11 Jul 2006

Singapore’s ‘Martyr,’ Chee Soon Juan

July/August 2006
By Hugo Restall


Striding into the Chinese restaurant of Singapore’s historic Fullerton Hotel, Chee Soon Juan hardly looks like a dangerous revolutionary. Casually dressed in a blue shirt with a gold pen clipped to the pocket, he could pass as just another mild-mannered, apolitical Singaporean. Smiling, he courteously apologizes for being late—even though it is only two minutes after the appointed time.

Nevertheless, according to prosecutors, this same man is not only a criminal, but a repeat offender. The opposition party leader has just come from a pre-trial conference at the courthouse, where he faces eight counts of speaking in public without a permit.

He has already served numerous prison terms for this and other political offenses, including eight days in March for denying the independence of the judiciary. He expects to go to jail again later this year.

Mr. Chee does not seem too perturbed about this, but it drives Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong up the wall. Asked about his government’s persecution of the opposition during a trip to New Zealand last month, Mr. Lee launched into a tirade of abuse against Mr. Chee. “He’s a liar, he’s a cheat, he’s deceitful, he’s confrontational, it’s a destructive form of politics designed not to win elections in Singapore but to impress foreign supporters and make himself out to be a martyr,” Mr. Lee ranted. “He’s deliberately going against the rules because he says, ‘I’m like Nelson Mandela and Mahatma Gandhi. I want to be a martyr.’”

Coming at the end of a trip in which the prime minister essentially got a free ride on human rights from his hosts—New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark didn’t even raise the issue—this outburst showed a lack of self-control and acumen. Former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, the man who many believe still runs Singapore and who is the current prime minister’s father, has said much the same things about Mr. Chee—“a political gangster, a liar and a cheat”—but that was at home, and in the heat of an election campaign.

Mr. Chee smiles when it’s suggested that he must be doing something right. “Every time he says something stupid like that, I think to myself, the worst thing to happen would be to be ignored. That would mean we’re not making any headway,” he agrees.

But one charge made by the government does stick: Mr. Chee is not terribly concerned about election results. Which is just as well, because his Singapore Democratic Party did not do very well in the May 6 polls. It would be foolish, he suggests, for an opposition party in Singapore to pin its hopes on gaining one, or perhaps two, seats in parliament. He is aiming for a much bigger goal: bringing down the city-state’s one-party system of government. His weapon is a campaign of civil disobedience against laws designed to curtail democratic freedoms.

“You don’t vote out a dictatorship,” he says. “And basically that’s what Singapore is, albeit a very sophisticated one. It’s not possible for us to effect change just through the ballot box. They’ve got control of everything else around us.” Instead what’s needed is a coalition of civil society and political society coming together and demanding change—a color revolution for Singapore.

So far Mr. Chee doesn’t seem to be getting much, if any traction. While many Singaporeans don’t particularly like the PAP’s arrogant style of government, the ruling party has succeeded in depoliticizing the population to the extent that anybody who presses them to take action to make a change is regarded with resentment. And in a climate of fear—Mr. Chee lost his job as a psychology lecturer at the national university soon after entering opposition politics—a reluctance to get involved is hardly surprising.

Why is all this oppression necessary in a peaceful and prosperous country like Singapore where citizens otherwise enjoy so many freedoms? Mr. Chee has his own theory that the answer lies with strongman Lee Kuan Yew himself: “Why is he still so afraid? I honestly think that through the years he has accumulated enough skeletons in his closet that he knows that when he is gone, his son and the generations after him will have a price to pay. If we had parliamentary debates where the opposition could pry and ask questions, I think he is actually afraid of something like that.”

That raises the question of whether Singapore deserves its reputation for squeaky-clean government. A scandal involving the country’s biggest charity, the National Kidney Foundation, erupted in 2004 when it turned out that its Chief Executive T.T. Durai was not only drawing a $357,000 annual salary, but the charity was paying for his first-class flights, maintenance on his Mercedes, and gold-plated fixtures in his private office bathroom.

The scandal was a gift for the opposition, which naturally raised questions about why the government didn’t do a better job of supervising the highly secretive NKF, whose patron was the wife of former Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong (she called Mr. Durai’s salary “peanuts”). But it had wider implications too. The government controls huge pools of public money in the Central Provident Fund and the Government of Singapore Investment Corp., both of which are highly nontransparent. It also controls spending on the public housing most Singaporeans live in, and openly uses the funds for refurbishing apartment blocks as a bribe for districts that vote for the ruling party. Singaporeans have no way of knowing whether officials are abusing their trust as Mr. Durai did.

It gets worse. Mr. Durai’s abuses only came to light because he sued the Straits Times newspaper for libel over an article detailing some of his perks. Why was Mr. Durai so confident he could win a libel suit when the allegations against him were true? Because he had done it before. The NKF won a libel case in 1998 against defendants who alleged it had paid for first-class flights for Mr. Durai. This time, however, he was up against a major bulwark of the regime, Singapore Press Holdings; its lawyers uncovered the truth.

Singaporean officials have a remarkable record of success in winning libel suits against their critics. The question then is, how many other libel suits have Singapore’s great and good wrongly won, resulting in the cover-up of real misdeeds? And are libel suits deliberately used as a tool to suppress questioning voices?

The bottling up of dissent conceals pressures and prevents conflicts from being resolved. For instance, extreme sensitivity over the issue of race relations means that the persistence of discrimination is a taboo topic. Yet according to Mr. Chee it is a problem that should be debated so that it can be better resolved. “The harder they press now, the stronger will be the reaction when he’s no longer around,” he says of Lee Kuan Yew.

The paternalism of the PAP also rankles, especially since foreigners get more consideration than locals. The World Bank and International Monetary Fund will hold their annual meeting in Singapore this fall, and have been trying to convince the authorities to allow the usual demonstrations to take place. The likely result is that international NGO groups will be given a designated area to scream and shout. “So we have a situation here where locals don’t have the right to protest in their own country, while foreigners are able to do that,” Mr. Chee marvels. Likewise, Singaporeans can’t organize freely into unions to negotiate wages; instead a National Wages Council sets salaries with input from the corporate sector, including foreign chambers of commerce.

All these tensions will erupt when strongman Lee Kuan Yew dies. Mr. Chee notes that the ruling party is so insecure that Singapore’s founder has been unable to step back from front-line politics. The PAP still needs the fear he inspires in order to keep the population in line. Power may have officially passed to his son, Lee Hsien Loong, but even supporters privately admit that the new prime minister doesn’t inspire confidence.

During the election, Prime Minister Lee made what should have been a routine attack on multiparty democracy: “Suppose you had 10, 15, 20 opposition members in parliament. Instead of spending my time thinking what is the right policy for Singapore, I’m going to spend all my time thinking what’s the right way to fix them, to buy my supporters’ votes, how can I solve this week’s problem and forget about next year’s challenges?” But of course the ominous phrases “buy votes” and “fix them” stuck out. That is the kind of mistake, Mr. Chee suggests, Lee Sr. would not make.

“He’s got a kind of intelligence that would serve you very well when you put a problem in front of him,” he says of the prime minister. “But when it comes to administration or political leadership, when you really need to be media savvy and motivate people, I think he is very lacking in that area. And his father senses it as well.”

However, the elder Mr. Lee’s death—he is now 82—is a necessary but not sufficient condition for change. Another big factor is how civil society is able to use new technologies to bypass PAP control over information and free speech. The government has tried to stifle political filmmaking, blogging and podcasting. Singapore Rebel, a 2004 film about Mr. Chee by independent artist Martyn See, was banned but is widely available on the Internet.

Meanwhile, pressure for Singapore to remain competitive in the region has sparked debate about the government’s dominant role in the economy. Can a top-down approach promote creativity and independent thinking? The need for transparency and accountability also means that Singapore will have to change. That is the source of Mr. Chee’s optimism in the face of all his setbacks: “I realize that Singapore is not at that level yet. But we’ve got to start somewhere. And I’m prepared to see this out, in the sense that in the next five, 10, 15 years, time is on our side. We need to continue to organize and educate and encourage. And it will come.”

He doesn’t dwell on his personal tribulations, but mentions in passing selling his self-published books on the street. That is his primary source of income to feed his family, along with the occasional grant. As to the charge of wanting to be a martyr, once he started dissenting, he found it impossible to stop in good conscience. “The more you got involved, the more you found out what they’re capable of, it steels you, so you say, ‘No, I will not back down.’ It makes you more determined.”

Perhaps it’s in his genes. One of Mr. Chee’s daughters is old enough that she had to be told that her father was going to prison. She stood up before her class and announced, “My papa is in jail, but he didn’t do anything wrong. People have just been unfair to him.”


Mr. Restall is editor of the REVIEW.

17 comments:

  1. no doubt some appreciate martyrdom, but others prefer the workers party approach

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sometimes I wonder if the workers party approach simply adds unwarrented 'legitimation' to the PAP authoritarian state.

    It means that when LHL visits overseas he can say 'look we have an opposition'.

    Even though the electoral system is gerrymandered through the use of GRC's, the media is controlled etc. Two opposition members appear to be simply a 'token opposition'. When was the last time a bill was thrown out as a result of this opposition?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Chee Soon Juan wants to overturn the entire PAP system.

    Workers' Party wants to be the check-and-balance within the PAP system.

    It will be interesting to see how this ideological battle play itself out in the next few years.

    And the PAP, through its media, will stoke the fire with some relish.

    Mr Ow

    ReplyDelete
  4. I have the greatest respect for what the WP is trying to achieve but they need more MPs. Lots more sitting in parliment. Until then they are a 'token'. But with the GRC's this is never going to happen in the next election.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Actually I think they need more economic "power" than political power.

    British Labour, Aust Labour and teh Democrats in the US — parties leaning toward social democracy in general— are all empowered financially, either by very economically productive individual memebers and supporters or benefactors.

    I also think that martyrizing Chee is a very bad move.

    Example: if Chee were on the right campaigning against a totalitariam communist state, he would be a "hero", not a martyr.

    Change the word, change the status.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Personally I am against any sort of monetary funding from private individuals or companies to political parties. Look at Bush's well known relationship with the oil industry. Even though the industry in the last year has made billions in profits, Bush signed a bill that would grant even more taxpayer money to the industry rather than investing in alternate fuels.

    Should the WP eventually be put in power, they would be there then because of their financial supporters. That party would be obligated to some degree, working to the benefit of those companies or individuals. In the States, this has seen legislation highly influenced by pharmaceutical and oil companies. But given the current circustances, I would see companies prefering to buy out the PAP to keep them in power instead. That is if the PAP aren't already stinking rich.

    ReplyDelete
  7. "I would see companies prefering to buy out the PAP to keep them in power instead"

    Look, you can't compare Singapore to the U.S. Singapore's economy is currently dominated by GLCs. Why would GLCs 'buy out' the PAP to keep them in power?

    The PAP is pro-business already so no company would want to "buy out the PAP" - this is corruption.

    This is Singapore. That is America, "land of the free". What goes on there cannot be applied here. There's no one-size-fits-all for democracy. This is our unique brand of democracy. Learn to survive in the system, not make noise from outside or changing it from outside. Besides, changing it doesn't really benefit EVERYONE.

    ReplyDelete
  8. The anonymous commenter above stated,
    "This is Singapore. That is America, 'land of the free'. What goes on there cannot be applied here."

    Yes, Singapore is definitely not the land of the free. Nor is it the 'home of the brave' either for that matter. In the US, schoolchildren grow up studying how their forefathers overthrew oppression and died for their liberty at the hands of a greedy monarchy. They memorise sayings such as "Give me liberty or give me death!" or see on their Declaration of Independence how John Hancock wrote his name really big, for the oppressive monarch to see. How many Singaporeans would put their life or livelihood on the line for their beliefs? In Singapore, schoolchildren study the good deeds of the Minister Mentor, and the ominous danger of racial riots resurfacing.

    As the commenter said, this is Singapore. That is America.

    In a primary school textbook, I saw that Singapore is compared to Switzerland, where many different languages and peoples also found a way to live in peace and prosperity. Switzerland's democracy was described. Then the book said, "Singaporeans also have a say in their government, by giving responsible feedback."

    That is funny.

    ReplyDelete
  9. 'Responsible feedback' in PAP vocabulary really means what they wish to hear only. Anything to the contrary is just irresponsible.

    ReplyDelete
  10. >> Clyde said: "Personally I am against any sort of monetary funding from private individuals or companies to political parties." <<

    Money it and of itself isn't evil. What one does with it can be good or bad.

    If you say funding or money is a corrupting influence, why stop there? You may as well go on to say "drugs are evil", "fast food corrupts the health" "alcohol is nasty" "rap music and TV have negative influences".

    It is the action (human action) which brings about results. Morality and ethics is all based on human action.

    The economic reality is that any activity requires resources. Political activity is no different. There is no activity which "just happens" without resources being allocated. Therefore, one must have resources to allocate in the first place.

    ReplyDelete
  11. It's short hindsight to trivialise monetary funding of political parties to the level of fast food and alcohol. Realistically speaking, no industry, business or individual is going to invest a lot of money in politics without expecting anything in return. If you believe that legislation should face the influence of any number of 'investors', then the government has failed their job of protecting the interests of the people rather than corporations.

    This isn't to say that funding is entirely evil. But surely there must be some restrictions or caps on monetary contributions. A few thousand dollars makes one a contributor. A million dollars makes one a shareholder.

    There's no one-size-fits-all for democracy. This is our unique brand of democracy.

    This is such a common excuse for the current state of totalitarianism. Democracy is not made to fit like a pair of Levis. It's an excuse to retain authoritarianism without giving a single iota of control to a second (opposition) party, while under the guise of a plastic democracy. While it's probably true that no two democracies are alike nor perfect, we can always strive towards a truer democratic state by protecting our rights and freedoms as individuals that allow for maximum public participation of all classes, race and religion, and also maximum scrutiny of government without fear of retribution.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anon wrote: Chee Soon Juan wants to overturn the entire PAP system. Workers' Party wants to be the check-and-balance within the PAP system.

    ---------------------------

    Chee is not against the entire PAP system or anyone for that matter. Chee is for freedom of speech, transparency, an independent judiciary, pro-singaporeans policy, and accountability.

    the worker's party, since 2001 and post-JBJ, seems more like a flip flop, and sways and bends towards where ever the wind blows. As pointed out earlier WP actually lends legitimacy to the dictatorship, it also did very little in fighting for democratic rights and freedom of singaporeans. Same can be said of Chiam See Tong too. Both are overly consumed in municipal affairs and avoided tackling and asking the hard questions.

    ReplyDelete
  13. CSJ is the only politician to speak against injustices when they occured. eg the recent Mr Brown saga. Did WP or Chiams raise a voice? We need oppostion of CSJ's
    calibre

    ReplyDelete
  14. he is all by himself, having destroyed SDP by his great leadership

    an individual yapping away, like mr brown; they have sympathy for each other

    unfortunately, the people paid them all that attention and encouraged them to destroy themselves, instead of paying attention to and engaging in serious discussions and organizational work

    ReplyDelete
  15. clyde said: "Realistically speaking, no industry, business or individual is going to invest a lot of money in politics without expecting anything in return."

    Are you absolutely 100%, beyond a shadow of a doubt SURE that what you've said is indeed "realistic"?

    And what is wrong with being a shareholder, or a stakeholder? If you believe in something there is a tendency for you to want to "trade" your private property for the "value".

    Those who don't have funds contribute private property too: in their time, the use of their skills, even their own computers, many folks buy their own lunch and pay their own transport.

    Why?

    Because the "objective" is of greater value than what they have to "give up" (the price they pay) to attain the objective.

    Next time you watch a Michael Moore film, look at the credits at the end.

    Oxfam is partially funded by Rowntree—one of the oldest confectioners.

    Ben and Jerry's (ice cream makers) know market economics extremely well. They fund lots of social democratic programs.

    Check out the name "James Walter Jr" on google.

    All these folks donate their "excess" resources i.e. money, because they believe in their values and principles and are highly motivated to see their values achieved.

    If you want real change to occur and in effective ways, blogging, podcasting, petitioning et al have their place. But nothing beats MARKET ACTION—i.e. the allocation of massive resources to achieve an end.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Soci

    If the WP were to boycott, these would result in the same effect of the 1960s. So it would be a very bad ideas.
    Gerrymandering is not new but a very old game in both the established democracies & newer developing ones.
    In regards to the bills thrown out, you are assuming that majority in power people would cross the party line. This does not work in partisan politics in any location unless there is a strong custom/tradition of such.
    CSJ may be the pinup poster person to the "literati" here but having meet and seen him up close, he is basically a Gift with his non-savvy comments to the present powers to be and any fence sitters , not withstanding any fawning by any outside parties.

    ReplyDelete
  17. quite so; one reason PAP has been so successful is its enemies keep barking up the wrong tree, like CSJ kept doing, and those who cheer him on

    even "give mr brown freedom to speak" was stupid; he is free to speak, but the question is whose words get printed in Today, about whether it would be better for the country ifSPH/mediacorp presents other ideas as well as the official one

    ReplyDelete

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.