The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Singapore PM says will not take family feud to court

-

SINGAPORE: Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said yesterday he wanted to avoid suing his brother and sister for defamation over allegation­s that he had abused his power in a dispute with them over what to do with their late father’s house.

The bad blood between the heirs of Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s first prime minister, has gripped the city-state since mid-June, when the younger siblings launched a series of attacks on their elder brother in social media postings.

“In normal circumstan­ces, in fact, in any other imaginable circumstan­ce than this, I would’ve sued immediatel­y,” Lee said in a statement to a rare special sitting of parliament, before taking questions from members.

He said any such action would “further besmirch my parents’ names”, while drawn-out legal proceeding­s would distract and distress Singaporea­ns.

“Therefore, fighting this out in court cannot be my preferred choice,” the prime minister said.

The prime minister’s younger brother and sister, Hsien Yang and Wei Ling, allege Hsien Loong has abused his power in the dispute over the old family home at 38 Oxley Road, and fear that he would use the organs of the state against them.

Hsien Yang has said he and his wife, lawyer Lee Suet Fern, would be leaving Singapore because they felt closely monitored and hugely unwelcome.

The prime minister has consistent­ly denied the allegation­s, and said he was very disappoint­ed that they have chosen to publicise private family matters.

Yesterday’s parliament­ary session was extraordin­ary for Singapore, a small but wealthy

In normal circumstan­ces, in fact, in any other imaginable circumstan­ce than this, I would’ve sued immediatel­y. Lee Hsien Loong, Singapore’s Prime Minister

island nation that prides itself on being a rock of stability in Southeast Asia.

The accusation of abuse of power prompted Lee to call for the special sitting of parliament to defend the integrity of his government.

Taking a rare step, Lee removed the Party Whip for the debate, allowing lawmakers from the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP) to question their own cabinet regardless of the party line.

The PAP controls 83 of the 89 elected seats in parliament, and lawmakers submitted their questions in writing at the end of last week. More than 30 lawmakers were due to put questions over the course of Monday and Tuesday.

Low Thia Khiang, a leader of the opposition Workers’ Party, criticised the prime minister for not taking his siblings to court, saying there was no reason they should be treated differentl­y from other citizens.

He also said that if the siblings had evidence of the prime minister lying or abusing power “they should have made them public by now” rather than conduct a media campaign that had left Singaporea­ns in suspense.

“The government needs to move on. I am personally perplexed and lost on the Lee family saga,” said Low.

“However, this is not a Korean drama show.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? Lee speaks at the special sitting of parliament. — Reuters photo
Lee speaks at the special sitting of parliament. — Reuters photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia