By Andrew Loh

The deportation of 53 foreign workers who were allegedly involved in the Little India riot on 8 December is the latest example of seemingly arbitrary enforcement actions taken by the Government.

The repatriation of the 53 workers has drawn criticisms from various quarters, including Human Rights Watch and Workfair Singapore, along with members of the public online.

The charges against the 53, according to a police statement on 17 December:

“Group Two consists of 53 persons whom Police has identified to have participated in the riot and who failed to disperse despite Police’s orders to do so. They had knowingly joined or continued to participate in the riot, after being ordered to disperse, impeding the riot control and emergency rescue operations. Their actions and conduct had threatened public order, thus making their continued presence in Singapore undesirable. They were all rounded up in a Police operation in the early hours of this morning. They will be repatriated after being issued a stern warning. They will be prohibited from returning to Singapore.”

What is perhaps most shocking about the matter is the Law Minister’s explanation, as reported here.

Mr K Shanmugam, the minister in question, reportedly said that “repatriation happens on a regular basis.”

Of the 53, he said:

“If every case has got to go to court and a judge makes a decision, then repatriation decisions becomes [sic] judicial rather than administrative. Then every foreigner is entitled to stay here at taxpayers’ expense, housed here at taxpayers’ expense, it could stretch on a year or more.”

Mr Shanmugam’s remarks are shocking for several reasons, the most important of which is how cost-savings is apparently – and disconcertingly – cited as a reason to repatriate the workers..

Does this mean that if or whenever there is an incident which involves a large number of accused, the government will prefer a quick administrative resolution over a judicial one?

What then does this mean for the rule of law, and one’s right to legal recourse?

While the law may allow the government to deal with such cases through administrative decree, it should nonetheless be the last option which the government should resort to.

If we are more interested in saving costs than to make sure justice is done, and seen to be done, then we are all the poorer for it. Justice then would seem to be an opaque, arbitrary thing, administered through unilateral decision-making by the authorities.

Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean had said, on 17 December, that those arrested would be dealt with “strictly, firmly, and fairly.”

How is deporting the 53 workers without granting them recourse to appeal the government decision fair?

This is the same way the government dealt with 29 mainland Chinese SMRT drivers last year. They too were repatriated without being given an opportunity to present their cases, or to defend themselves from the accusations.

smrt29

In 2003, during Vignes Mourthi’s appeal in the courts, his lawyer M Ravi argued that evidence against Vignes was questionable. According to a news report:

“When Mr Ravi asked the Chief Justice [Yong Pung How] if the public prosecutor was ‘still maintaining that an innocent man be hanged because of procedure’, the CJ answered: ‘Yes, the answer is yes.’”

Are we so insistent on administrative efficiency that we would follow it even as potential injustice stares us in the face?

Who reviews the police’s decisions? Or have power over it? Who shall an accused turn to if not the courts? Yet, what shall one do if that avenue is denied to one?

“It’s an issue of due process,” Mr Robertson, Human Rights Watch’s Asia deputy director, told the BBC. “Singapore does have a policy of deport first and ask questions later.”

“No one is excusing the people who used violence on that day… but in the case of the deportations it’s not clear how the decision was taken, what evidence was brought against these people, or whether they had the opportunity to present their version of the story.”

What then does the DPM mean when he promised that these workers would be dealt with “fairly”?

How is deporting them without granting them avenues of appeal or defence a fair action?

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

SCDF ambulance drivers now allowed to run red traffic lights and make U-turns at non-designated junctions

Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has announced that SCDF ambulance drivers are allowed…

新选民册开放查阅

新的选民册已经修订好了,其中包含了2019年2月1日的合格选民名单,从本月26日起至3月11日,经由选民局(ELD)公开给民众查阅。 总理公署属下选民局于2月25日发出文告指出,公众可以上网查询个人资料,或携带身份证或护照,到选民局柜台或民众俱乐部查阅。国外的选民也可以携带他们的身份证件或护照,到指定的海外领事馆或大使馆查阅。指定的海外领事馆或者大使馆可上网到选民局查阅,或是亲自到选民局询问。 选民局表示,在这段查阅期间,选民如察觉选民册中的个人资料和身份证上的不符合,可提交纠正申请。相关的个人资料包括了姓名(如果已经被省略)、或者更新姓名或地址。 这段期间,选民也能提出反对意见,要求自所在选区中除名。 想要做出申请或除名的选民,也可以上网到选民局网页www.eld.gov.sg/online.html,透过个人的政府电子密码(SingPass)进行提交。海外的居民除了上网,也亲自到指定的社区中心俱乐部进行提交。 复名申请需尽快提交 在上届大选没能投票而被除名的选民,可在查阅期间重新登记为选民,以便能够在来届大选履行选民权利。 选民局促请需要重新登记的国民尽早做出申请,因为选举令状(Writ of Election)一经颁布,所有登记工作将停止,一直到提名日(没有对手的情况下)或投票日(有对手的情况下)后才能继续。换句话说,就是来不及重新登记为选民的国人,只能等下一届才能行使选民权了。 选民局指出,自2016年2月1日至2019年1月31日,这三年期间名字列于选民册,在国内居住了至少30天以上的国人,可以申请为海外选民,并在来届大选期间到指定的海外投票站投票。 随着选民册每年的修订,先前已经注册为海外选民,并希望继续留作海外选民的国人,需要重新登记。选民局补充说,海外新加坡人受促通过上述渠道提前进行注册。…

Singapore Airlines and All Nippon Airways ink join venture agreement

Last Friday (31 Jan), the two airline companies Singapore Airlines (SIA) and…

Weekly dengue infections drop to 125 from 138 cases

Dengue cases continued to drop as only 125 cases were diagnosed between…