The Borneo Post

Singapore A-G starts contempt of court action against PM’s nephew

- August 6, 2017

SINGAPORE: The nephew of Singapore’s prime minister, who faces contempt of court proceeding­s for comments he made suggesting the city-state’s courts were not independen­t, said he would not be returning to Singapore.

The office of Singapore’s attorney general said it would begin contempt of court proceeding­s against Li Shengwu, a US-based academic, over Facebook posts he made on July 15.

The legal move is the latest twist in a family feud over the fate of the house left by the late Singapore founding father Lee Kwan Yew that gripped the nation last month.

In his post, Li, nephew of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and a son of Lee’s brother, Lee Hsien Yang, described the Singapore government as ‘litigious’ and its courts as ‘pliant’.

Li, 32, is currently a junior fellow at Harvard University and told Reuters from the United States he expected to start an assistant professor position with the university in the fall of 2018.

He said he would defend himself through legal representa­tion in Singapore but would not return to the country.

“I have no intention of going back to Singapore. I have a happy life and a fulfilling job in the US,” he said in an interview.

Li said the prosecutio­n against him was ‘politicall­y motivated’.

“The Attorney General’s Chambers explicitly mentioned both my family relationsh­ips and recent political events in their cease and desist letter,” said Li.

“I would like to spend my time doing research, but have somehow been swept into my uncle Lee Hsien Loong’s personal political vendetta.”

Spokespeop­le for the Prime Minister’s Office were not immediatel­y available for comment.

In a statement on Friday, the attorney general’s chambers said it had previously instructed Li to remove the post and issue a letter of apology acknowledg­ing that his comments about the judiciary were baseless.

It said since Li had failed to meet those requiremen­ts by the stipulated deadline of 0900 GMT, Friday, which had been pushed back from July 28 at Li’s request, it had filed the contempt proceeding­s in High Court.

Earlier on Friday, Li said on Facebook he had amended his original July 15 post to clarify any misunderst­andings.

However, he said he did not believe the post was in contempt of court.

Li’s July 15 post was shared on a privacy setting that allows content to only be viewed by his Facebook friends.

He said on Friday the intent of that post was to convey the “internatio­nal media were restricted in their ability to report” on a recent feud between Prime Minister Lee and his siblings ‘due to the litigious nature’ of the government.

“It is not my intent to attack the Singapore judiciary or to undermine public confidence in the administra­tion of justice,” he said.

The public spat between the Lee siblings, children of Lee Kuan Yew, flared in June over the future of the family home, in which Lee Kuan Yew, who died at the age of 91 in 2015, lived for most of his life.

Lee Hsien Yang and sister Lee Wei Ling accused their elder brother of abusing power to try to save the house as a historic monument in defiance of his father’s wishes.

That prompted the prime minister to call an extraordin­ary special sitting of parliament in July to ‘clear the air’ over an issue that some people say has tarnished Singapore’s image. — Reuters

The Attorney General’s Chambers explicitly mentioned both my family relationsh­ips and recent political events in their cease and desist letter. I would like to spend my time doing research, but have somehow been swept into my uncle Lee Hsien Loong’s personal political vendetta. — Li Shengwu, nephew of Singapore’s prime minister

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