA).

In the following months, the detainees were paraded on television interviews allegedly arranged by the government. The Catholic Church became entangled in the saga and then-Archbishop Gregory Yong had to publicly disavow its involvement. Former Solicitor-General Francis Seow, who was acting for three of the detainees, was later detained under the ISA as well.

The only time the detainees spoke up on their own , away from incarceration, which they did through a press statement claiming they were ill-treated during detention and denied being part of any “Marxist plot”, they were swiftly re-arrested by the ISD. The eight who released the press statement, on 20 April 1988, later recanted.

An earlier promise by the government to hold a Commission of Inquiry to look into the allegations of abuse was shelved. The government said it saw no need for an inquiry as the detainees had signed another statement disavowing their recantation.

The Straits Times termed the detainees’ statement as a “ploy to discredit [the] Government”.

One year after the initial arrests, the government, which earlier claimed that Tan Wah Piow was the “mastermind” behind the “plot”, later insisted that “the plot was a full-blown Communist Party of Malaya operation.”

There has been no independent inquiry or investigation into the arrests till this day.

The Online Citizen looks at the Straits Times’ coverage of the saga in 1987 next.

Straits Times, Front Page, 27 May 1987
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

SDP “erects a bogeyman” about the 10 million population target, then declares “success”, says PAP’s Heng Swee Keat

People’s Action Party (PAP)’s First Assistant Secretary-General Heng Swee Keat said on…

Worker assaulted by employer outside MOM building, and possibly to be repatriated

MOM needs to take a serious views of abuse of foreign workers. Andrew Loh.

中飞行表演队按计划出演 国防部:定期做体温和健康检测

新加坡航空展即将在下周登场,而中国八一飞行表演队不受新冠疫情影响按计划出演,国防部表示表演队将会定期接受体温和健康检测。 国防部指出,中国人民解放军空军旗下的八一飞行表演队已经主动采取积极的防范措施,包括在他们生活和受训的天津市,定期接受身体检查。 因此,相关部门得知表演队有份参与航空展后,最终决定让表演队按原定计划表演, 周三(5日),空军八一飞行表演队已抵达新加坡,而此次表演共动用9架飞机,100多名人员出演。 而新加坡航空展将于下周11日至16日,于樟宜展览中心举行,预计将近有五万名业界代表与六万名公众出席。 为加强预防新冠病毒传播,我国从本月起禁止此前14天曾到过中国大陆的各国旅客入境,也暂停签发各类签证给中国护照持有者。 主办方受询时指出,参展的中国队伍已积极采取健康检查和体温检测等措施,确定健康后才飞往我国,并强调这些措施已在我国发出禁令前就已经实施。 韩国飞行队宣布取消参演 航空展表演常客韩国“黑鹰”特技飞行队,则宣布取消航空展飞行演出,这导致今年的飞行表演减至只有中、美和我国参与。