Our
Rights Under Seige - by Teo Soh Lung (Facebook post, 11 June 2017)
While the Constitution of the Republic
of Singapore asserts that it is the “supreme law” of the land and that we, the
people are endowed with “fundamental liberties”
which includes the right to life, liberty, freedom of speech and assembly, I
have yet to see a judicial pronouncement that any of our laws is in breach of
our Constitution. From the Internal Security Act to the Penal Code, all claims
(as far as I know) of unconstitutionality of laws have failed.
I do not think there are or will be
many litigants who challenge an existing law as unconstitutional. Most
unconstitutional acts do not reach our courts for determination. They take
place at the investigation stage and no practical person who has been spared the trauma he experienced, will take the unjust treatment he received to the
courts.
Since our independence in 1965, and
especially in recent years, we have witnessed the passing of too many laws that
give the police wide powers to arrest and investigate people who they think are
able “to assist” in their investigations. These laws in my view, undermines our
Constitution and deprive us of its protection.
It takes just one complaint to the
police for the entire oppressive machinery to commence work. Sometimes, the
media is used to inform and warn the public of intended investigations so as to
instill even more fear into the minds of the people. The reluctance of the
police to ignore complaints of trivial matters have led to the harassment and
intimidation of peaceful citizens who were merely exercising their rights to
free speech, expression and assembly.
Investigation usually begins with a
letter from the police under section 21(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code. It
is hand delivered by a few police officers after office hours to an intended
witness, requesting him to appear at the police station on an unreasonable day.
Under most existing laws, the police
are not only empowered to interview the person who turns up at the police station,
they are also empowered to seize properties and retain them for as long as they
wish without an order from our courts. This enormous power is given to the
police because parliament on our behalf (without an effective opposition for
decades) had decreed that almost all offences under investigation are
“arrestable offences”. There is no time frame for the police to conduct such
investigation or to return seized properties. It is also not mandatory for the
police to inform anyone of the outcome of an investigation.
Depending on the whims and fancies of
the police, the investigation of cases can commence almost immediately upon
receipt of a report to the police. The identity of the complainant is protected
unless there is a trial and the complainant is called as a witness. Take the
case of Mr Koh Eng Khoon, Chairman of the Association for the Recycling of
Second Hand Goods. His home was raided at midnight following a complaint by
someone from the deputy prime minister's office. Mr Koh was intimidated and his
home ransacked for no reason. The raid of more than an hour resulted in the
seizure of his mobile phone. Sadly, there was little public outcry from members
of the public.
Mr Koh was “lucky” in a way for the
police subsequently discovered that they had harassed the wrong person. They
returned his mobile phone without an apology and all was back to normal for the
police. No one was dismissed or reprimanded for the high-handed manner in which
the police conducted their investigation. No minister chided the police for
their wrongdoing.
Why wasn't Mr Koh compensated for the
wrongful raid, seizure and harassment at midnight by the police? Clearly, the
police had not respected his fundamental liberties guaranteed by our
Constitution.
At the beginning of this month, a
group of young people sat quietly in a tram, reading the book “1987 Singapore's
Marxist Conspiracy 30 Years On”. One intolerant person lodged a police report.
Quite immediately, the police started its investigation and called for
witnesses.
What I am most disturbed about this
whole affair is the speed at which the police attended to this trivial
complaint. While Minister K. Shanmugam keeps warning us of high level threats
Singapore faces and our likelihood of being a soft target for real terrorists, his
police force is wasting its time and resources investigating a matter that
neither bothered the public or are of concern to the maintenance of peace and
security in the country.
The young people had merely requested
the police to investigate the injustices suffered by the victims in 1987. Why
not investigate the case of the victims or disclose the outcome of their
investigation into my complaint pertaining to ill treatment I was subjected to
in 1987? For sure this group of young people are not terrorists. Neither did
they cheat SMRT for their rides. They have not threatened anyone on the tram or
disrupted the peace and security of Singapore. Why did the police choose to
investigate them and not the complaints of the victims of 1987?
The Public Order Act, the
Parliamentary Elections Act, the Administration of Justice (Protection) Act
2016 just to name a few, give too much power to our police. If we are not
vigilant, we will soon be deprived of all our fundamental liberties guaranteed
by our Constitution. It is time we take stock of the rights we have lost and
attempt to regain them with or without the help of our parliamentarians.
For now, I call upon the police to
stop investigating and harassing the young people who stood up for the victims
of 1987. I salute them for their courage.
We, the people must now have the
courage to stand with them against the unjust investigation. They had merely
exercised their constitutional right to free speech, expression and assembly
and had done no wrong. Today it is them under investigation. Tomorrow it may be
you or me (again).
[This post is shared here with the kind written permission of Teo Soh Lung.]
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