Lee [left]; Ngerng [right]

We are deeply concerned that Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has sent a Letter of Demand to Mr Roy Ngerng for his 15 May 2014 article, ‘Where Your CPF Money is Going: Learning from the City Harvest Trial’, on his blog, ‘The Heart Truths–To Keep Singaporeans Thinking’.

Mr Lee considers certain statements in the article “a false and baseless allegation and constitutes a very serious libel against [him which] disparages him and impugns his character, credit and integrity”. His lawyers assert that “the Article was published maliciously”. Mr Lee’s letter demands removal of the article, apology, and payment of damages.

The right to free expression is enshrined in Article 14 of our Constitution and Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Freedom of expression facilitates useful comment on public policy matters, crucial for the betterment of society. It is also an important tool to build a culture of transparency and accountability. In view of these benefits, public officials charged with the administration of our nation should tolerate a greater volume and depth of criticism.

Defamation actions do not address the concerns that Singaporeans have. Mr Ngerng’s article, touching on issues like CPF and retirement funding, has sparked important questions that Singaporeans wish to be answered.

The Prime Minister’s threat of legal action, and the accompanying demand to remove the entire article, will eliminate dialogue and engagement on these questions when they should be debated and rebutted in public. This would permit Singaporeans to think for ourselves and make up our own minds about serious matters of governance.

While the freedom of expression is not and should not be unqualified, public officials should expect scrutiny and indeed encourage it for the betterment of public policy. The threat of legal action is an oppressive tool with undue chilling effects on public discourse. It should have no place in a modern, open democracy.

We urge the Prime Minister to withdraw his threat of legal action and publicly respond to the claims made by Mr Ngerng.

Signed:-

Alfian Sa’at

Chen Ying Ang

K. Z. Arifa

Ariffin Iskandar Sha

Azhar Sulaiman

Muthu Balakrishnan

Jeremy Boo

Timothy Chen

Leslie Chew

Chong Kai Xiong

Starlin Fonseca

Lukas Godfrey

Vanessa Ho

Murali Kanasappa

Darryl Koh

Joses Kwan

Vincent Law

Lynn Lee

Lee Xian Jie

Zixu Augustin Lee

Bing Sheng Lim

Lim Kay Siu

S. K. Lim

Andrew Loh

Robin Loi

Leslie Low

Luo Jianwen Esmonde

Braema Mathi

Aravind Menon

Mohd Farhan

Mohammed Razlan

Muhammed Saiful Islam s/o Saleem

Neo Swee Lin

Ng E-Jay

Ravi Philemon

Sahul Hameed bin Mohamed Hassan

Siew Kum Hong

Christine Sng Mechtler

Prof Paul Tambyah

Tan Alice

Daryl Tan Ser En

Joe Tan Bock Hoe

Mervin Tan

Dr Ping Tjin Tham

Shelley Thio

Min-Wei Ting

Vivian Wang

Jolovan Wham

Dr Vincent Wijeysingha

Wong Shimin

Wong Tong Kwong

Yuen Ken Wah Derek

Zahari Nawi

Rachel Zeng

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

Of politics and policy, canvassing and engagement

~by: Howard Lee~ By the time you read this, Parliament would probably…

39-year-old man arrested for causing a public nuisance and flouting safe distancing regulations

The Singapore Police has arrested a man on Sunday (9 May) for…

Stay-home notice period reduces to 14 days for travellers from high-risk countries, but compulsory to take additional COVID-19 tests

Starting from today (23 June), all new travellers arriving from high-risk countries…

Flawed argument on YPAP website on death penalty

Kirsten Han I have just read an article on the death penalty…