A Singapore court has found the UK author Alan Shadrake
guilty of insulting the Singapore judiciary in a book he wrote about
the death penalty.
The 75-year-old will be sentenced for contempt next
week; he also faces trial on defamation charges.
In his book, Once a Jolly Hangman - Singapore
Justice in the Dock, he criticised how the death penalty is used,
alleging a lack of impartiality.
The Malaysia-based Shadrake was arrested in July when
he visited Singapore to launch his book.
This is a case about someone who says among other
things the judges in Singapore are not impartial... (and are)
influenced by political and economic situations and biased against the
weak and the poor, Justice Quentin Loh said.
The book contains interviews with human rights
activists, lawyers and former police officers, as well as a profile of
Darshan Singh, the former chief executioner at Singapore's Changi
Prison. It claims he executed around 1,000 men and women from 1959
until he retired in 2006.
Separately, Shadrake is being investigated by the
police for criminal defamation; his passport is being held by the
police.
The BBC's Vaudine England says few critics of
Singapore manage to avoid censure in the city-state's courts.
Update: Sentenced
16th November 2010. Based on article
from google.com
A Singapore
court jailed the 75-year-old British author for six weeks on Tuesday
for publishing a book critical of executions in the city-state.
Alan Shadrake was handed the prison sentence and a
fine of 20,000 Singapore dollars (15,000 US) for contempt of court over
the book, which features an interview with a former chief executioner.
High Court Judge Quentin Loh dismissed a last-minute
apology by Shadrake as nothing more than a tactical ploy in court
to obtain a reduced sentence and ruled that the freelance
journalist will have to serve two extra weeks in prison if he fails to
pay the fine.
A fine should be imposed to prevent Mr Shadrake
from profiting from his contempt (of court), the judge said.
The ruling said the sentence was the stiffest ever
imposed for contempt of court in Singapore. The previous longest jail
term was 15 days.
Update: Offered a Way Out
23rd November 2010. Based on article
from indexoncensorship.org
The Attorney
General's Office made an unprecedented application for the court to
remind Alan Shadrake of his right to seek leave of the court if he
wants to leave Singapore.
This implies that if his defence team applies for
Shadrake to leave the jurisdiction, the prosecution would not contest
it.
Shadrake, who appealed the sentence last week, has
said that he will consider the offer.