Summon Request Declined, Singapore Falun Gong Practitioners Appeal to Supreme Court
(Clearwisdom.net) On August 16, after a request to summon Minister Mentor
Lee Kuan Yew and Deputy Prime Minister Mr. Wong Kan Seng to testify was declined
by the Subordinate Courts, practitioners involved in the case decided to appeal
to the Supreme Court and their Notice of Appeal has been received by the court.
The practitioners are now awaiting the Grounds of Decision from the Subordinate
Courts to decide the next step. According to the Minghui/Clearwisdom website, on July 10, the Singapore
Police decided to charge a total of nine practitioners who distributed Falun
Gong truth-clarifying materials on October 22 and 23, 2005 in
downtown Singapore for "Assembly without Permission." The case
regarding the October 22 incident involves five practitioners, and the one on
October 23 involves six practitioners; two of the practitioners were involved on
both days. On July 28, Wang Yuyi, one of the six defendants of the October 23 case,
requested the Subordinate Courts to summon eight witnesses, including Minister
Mentor Lee Kuan Yew and Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Home Affairs,
Wong Kan Seng to testify. On August 7, following legal procedures, Wang Yuyi
submitted an application to the courts to summon these witnesses. The Subordinate Courts Refuse to Issue Summon without Giving Grounds for
Decision This reporter contacted Ms. Wang Yuyi regarding her request for witnesses.
According to Ms. Wang, a judge declined her request as soon as she saw the
application form, stating that these witnesses are not related to the case.
Later, Wang Yuyi filed another application in which she provided a report to
detail how each of the witnesses was related to the case. However, her
application was again not approved. Ms Wang recalled: "At the beginning, the judge asked if all the witnesses were present at
the site on October 23 2005. I said "no." The judge then said that
they are then not related to the case. I asked the judge, "Is that true
that witnesses must be present at the site?" She said "no." I
then asked her to momentarily skip this issue and read my application carefully. "After reading my application, she still said 'no.' However, she refused
to give the grounds for her decision. I saw her concern and asked: 'Is my reason
for summoning witnesses not convincing or are you feeling it difficult to handle
because these witnesses have special social position?' The judge said that when
summoning witnesses, the Singapore courts only look at the evidence and never
consider witnesses' social position. In the end, the judge said that she would allow me to revise my request and
submit it again. I told her that it would be meaningless as she couldn't give
any concrete comments and thus I didn't know how to revise it." Brief Explanation of the Reason to Summon Singapore High Officials Regarding why she wants to summon Lee Kuan Yew to testify, Wang Yuyi said:
"For so many years, we have heard from the police officers and officials
from government departments that they have no other way, but only follow the
order from the higher authorities; therefore, we hope that Minister Mentor Lee
Kuan Yew and Home Affairs Minister Wong Kan Seng and others could clarify all
this in court." Reportedly, Lee Kuan Yew has been promoting trade cooperation between China
and Singapore for many years. In addition, lawsuits against Falun Gong
practitioners often happened when he had frequent contacts with senior officials
of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). For example, in April 2004, two
practitioners were charged for an activity which had taken place 15 months
before. During that period, Lee Kuan Yew and Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong had
each visited China, and the media the also reported on several commercial
cooperative projects between the two countries. This lawsuit against the nine
practitioners was initiated during former head of the 610 Office Li
Lanqing's visit to Singapore. Lee Kuan Yew arranged Li's trip to Singapore and
the presentation of an honorary degree to Li from the National University of
Singapore. On January 23 and July 14, 2006, respectively, Deputy Prime Minister Wong Kan
Seng told the media about the Singapore government's reason, plan and
determination to sue some Falun Gong practitioners. He stated: "The police
will take proper action to enforce the laws." The practitioners involved in
this case believe that the subsequent actions against practitioners were
apparently because he is in charge of the Ministry of Home Affairs. The other witnesses summoned by Ms. Wang Yuyi are from the Police Operations
Department and the Tanglin Police Division. They all had direct contact with the
practitioners and some had multiple contacts. Wang Yuyi said: "If all the witnesses testify at the courts, you will
see how the Singapore government has arranged this lawsuit to please the Chinese
Communist Party. From Lee Kuan Yew to the Ministry of Home Affairs, the Police
Operations Department to the Tanglin Police Division, this chain won't be
complete and the whole story will have holes if any of these
institutions/individuals is absent. Therefore, I insist on summoning all of them
to testify." Ms. Wang added: "I have submitted the names of six witnesses. There are
two or three more who were police officers on duty during the incident. I am
trying to obtain their names so that I can submit them." First Time in Singapore History Regarding this summon request, human rights attorney M. Ravi commented:
"This is the first time in Singapore history that civilians have appealed
to the Supreme Court in order to summon key political figures." Ms. Wang Yuyi said a similar situation occurred when she submitted the Notice
of Appeal on August 16: "The staff member at the front desk didn't dare to
accept the document, saying that she had been working there for decades and this
was the first time to see such an application. After consulting with a judge,
she accepted the document." Regarding this small incident, Wang Yuyi shared her opinion: "Laws are
to uphold social justice, and juridical procedures shall reflect this principle.
However, in the distorted Singapore juridical environment, attorneys
representing human rights violation victims often tried to plead to the
prosecution in order to get a lighter sentence for the defendants. On the other
hand, very few lawyers ever gave thorough defense for defendants in order to
dismiss those unlawful charges. Little by little, the Singapore courts have
become venues for bargaining instead venues for upholding justice." Ms. Wang reminded the public: "I just found that some existing juridical
resources have been forgotten by people. When defending ourselves in this case,
we shall remember and use these rights that we have been endowed with by
laws."
Chinese version available at
http://minghui.ca/mh/articles/2006/8/19/135889.html
Yearly Archive
Printer Version
feedback@clearwisdom.net