Besides losing the citizenship, you will be charged in the courts and the worst punishment is you may not be able to enter Singapore anymore.
Think about it, the whole purpose of having dual citizenship is to come back to Singapore as citizen, by trying to keep the Singapore passport, now you risk not being able to enter Singapore anymore.
No wonder Old Fart prefers Ah Tiongs to Sinkies any time. The former have balls compared to the latter.
Read the following article and tell me Zhou Bin is a special case:
****************************************************
Zhou Yongkang under house arrest: Mingjing News
Retired political heavyweight Zhou Yongkang, who is rumored to be under investigation for graft, has effectively been placed under house arrest, while his son Zhou Bin has been detained by Chinese security officials in Singapore, reports Mingjing News, a website allegedly sourced by political insiders and run by overseas Chinese.
Prior to his retirement last November, the 70-year-old Zhou was a member of the Politburo Standing Bureau, China's top decision-making body, and chief of the Central Political and Legislative Committee, the department in charge of the country's security forces and law enforcement institutions. Earlier in his career Zhou was also the general manager of state-owned oil giant China National Petroleum Corp and the minister of Land and Resources. A WikiLeaks cable from 2009 revealed that the US government believes he heads a group of individuals who control the interests of China's lucrative oil industry.
According to the latest issue of Mingjing's Zhongguo Mibao magazine, Zhou Yongkang's son Zhou Bin, who had reportedly fled to California to evade China's anti-graft authorities, never made it to the United States and was actually apprehended by Chinese officials in Singapore. Mingjing claims, however, that
Zhou Bin, who holds American and Singaporean passports, has not been officially placed under arrest though is also prohibited from leaving Singapore.
The magazine report also said that the investigation into Zhou Yongkang's corrupt activities has advanced and that the retired politician has effectively been placed under house arrest.
Zhou's corruption case will implicate a number of other high-ranking government and Communist Party officials, the report added.
Wang Qishan, head of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, China's anti-graft watchdog, has allegedly issued an order calling for 24-hour surveillance of all individuals implicated in the Zhou Yongkang case and for the confiscation of their passports. Persons of interest already detained will all be relocated to Beijing, where they cannot be moved unless with the prior joint written authorisation of the investigation team leader and Beijing public security bureau chief Fu Zhenghua.
Rumors regarding Zhou Yongkang's downfall have circulated on the internet since last year, though so far none have proven to be authentic.
Source:
http://www.wantchinatimes.com/news-subclass-cnt.aspx?id=20130923000089&cid=1101