The Borneo Post

Singapore activist charged for protesting without permit

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SINGAPORE: A Singaporea­n activist was charged yesterday for organising public protests without a permit, sparking calls for the tightly controlled citystate to stop treating peaceful demonstrat­ions as crimes.

Jolovan Wham, 37, appeared in court accused of organising three small protests between November last year and July.

These were a candleligh­t vigil outside a prison for a death row convict, a protest on a subway train and a demonstrat­ion at which a Hong Kong democracy activist spoke via video link.

Police described Wham in a statement as ‘ recalcitra­nt’ and said he had ‘repeatedly shown blatant disregard for the law’.

While it is one of Asia’s safest and wealthiest countries, Singapore has faced criticism for its tough laws.

It is illegal to hold a public protest in most of Singapore without police approval, but permits are rarely granted and the only place where demonstrat­ions can be held without one is the corner of one downtown park.

People convicted of organising such protests face a fine of up to Sg$ 5,000 ( US$ 3,713). Repeat offenders must pay up to Sg$10,000, face a maximum six-month prison sentence, or both.

The subway protest saw Wham and several blindfolde­d activists ride on a train while holding up books in protest against a 1987 security operation in which 22 people were arrested under a tough law that allows for detention without trial.

A protest organised by Wham in November last year featured leading Hong Kong democracy activist Joshua Wong speaking via Skype, according to a charge sheet.

Wham was also charged with one count of vandalism for pasting protest posters on a metro train and three counts of refusing to sign statements he made to the police.

Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said Wham’s prosecutio­n demonstrat­es the absurdity of Singapore’s laws on public assemblies and the government’s willingnes­s to penalise those who speak out.

“The Singapore government should start listening to criticism, stop treating peaceful assemblies as crimes, and cease prosecutin­g their organisers.”

 ??  ?? Jolovan Wham
Jolovan Wham

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