The first in a series of intimate interviews with people who have made an impact in Singapore’s socio-political scene, The Online Citizen meets up with Seelan Palay to talk about his time in jail, his family and Dr Chee Soon Juan.

by Joshua Chiang

You went to jail recently because of your participation in the Tak Boleh Tahan demonstration outside Parliament House. Can you tell us more about the events leading up to the imprisonment?

It (the demonstration) was about the rising cost of living, high salaries of the ministers, income inequality. I was arrested that day, and the trial went on for close to one-and-a-half years. On the day it ended, I had an option to go to prison or pay a fine. I didn’t want to pay the fine – it was around $1800 – and so I decided to go to prison for 12 days.

It’s my first time going to prison; although I’ve been arrested and put in lock up sometimes on the day itself, they released me. I’ve not been in prison before.

Tell us more about your imprisonment.

On the first day, what I have to do is to go surrender myself at the court and say that I want to serve the sentence. So the judge asked me if I was going to appeal at the higher court. I said, “I’m not going to. It’s no use. I already know the result.” Before that he was smiling, and after I said that he was kind of frowning.

After that I was handcuffed and taken to the basement of the subordinate courts where there’re a lot of holding cells. Then I was brought in a van to the prison. After I was brought there (to Changi Prison), they made me strip; they did a strip search. And after they did the searching they gave me this blue shorts and white t-shirt; I went for some ID marking and everything, then they brought me to my cell.

What’s the cell like?

It was quiet bare. They give you this straw mat, you know the kind that you bring to the beach, but it’s pretty worn out, so you might as well sleep on a piece of paper. I’d imagine that it would be pretty bad for your back, especially if you’re going to be in there long-term. They also give you two blankets and you can choose to roll up one into a pillow and use the other to cover yourself. That’s what I did.

The cell is basically like a very long rectangle. There’s a big blue door, you can open a latch and look in. There are no bars. The cell can fit three people. And at the back of the cell there’s a short wall, and there’s a latrine; a toilet on the floor. And right in front of the toilet there’s a shower. So if you want to shower, you’ve got to spread your legs in front of the latrine and press a button for the shower. The water from the shower basically goes into the latrine. And that’s also where you brush your teeth, so you’d better not drop your toothpaste or your soap into the toilet bowl because you are expected to dig it out and re-use it.

So you shared the cell with two other people?

Yes, one was a Singaporean. The other one was a Nepali.

The case of the Nepali was really sad to hear, because he’s 30-something years old, he’s never been out of Nepal his whole life, and this is the first time he came out. He worked for this boss who’s also a PR (Permanent Resident) in Singapore, and he worked in a restaurant. According to him, the boss gave him a place to stay but didn’t pay him for five months, and he kept asking for his pay but the boss didn’t give him any. Finally he got angry; he pushed the boss, the boss pushed back and they started fighting. After that the case went to court. This guy, I believe he was sentenced to six or eight months in prison.

I asked him, “What are you going to do after your release?” He said, ”I’m just going to go back to Nepal, I don’t want to travel again.”  And I asked him what happened to the boss? Did he get charged? He said that he doesn’t think so. So did he have a lawyer? He said, “No.”

Do you get to leave your cell?

There’s supposed to be yard time, when you go out for a while to this big basketball court. But when I’m brought to the yard, there seems to be no one there. Maybe they bring me to the yard after everybody had left.

Sounds like you’ve been given special status.

(laughs) I don’t know. That’s what happened.

How did you pass your time during those 12 days?

I think the first three days I kept asking for my books. Because previously some friends of mine went in for one-week sentences, and for the whole week, they didn’t get the books, so I feared that (the same thing would happen to me.) I really love reading you see. I really didn’t have any appetite when I didn’t have my books with me, I didn’t eat well.

After three days they handed me my books. I bought in three books – ‘The Autobiography of Malcolm X’, another book called ‘The Mute’s Soliloquy’ by Pramoedya Ananta Toer, an Indonesian writer, and I also brought in Alan Shadrake’s ‘Once a Jolly Hangman’. They didn’t give me ‘Once a Jolly Hangman’. And I asked them – why? The warden smiled and said something like, “Questionable content.” That was pretty funny.

Did you get it back after you were released?

Yes, I got it back upon my release. The sad thing is, I read very fast. I needed three books. But I read too fast so I finished the two books I had quite quickly.

Were you allowed pen and paper?

I was allowed pen and paper because I had a trial in the following week. So for some of the days I would come out for trial. That was quite testing because they put you in these orange overalls and they handcuff you at the back, they cuff your ankles, and then they had a chain connecting your handcuffs and your ankle cuffs, so you had to bend like this (stoops with hands behind him).

The first time they did that to me, I looked at the guards and said, “What is this the slave trade or what?” And I looked at the other prisoners around me and said, “You don’t have to treat people like this, even if they’ve committed crimes.” The first day I was brought (to court), and so many people were struggling to walk – an old man too was very obviously walking in great pain…

Apparently it’s a security concern because some of the prisoners had escaped when they arrived at the subordinate courts, but there’s surely better ways to do this. And it’s excruciatingly painful. I told the judge about it too. Because the metal cuffs scratch and ‘clang’ against your ankles so it hurts with every single step you take.

Did the 12 days feel long?

Some days. Especially when I didn’t have my books. I don’t regret going into prison. I did what I did, and the Government wanted to react in this manner. If they want to be unreasonable that’s for people to judge right? But what I did miss was sunshine. I like the feeling of sunshine on the skin. In my cell, there’s a window. But the window is so high up, you can see the sunlight coming in at the ceiling, but it doesn’t come down into the cell.

It’s not like in those movies…

Yah. Quite funny right? But it’s true.

One time I had nothing to, I actually went to the toilet area – the window is above the toilet area – and I tried to climb up the ledge and jump up so I could catch the sunshine but I couldn’t reach it. So those days when they bring me to court, there’s one moment at the loading bay where the sun would shine in, and when they bring me in (from the van) I would always turn (and face the sun) as I walked in. So for seven seconds I would just absorb the sunshine and then I would go back in to the blasting air-con.

How did you get in touch with your families and loved ones?

I couldn’t. They were supposed to visit, but on the day it happened, I had to get to court. So I didn’t get to see them until I was released.

My sister did come to court, on one of the days. She saw me, but we couldn’t speak. So at first when she saw me in the orange overalls and shackles, she was kind of shocked and kind of smiling, like amused. But once the break time came, and they to had to drag me and I was walking like that, dragging the chains. I turned around and she was totally… her face totally changed. It was all red and she was crying. And then everybody was comforting her, and she was like , “Why did they treat him like that? He’s not a murderer.” Chee Siok Chin (sister of SDP leader Dr Chee Soon Juan) was there and she tried to console her.

What are your parents’ views on your involvement in activism?

I think the first time I got into trouble was during the 2006 IMF World Bank summit in Singapore. I was planning to distribute some fact-sheets about the impact of IMF policies on Third World countries. And when I wanted to do that, the police intercepted me as I was traveling to work on some artwork; they escorted me into a police car and drove me to my block. They went into my room, searched my room and took my computer. My mother was there but she wasn’t allowed to speak to me so she just stood there crying. And so after that I was brought to the station, my mother was still crying, but my father sort of told her, “Well he knows the consequences, and he goes into it, so it’s ok, we shouldn’t worry. He’s not scared. If he’s scared then I’ll start worrying.”

And from that day, slowly as time went on, my mom got more composed. So nowadays sometimes if there’s a demonstration, I just tell her, “You know there’s going to be a demonstration, I might get arrested and come back tomorrow.” And she’d say, “Okay, take care.”

But these 12 days in jail was the longest time you were away. What did they feel about it?

My mother says the house feels a bit empty ‘cos she can’t hear my voice. And, my dad is ok. I think my dad is confident of me… so he kind of supports what I do. And he thinks that, “Well, you are not committing a crime. You are only speaking up for people, speaking up for human rights, and justice. What’s wrong with that?”

Do you have a lot of such (political) discussions with your family?

Well my mum doesn’t have so many views on politics, but she does know about how families struggle to survive in Singapore. My father… he was initially quite surprised when I first got involved. Two years ago, when he met Dr Chee (Soon Juan), he told Dr Chee, “I’m so surprised my son got involved. Because my whole life I’ve been voting opposition and I never tell him. And I never talk to him about politics and suddenly he got into it by himself.” So my father thinks it’s kind of fated or something.

The anti-death penalty campaign was your virgin campaign?

Yes, But before that I did a little bit of campaigning with ACRES, a local animal rights group, and also the Vegetarian Society of Singapore. But those were kind of like, giving out flyers at roadshows and other indoor events…

Permissible activities.

Ya, you can say ‘permissible’ by their (the Government’s) standard.

At anytime during your campaignings, do you actually feel afraid?

In the beginning, in 2006 when I first got arrested, of course I was afraid. I thought they were going to throw me into ISA detention or something, because I really didn’t know what to expect. I didn’t have anybody to turn to. I have a friend, Rizal, an activist. He was calling a lot of people in Singapore from different fields, NGOs, activists, artists… none of them knew what to do. The only people who came down to speak up for me were Chee Siok Chin and some other people from SDP. She actually came down to Cantonment and she wanted to know if I was arrested, and they (the police) said, “No he’s not officially under arrest, he’s under investigation.” And she said,  “If that’s the case we want to see him and we ask that you release him now.” And soon after that the questions to me changed. They asked, “Do you know Chee Siok Chin, do you know Dr Chee Soon Juan?” And I said, “They’re my friends.” And then they said, “Ok ok, you can go first.” Then suddenly I was out of there. Ms Chee drove me back home, and she (Chee) spoke to my mum for a while to console her…

At that time I was afraid to be put away for a very long time. Not because of my personal freedom being taken away but more because I still have to take of my parents. That’s the main reason. But by this time, knowing Dr Chee and other people in SDP who have gone to prison – and I’ve gone to see them go in, and see them come out, and they’re still sturdy. And it helps me stay confident as well.

You still have outstanding charges?

I have outstanding investigations. I think I still have ten open investigations. And I can be charged in court for any one of them at any time.

So you’re hanging on to your blue shorts and white shirt for the time being.

(laughs) Well it depends on what the Government wants. I don’t know why they haven’t acted on some of the things, like the two-man protest I did for the Burmese outside MOM (Ministry of Manpower building at Havelock Road). They arrested us for criminal trespass, and they put us in lock up, and then they released us and nothing happened after that. So I don’t know. It’s very weird. The only cases I’ve ever went on trial for were two Tak Boleh Tahan events.

_______________________________________

End of Part One – you can read Part Two here

____________________________________________________

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

内阁成员、总统、议长副议长减薪三个月

上月28日,副总理兼财政部长王瑞杰,在国会总结新财年政府财政政策辩论时,宣布所有部长、政治职务者都将减薪一个月、国会议员也将减少一个月的津贴。 今日(26日)他在国会发表额外财案声明,也宣布所有内阁成员,以及总统哈莉玛、国会议长副议长都将再减薪两个月。 王瑞杰较后也在脸书发文,随着当前局势变化且朝不可预测方向进展,未来数月仍艰巨,呼吁各界保持警惕,为各种状况做好心理准备,他也表示政府将继续照顾、保障新加坡人。 在今日的“坚韧预算案”配套,他宣布总值超过480亿元的援助措施。 加上上月2020财案中40亿元的经济稳定与支援配套;16亿元的关怀与援助配套,以及八亿元支援前线抗疫人员拨款,我国共拨出近550亿元抗疫,占国内生产总值11巴仙。 今年财年的赤字也将高达392亿新元,相等于国内生产总值的7.9巴仙。

租户被指无视房规、拒搬迁 房东气到心脏病爆发

我国房东和租户纠纷本就不是新鲜事,但是房东开口要求租户搬迁已经五个月了还不成功,甚至被租户气到心脏病爆发,房东儿子报警求助就真的是新鲜事了。 事件的主人公为75岁的梁女士,以及两名来自香港的女租户。而据梁女士的儿子,叶先生(50岁)指出,原本租户只有一名时,并没有发生过这么激烈的摩擦事件,一直到第二名女子入住后,才开始从小摩擦变成大摩擦,导致梁女士心脏病爆发。 叶先生指出,梁女士自三年前丈夫逝世后,就独居在四房式组屋单位内。她之后认识了来自香港的女教友,了解到对方正在寻找落脚处,因此将一间睡房以500元月租的价格租给她。 香港女学生搬入后产生摩擦 两人相处不错,女租户就在第二年介绍了一名香港的女学生过来。 据叶先生指出,其母亲在女学生搬过来后首个月就开始“有意见”,指女学生无视母亲禁止煮食的规定,继续煮食还将厨房弄得很肮脏,还很浪费电,可以将冷气开足整日。 梁女士当时曾要求女学生搬走,岂知女教友当时却和女学生联手,无视条规,被梁女士指责还会顶撞,甚至将住家弄得乱糟糟。 忍无可忍之下,梁女士在去年12月开始要求两人搬迁,但是两人继续无视,还出言伤人,导致梁女士被气得精神压抑。 叶先生指母亲是在今年4月尾向他哭诉,要求他帮忙“赶人”。然而叶先生于5月8日晚上尝试和她们交涉时,就遭到对方拒绝见面。他等了一小时后,就先行离开,随后传简讯要求两人在24小时内搬走。 两名女租户在当天晚上就去敲其母亲的房间,将后者吵醒后质问为什么要让叶先生介入他们的纠纷,甚至一度不让后者休息。其母亲费了很大力气将两女推开,才得以关上房门休息。 要求出钱修冷气 事情过了一段时日,两名女租户却在周二(5月19日)给叶先生发简讯,指冷气坏了,要求他找人修理。…

Indian state minister says Amaravati capital low priority while Vivian says to give them time

Yesterday (10 Sep), at the India-Singapore Business and Innovation Summit held in…

Pasir Ris ONE – HDB “closely monitoring the progress” of discussions

The Housing and Development Board (HDB) is “closely monitoring the progress” of…