Alan Shadrake : Justice SInkie style

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http://www.british-weekly.com/?p=4101

An Open Letter from Alan Shadrake to the Singapore Government

I am being prosecuted and facing jail for exposing prosecutorial scandals in Singapore – scandals this PAP dictatorship doesn’t want decent Singaporean citizens to know about. One particular heinous scandal concerns Guiga Lyes Ben Laroussi, a Tunisian and valuable ‘foreign talent’ who was the main drug supplier to Singapore’s so-called High Society Drug Circle in 2004.

This destroyer of lives was allowed to escape Singapore after facing a mandatory death penalty charge. The charge was then ‘negotiated’ down so he would receive a jail sentence of between 20 and 30 years in prison instead.

Then another miracle happened: He was allowed bail in the sum of $280,000, given his passport back and allowed to leave Singapore. This could only have been done with the connivance of top government officials because they feared he would expose bigger names if he were to be sent to the gallows.

I exposed this and other prosecutorial scandals in my book Once A Jolly Hangman: Singapore Justice in the Dock, because I hate injustice. While this evil drug baron – friend of the rich and privileged in Singapore – is enjoying his life of luxury in his mansion on his family estate in Le Bardo, Tunisia, Singapore is preparing to hang more pitiful drug mules – perhaps some who helped Guiga get rich.

How is it that this evil drug trader managed to escape justice? I cannot get my passport back and be allowed to leave Singapore. They are determined to punish me first!

I am facing a six months prison sentence for exposing this and many other prosecutorial scandals. There are two other charges hanging over me arising from my book one of which carries as two year prison sentence. My medical and mental problems have been horrendous. I almost bled to death in the street six weeks ago from internal haemorrhage. Had I not been rushed to hospital I would have collapsed and died without anyone knowing the cause until it was too late.

Where is the justice in what they are now doing to me? Did anyone notice that Guiga Lyes Ben Laroussi had escaped justice? Did the Straits Times publish this scandal and demand with massive headlines that Guiga should be extradited back? It did not. Why not? The answer is in my book. But what happened when a Romanian diplomat ran away in March 2010 following a fatal traffic accident? Screaming headlines in the Straits Times and all the local media for him to be brought back and tried.

Guiga Lyes Ben Laroussi, big time destroyer of lives – including his own Singaporean girlfriend, Mariana Abdullah – has been on Interpol’s wanted list for five years. The head of Interpol is Singapore’s very own former police chief Khoo Boon Hui! No attempt has been made to bring him back. His lawyer, Subhas Anandan, has said his powerful family will tell the Tunisian police to ‘go fly a kite’ if they attempt to arrest and have him extradited.

This is yet another scandal in this saga. Perhaps I would have been better treated had I been a major drug syndicate boss.

Amazingly, Law Minister, Mr. K. Shanmugam recently told TODAY that the death penalty for drug offences here is a “trade-off” the government must make to protect “thousands of lives” if drugs became freely available. He further explained that if Yong Vui Kong (now on death row with 36 others) escapes the death penalty, drug lords will see it as a sign that young traffickers will be spared and will then use more of them as drug mules. “You save one life here, but 10 other lives will be gone. What will your choice be?” he added.

My choice, Mr. Shanmugam? If anyone has to be hanged, start with drug barons like Guiga Ben Laroussi!

Here are some of those young people Mr. Shanmugam believes should have been hanged: Flor Contemplacion, Angel Mou Pui-Peng, Vignes Mourthi, Shangmugam Murugesu, Amara Tochi, Thiru Selvam, Zulfikar bin Mustaffah, Rozman Jusoh, Chuek Mei-mei, Nguyen Van Tuong, Tsang Kai Mong Elke, Poon Yuen-chung. I will continue my fight to get justice for all of the above and those who are bound to follow and I will remain a thorn in Singapore’s side regarding injustice until the day I die!

Alan Shadrake

A Prisoner of Singapore

October 29, 2010
 
He was allowed bail in the sum of $280,000, given his passport back and allowed to leave Singapore

OMG! Did this really happened?
But one would think if this chap was really 'protected', no one could have touched him and he would not have been arrested in the 1st place right?
 
The charge was not negotiated down. The final lab test proved that the amount of cocaine was below the amount for the mandatory death sentence. Drugs typically are cut with other stuff and the pure weight has to be done in a lab.

His passport was also not given back.

Note he is also does not want to tell everything and wants you to buy his book. "It did not. Why not? The answer is in my book."

Once you know that Yap Keng Ho has met with anyone, things will go back bad quickly.
 
My choice, Mr. Shanmugam? If anyone has to be hanged, start with drug barons like Guiga Ben Laroussi!

Here are some of those young people Mr. Shanmugam believes should have been hanged: Flor Contemplacion, Angel Mou Pui-Peng, Vignes Mourthi, Shangmugam Murugesu, Amara Tochi, Thiru Selvam, Zulfikar bin Mustaffah, Rozman Jusoh, Chuek Mei-mei, Nguyen Van Tuong, Tsang Kai Mong Elke, Poon Yuen-chung. I will continue my fight to get justice for all of the above and those who are bound to follow and I will remain a thorn in Singapore’s side regarding injustice until the day I die!


I find it very intriguing when he said the above. So does he mean that none of those names he mentioned should be hanged until Guiga Ben Laroussi gets hanged in the gallows? :confused:
 
Once you know that Yap Keng Ho has met with anyone, things will go back bad quickly.

This guy brainwashes everyone he sees with his hatred on leegime. Basically just a nutcase allowed to run loose on the streets. His life is filled only with hatred. I just feel sorry for him.
 
The following is from Wikipedia. Dinesh Singh Bhatia, the son of former judicial commissioner Amarjeet Singh and NMP Kanwaljit Soin, was involved in this case.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guiga_Lyes_Ben_Laroussi


Guiga Lyes Ben Laroussi[1] (born on 14 June 1969, in Le Bardo, Tunisia[2]) is an international fugitive wanted by Singapore government for drug trafficking.

Guiga was the marketing manager at Bobby Rubino's restaurant in Singapore. Central Narcotics Bureau officers had Guiga under surveillance for two months and spotted him several times meeting suspected drug users outside pubs in popular nightspot areas, such as Mohamed Sultan.[3] In the first-ever raid of a cocaine syndicate ring in Singapore in October 2004, which resulted in the arrest of 23 members including wealthy locals and high-profile expatriates, Guiga was claimed by the police to be the link man of the ring.[4] He was charged with 16 charges including possessing 25.2 grams (0.9 oz) of cocaine[5] and selling ecstasy to Dutch businessman Petrus Van Wanrooij.[6] Guiga's girlfriend Mariana Abdullah was charged with drug-related offence as well.[4]

Guiga faced 24 years in jail and 20 strokes of the cane under a plea bargain arrangement he was considering.[5] He failed to appear in court on February 23, 2005, when he was due to appear to give his plea over the charges. Judge F.G. Remedios issued a warrant for his arrest and said his bail fee of S$280,000 (US$170,000) had been forfeited.[5] Since Guiga's passport had been confiscated as a bail condition, it is unclear how he managed to flee the country. Guiga was subsequently listed by Interpol as a fugitive.
 
Last edited:
Alan Shadrake said:
Then another miracle happened: He was allowed bail in the sum of $280,000, given his passport back and allowed to leave Singapore.

Wikipedia said:
Judge F.G. Remedios issued a warrant for his arrest and said his bail fee of S$280,000 (US$170,000) had been forfeited.[5] Since Guiga's passport had been confiscated as a bail condition, it is unclear how he managed to flee the country.

Either Alan Shadrake is lying or Wikipedia is lying :(
 
The following is from Wikipedia. Dinesh Singh Bhatia, the son of former judicial commissioner Amarjeet Singh and NMP Kanwaljit Soin, was involved in this case.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guiga_Lyes_Ben_Laroussi


Guiga Lyes Ben Laroussi[1] (born on 14 June 1969, in Le Bardo, Tunisia[2]) is an international fugitive wanted by Singapore government for drug trafficking.

Guiga was the marketing manager at Bobby Rubino's restaurant in Singapore. Central Narcotics Bureau officers had Guiga under surveillance for two months and spotted him several times meeting suspected drug users outside pubs in popular nightspot areas, such as Mohamed Sultan.[3] In the first-ever raid of a cocaine syndicate ring in Singapore in October 2004, which resulted in the arrest of 23 members including wealthy locals and high-profile expatriates, Guiga was claimed by the police to be the link man of the ring.[4] He was charged with 16 charges including possessing 25.2 grams (0.9 oz) of cocaine[5] and selling ecstasy to Dutch businessman Petrus Van Wanrooij.[6] Guiga's girlfriend Mariana Abdullah was charged with drug-related offence as well.[4]

Guiga faced 24 years in jail and 20 strokes of the cane under a plea bargain arrangement he was considering.[5] He failed to appear in court on February 23, 2005, when he was due to appear to give his plea over the charges. Judge F.G. Remedios issued a warrant for his arrest and said his bail fee of S$280,000 (US$170,000) had been forfeited.[5] Since Guiga's passport had been confiscated as a bail condition, it is unclear how he managed to flee the country. Guiga was subsequently listed by Interpol as a fugitive.
If he was facing capital sentence and was a drug lord, how can bail be granted in the first place? He is a sure flight risk.
Any lawyers here?

How did he managed to leave Singapore? Another Abbas Saad?
 
This guy brainwashes everyone he sees with his hatred on leegime. Basically just a nutcase allowed to run loose on the streets. His life is filled only with hatred. I just feel sorry for him.

It is ok to hate the leegime, especially what they've done to him.

Unfortunately however this Yap guy is not helping, but hurting things for people whom he associates with.
 
The following is from Wikipedia. Dinesh Singh Bhatia, the son of former judicial commissioner Amarjeet Singh and NMP Kanwaljit Soin, was involved in this case.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guiga_Lyes_Ben_Laroussi


Guiga Lyes Ben Laroussi[1] (born on 14 June 1969, in Le Bardo, Tunisia[2]) is an international fugitive wanted by Singapore government for drug trafficking.

Guiga was the marketing manager at Bobby Rubino's restaurant in Singapore. Central Narcotics Bureau officers had Guiga under surveillance for two months and spotted him several times meeting suspected drug users outside pubs in popular nightspot areas, such as Mohamed Sultan.[3] In the first-ever raid of a cocaine syndicate ring in Singapore in October 2004, which resulted in the arrest of 23 members including wealthy locals and high-profile expatriates, Guiga was claimed by the police to be the link man of the ring.[4] He was charged with 16 charges including possessing 25.2 grams (0.9 oz) of cocaine[5] and selling ecstasy to Dutch businessman Petrus Van Wanrooij.[6] Guiga's girlfriend Mariana Abdullah was charged with drug-related offence as well.[4]

Guiga faced 24 years in jail and 20 strokes of the cane under a plea bargain arrangement he was considering.[5] He failed to appear in court on February 23, 2005, when he was due to appear to give his plea over the charges. Judge F.G. Remedios issued a warrant for his arrest and said his bail fee of S$280,000 (US$170,000) had been forfeited.[5] Since Guiga's passport had been confiscated as a bail condition, it is unclear how he managed to flee the country. Guiga was subsequently listed by Interpol as a fugitive.

Were all the 23 charged? Drug comsuption is against the law to in singapore right? This should be high profile charge but i din remember any of it.
 
How did he managed to leave Singapore? Another Abbas Saad?

Abbas Saad was arrested, charged, found guilty of match fixing and fined $50,000. At no point did he ever attempt to escape the country.
:rolleyes:
 
The charge was not negotiated down. The final lab test proved that the amount of cocaine was below the amount for the mandatory death sentence. Drugs typically are cut with other stuff and the pure weight has to be done in a lab.

His passport was also not given back.

Note he is also does not want to tell everything and wants you to buy his book. "It did not. Why not? The answer is in my book."

Once you know that Yap Keng Ho has met with anyone, things will go back bad quickly.

lab test result from the goverment ?? :rolleyes:
 
Were all the 23 charged? Drug comsuption is against the law to in singapore right? This should be high profile charge but i din remember any of it.

This will hopefully help with your memory. Other than Dinesh Singh Bhatia, there were also a high profile msm journalist and a media celebrity involved.

On Dinesh Singh Bhatia, his lawyer was none other than K Shanmugam. Back then, he was just a lowly PAP MP. Since then, he has risen like a meteor to become Minister of Home Affairs. With such a high powered lawyer arguing his case, he got 12 months which was subsequently reduced to 8 months on appeal.


Drug war Enters new dimension
In US, cocaine's a high society drug associated with Wall Street and Hollywood; Singapore follows. By Seah Chiang Nee.
Oct 17, 2004

http://www.littlespeck.com/content/lifestyle/CTrendsLifestyle-041017.htm

WHEN narcotics agents arrested 23 members of a drug syndicate last week, it was more than just another bust - it represented a crossing of dimensions.

It was the first report of cocaine, a "high society" drug potentially more dangerous than heroin, having penetrated Singapore's wealthy youths and expatriate community.

Those arrested - 16 Singaporeans, five foreigners and two permanent residents - were not dropouts normally involved with the drug trade.

They were from the high earning upper class, and included brokers, businessmen and executives, an award-winning French chef, a show personality and a TV journalist.

They zoom around town in flashy cars, eat at expensive restaurants and hang out at Boat Quay pubs. One of them, Briton Andrew Vale, a top financial broker who has been here for 10 years, drives a Rolls Royce.

This is the latest chapter of Singapore's battle against drugs, moving from opium in the 40s to heroin to designer drugs, and now cocaine.

The first time I saw someone smoking opium was in the late 40s when as a pre-teen I accompanied my father to his mahjong den on the first floor of a dingy shop near North Bridge Road.

Then as a reporter, I encountered heroin addicts - with pale faces, sniffing noses and a glazed look - in Hong Kong, Thailand to Malaysia and Singapore.

With each raid and execution of traffickers, heroin faded. But others have entered the scene.

Even as a liberal young journalist, I could agree with the reasons why Singapore and Malaysia had laws to hang drug traffickers.

These countries are a stone's throw away from the Golden Triangle, one of the world's biggest heroin producers. If not stopped, the menace can write off hundreds of thousands of urban youths.

Singapore maintains the highest per capita execution rate in the world. Since 1991, more than 400 people have been hanged mostly for drug trafficking.

Tolerance for addiction also declined because of the impact on crime; too many addicts were robbing and stealing to pay for their fixes.

From the 90s, addicts were sent to prison instead of a mandatory "cold turkey" treatment.
Cocaine, a powerfully addictive stimulant drug, had long been the plaything of America's rich and famous, from wealthy brokers on Wall Street to Hollywood film stars.

As Singapore became a developed state, its lifestyle began to take after many of the traits of the richer nations in the West, ranging from late marriage and fast divorce to low birth rates and cocaine abuse.

It is the way the pendulum swings. Two reasons explain why Singapore is vulnerable.
The republic aims to become a cosmopolitan city that provides quality and high-tech services. It requires foreign expertise and ideas.

Secondly, the new generation of Singaporeans is Internet-savvy, worldly wise and able to absorb knowledge quickly, a two-way street that includes the good and bad.

When the open policy for the Internet and foreign talent was adopted, some officials had cautioned: "When you open the window to let in the breeze, some flies are bound to come in."

This warning has hit home with the latest arrests of the five foreigners and their local girlfriends. The syndicate supplies cocaine and other drugs to a small closely-knit crowd.
Investigators believe they number no more than 30 to 40 consumers.

Of the arrests, the most shocking was that of a former High Court judge's son, Dinesh Singh Bhatia, 34, a private equity investor.

His father is Amarjeet Singh, a former judicial commissioner and also a senior counsel, who served on the United Nations war crimes tribunal for the Balkans.

Dinesh's mother is the former Nominated MP and orthopaedic surgeon Dr Kanwaljit Soin and a director of the London-based HelpAge International, a global network helping the disadvantaged elderly.

He has been charged with cocaine consumption. If convicted, he can be jailed up to 10 years or fined S$20,000 or both.

Dinesh returned from the UK in 1995 with three degrees - in computer science and electrical engineering and a masters in biomedical engineering.

Briton Andrew Vale last worked for the Singapore branch of Credittrade, a British-based finance firm. He was a broker on its Structured Credit Desk, dealing in credit derivatives and structured financial products, the sort of people Singapore needed.

The other high-profile arrests included:

* The alleged syndicate leader, Marx Oh Wee Chee, 31, a director of events management company Zero Event Concepts.

* Tunisian Guiga Lyes Ben Laroussi, 35, marketing manager at Bobby Rubino's restaurant, is the alleged link-man of the syndicate. Both he and his girlfriend Mariana Abdullah, 24, were charged with trafficking.

* Briton Nigel Bruce Simmonds, 35, bureau chief of Singapore Tatler, a high-society magazine, is charged with possessing drugs.

* Award-winning French chef Francois Fabien Mermilliod, 29, also charged with possessing drugs.

* Vale's girlfriend Penelope Pang Su-yin, daughter of the organiser of the Miss Universe pageant.

* Two TV personalities, rapper Sheikh Haikel and Cheryl Fox, a presenter in Channel News Asia, were also arrested and out on bail, pending urine test results. (Latest: both tested negatively, cleared).

Describing the crowd, a reporter of the New Paper wrote: "They live a lie. These are people on the move - young, urban and upwardly mobile professionals. At night, they drive flashy cars and hit the expensive fancy restaurants.

"This is the illicit cocaine party crowd right here in squeaky clean Singapore."

The Tunisian expatriate and two Singaporeans charged with trafficking could face the gallows if convicted. Caning, too, is on the cards for the guilty.

The websites are abuzz with talk of the arrests. In one chatroom, Sniff Snort says: "Cocaine is nature's way of telling you that you are making too much money."

Adds another: "Only someone with a brain the size of a pea wouldn't know the consequences of doing drugs in Singapore."
 
Thanks i remember liao.
Dinesh Singh Bhatia, last heard hawking sports cars.
 
Dear Silver

Sigh unfortunately as his current diatribe shows, his concerns were never about justice or any concept of justice but rather his deep seated campaign and personal convictions against the death penalty which led him to write a book based on facts and interesting tidbits against the death penalty and its administration as a systemic view.

Firstly ask any lawyer or definition what constitutes a justice system and we have the following components. law enforcement, courts and the laws. and the penal system. The problem in his book is that whereas is headline is " Singapore's Justice" he uses it loosely and inter changeably with the " Judiciary" which refers specifically to the courts
and to the the punishmment the courts have handed out according to the law. In his latest letter he specifically tightens his claim to prosecutorial scandals which is a far cry from saying the entire system is faulty or its components there of.

For those of us who read the book, prosecutorial discretion is the strongest case and its unfairness its the strongest case which Allan brings forth. There are interesting suggestions based on unsubstantiated testimony of Julia Bolhs and the Tunisian, that magic can and does happen vis sa vis drug trafficking cases with a mandatory death penalty. but does it in any way mean a miscarriage of justice ? So what if there is prosecutorial discretion which at times does not not agree with ones particular sense of moral right or wrong, does it mean a problem with the courts laws, or a problem within law enforcement ? Does a problem with two cases serve as the magic wand which justifies doing away with the death penalty which is what he wants at the end of the day ?

The name's he mentioned, how was justice not done in those cases ? As a supporter of the death penalty, Toichi stands out as a case deserving of a relook but the rest ? The problem with Alan here is that for him , Justice is not served by death penalty in any form under any circumstances and there is where he and I part company.



Locke
 
This is of course not the first time "magic" has happened. Does anyone remember the curious case of Elyamani Khamis and Khameleon?
 
This is of course not the first time "magic" has happened. Does anyone remember the curious case of Elyamani Khamis and Khameleon?

Yes I remember that. A super high flyer considered then to be Singapore's most flamboyant businessman. Our LHL once thought real high of the conman, praising his business acumen and vouching for his integrity to high heaven. Yeah, what happened to the farker? Last I heard he skipped town with his ill-gotten billions. He was the only guy who did a con on the MIWs and lived to tell about it.:p
 
Yes I remember that. A super high flyer considered then to be Singapore's most flamboyant businessman. Our LHL once thought real high of the conman, praising his business acumen and vouching for his integrity to high heaven. Yeah, what happened to the farker? Last I heard he skipped town with his ill-gotten billions. He was the only guy who did a con on the MIWs and lived to tell about it.:p

There is a bit more to the story. He bought his freedom by bringing down a blue eyed boy.
 
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