Scottish Daily Mail

Hunt’s fury as British ex-public schoolboy faces 24 lashes over drugs in Singapore

- By Stephen Wright Associate News Editor

A BRITISH ex-public schoolboy is at the centre of a major diplomatic row after being sentenced to 24 strokes of the cane for drugs offences in Singapore.

The case has sparked a rift between Singapore and the UK, which traditiona­lly have close ties.

It has also prompted the interventi­on of Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt and his officials, who made clear they ‘strongly oppose the use of corporal punishment’.

London-born Ye Ming Yuen, 29, who went to £37,000-a-year Westminste­r School, will be stripped naked and strapped to a large wooden trestle.

Then his buttocks will be flogged 24 times with a 4ft-long rattan cane.

His ‘judicial corporal punishment’ – which will be inflicted by a ‘trained caner’ taught how to cause the most pain possible – is the maximum caning sentence that can be handed out in Singapore and could leave him scarred for life.

Yuen has also been ordered to serve 20 years in jail after being convicted of seven drug offences, including traffickin­g.

He was originally facing the death penalty but the capital charge was dropped because the net weight of drugs involved was below 500g.

Last night Yuen’s family branded the caning sentence as ‘barbaric’ and ‘a form of torture’, and begged authoritie­s in the former Crown colony – renowned for its no-nonsense approach to law enforcemen­t – to grant him clemency.

Mr Hunt raised Yuen’s case with Singapore’s minister for foreign affairs, Vivian Balakrishn­an, while visiting the country last week, and since then Foreign Office officials have made representa­tions on Yuen’s behalf. Human rights groups have condemned Singapore’s use of the cane, saying it breaches the United Nations Convention Against Torture.

Yuen – first arrested over drugs offences in August 2016 – is being held at Changi prison. According to his family, who live in the UK, the only furniture he has in his cell, where he spends 22 hours a day, is a bamboo mat. He is allowed only two visits from family per month.

His younger sister, a 28-year-old developmen­t manager, said: ‘Without warning, the prison guards knocked on his cell to impose his caning sentence in early December. Ming exclaimed it was against his human rights. After hearing this, they did not proceed with the punishment.

‘The prison guards went to get him again two weeks later. Ming repeated the same explanatio­n, and again the caning did not proceed.

‘The authoritie­s do not give advance warning of caning which is mentally torturous. It could happen any day.’

Details of Yuen’s plight are outlined in his handwritte­n appeal submission, in which he asked for a reduced sentence of eight and a half years and 15 strokes of the cane.

A former top club DJ in Singapore, his offences include two counts of ‘repeat drug traffickin­g’ – one of 69g and one of 60g of cannabis. Another offence included drug traffickin­g of 15g of crystal meth. In his failed appeal bid, he said: ‘Should a shorter sentence be imposed, it would allow me to remain useful in society.

‘I was misled in my youth, in an environmen­t surrounded by drugs, to fall into the dark lure of addiction, oblivious to the hold it had on me.’ Before moving to Singapore in 2007, Yuen – the son of a marketing consultant from China and a Singapore-born marketing executive – was a pupil at Dulwich Prep School in South London and then Westminste­r School, whose alumni include Nick Clegg, Peter Ustinov and John Gielgud.

At Westminste­r School he gained 11 GCSEs – four A*s, six As, and one B. But while at the top public school he ‘got in with the wrong crowd’ and ended up in trouble with the Metropolit­an Police.

In 2007, it emerged that Yuen was wanted by Scotland Yard over an alleged forged driving licences scam. A newspaper tracked him down to Singapore, where he reportedly admitted that he manufactur­ed fake documents and sold them to pupils.

The Foreign and Commonweal­th Office said: ‘Our consular staff have been assisting a British man and his family since his arrest in Singapore in 2016. We strongly oppose the use of corporal punishment, such as caning, in all cases.’

A spokesman for the Singapore High Commission in London said: ‘Singapore deals with the drug problem comprehens­ively with the strictest enforcemen­t coupled with the severest of penalties to protect the welfare of the public and our collective aspiration to live and raise our children in a safe oasis.’

‘I was misled in my youth’

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ‘Barbaric’: A Changi prison officer uses a dummy to demonstrat­e how inmates are caned
‘Barbaric’: A Changi prison officer uses a dummy to demonstrat­e how inmates are caned
 ??  ?? Star student: A young Yuen
Star student: A young Yuen

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom