The Boston Globe

Singapore official charged in bribery

Case is latest in string of scandals

- By Sui-Lee Wee

It was an unpreceden­ted set of events in Singapore: a government minister charged with corruption and then hauled to court.

S. Iswaran, the transport minister, was formally accused Monday of taking bribes, including a ride on a private jet and tickets to the musical “Hamilton” and soccer games in Britain. By the time he appeared in court Thursday and pleaded not guilty, he had resigned from his post.

Singapore has long touted a squeaky clean image and a lack of graft. But in recent months, several scandals have tarnished the governing People’s Action Party’s reputation — and, in effect, the country’s.

Allegation­s of impropriet­y involving Iswaran became public in July. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong ordered him to take a leave of absence while authoritie­s investigat­ed Iswaran’s dealings involving a billionair­e who helped bring the Formula One auto race to Singapore. The charges unveiled against him include two counts of corruption and one charge of obstructin­g justice. He is also facing 24 counts of “obtaining, as a public servant, valuable things” worth more than hundreds of thousands of dollars.

“One can’t deny that this is a body blow to the PAP, to the government and to Singapore,” said Eugene Tan, an associate professor of law at Singapore Management University. “This is a system that has always prided itself in high public life standards and incorrupti­bility. When you have a series of allegation­s that a minister had compromise­d himself, that does raise legitimate concerns.”

In addition to Iswaran’s case, the PAP last year faced questions of impropriet­y in the real estate dealings of two ministers involving government bungalows and pertaining to the speaker of parliament’s extramarit­al affair with another lawmaker. Although the government found no evidence of wrongdoing or corruption in the real estate matter, the incident raised questions about the privileged positions that ministers have in Singapore at a time of rising living costs.

Singapore has consistent­ly been lauded for its lack of graft. It was the fifth-least-corrupt country in Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Perception­s Index in 2022, the only Asian country in the top 10.

Lee said the government has and will continue to deal with Iswaran’s case “rigorously in accordance with the law.”

“I am determined to uphold the integrity of the party and the government, and our reputation for honesty and incorrupti­bility,” Lee said in a statement. “Singaporea­ns expect no less.”

Voters get to weigh in during the next general election, which has to be held by 2025. The PAP’s share of the popular vote has slid in recent elections, and it is facing a growing challenge from an opposition that has criticized the PAP’s decadeslon­g, one-party dominance.

The party is also 10 months away from a major leadership transition, during which Lee is expected to step down and hand power to the so-called 4G, or “fourth generation,” of leaders that included Iswaran.

Lawrence Wong, who is set to take over as prime minister, emphasized the party’s stance on graft.

“The PAP stance on corruption is nonnegotia­ble, this is part of our DNA,” Wong told reporters. “There can be no compromise, no relaxation, no fudging on this, no matter the political price.”

Iswaran has said he would return all the money he had earned as a minister and a member of parliament since being placed under investigat­ion in July.

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