Function8’s letter to Archbishop

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[h=2]And the mine explodes![/h]
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September 24th, 2012 |
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Author: Contributions



In my previous post, (http://www.tremeritus.com/2012/09/23/mha-walks-into-a-minefield/) I was questioning the wisdom of MHA wading into the saga of the Archbishop’s letter. They could have stayed away and avoided embarrassment. They didn’t. And now they have stepped on a mine.
Function 8 (evidently riled up by MHA’s press statement) has released a letter written by them to the Archbishop after the latter’s withdrawal of his first letter. This is Function8’s letter:
1 June 2012

Dear Monsignor Nicholas Chia

May we first say that we were very happy to receive your letter of 25th May 2012 in support of the commemoration event of Operation Spectrum to be held on 2 June 2012 and your wish (parts blacked out by F8 to protect the direct contents of the Archbishop’s original letter). We received and appreciated it as a gesture on the part of the Catholic Church in Singapore to recognize truth and acknowledge the injustice suffered by the former detainees of Operation Spectrum and their families.

Needless to say, we are deeply disappointed and puzzled to receive your letter of withdrawal, just five days later.

Whatever might have transpired to pressurize the head of the Catholic Church in Singapore to withdraw the letter, we would like to think that you can now understand why the detainees had to make their “confessions” under the duress of torture and the threat of indefinite detention without trial.

We do not regard the event we are organizing as “political activities”, but as an effort to achieve restorative justice. This is a human and necessary stage in the healing process for the former detainees of Operation Spectrum, their families and friends. We are somewhat amazed and dismayed that you seem to suspect – without giving any reason (and indeed there is none) – that there is any ulterior motive to use your letter outside of the event, in any way at all.

How did you come to this conclusion? We had not even solicited the letter from you in the first place.

We note that you have copied a Mr (parts blacked out by F8 to protect the identity of the person) in your letter of withdrawal and are puzzled as to his role in this matter when he was not copied in the first letter. Should we also copy this response to Mr (parts blacked out by F8 to protect the identity of the person)? Out of courtesy, we will await your response.

Lastly, while we can understand that Christians are obliged to “render to Caesar what is Caesar’s”, in the context of Singapore, we are curious to know what you think they should “render to God” in this same context.


Yours sincerely,

The Organisers


The first paragraph is sufficient (despite the blanked out portions) to indicate that the Archbishop had expressed support for the event.
Someone has been copied into the letter of retraction. One wonders who that might be. Someone from the Church? Someone from the government? Why would that person be copied into the letter? More questions.

Let us not get sidetracked from the key issue. Whatever might have transpired between Function 8 and the Archbishop and however any party may be alleged to have acted irresponsibly, is irrelevant for the rest of us. What is relevant is whether government officials had brought pressure upon the Archbishop to retract his letter of support.

If such pressure was placed on the Archbishop, how did the officials come to know of the letter? Were the members of Function 8 and their meetings subject to surveillance by the ISD? If as is repeatedly alleged, the ISD’s function is to prevent terror attacks, why would their efforts be directed at the activities of a civil society group? (Although many of us in my generation and those older than me have taken it for granted that the ISD may have done routine surveillance on citizens for political purposes, I have increasingly heard from a younger generation of PAP apologists that the ISD and the ISA is necessary for the prevention of terrorist activity. These persons ought to consider whether the surveillance activities of our state is limited to crime prevention and prevention of terror or such surveillance activities are extended to political activities of persons seen as being unfriendly towards the ruling party.)

Of course, I am speculating a fair bit here.

The following scenario is also entirely probable:

Archbishop writes a letter to Function 8. A few days later, Minister has a routine meeting with the Archbishop where the latter frankly reveals the fact of the letter written to Function 8. Minister suggests that it is not advisable to have the letter released to the public and persuades the Achbishop to withdraw the letter. On day 5, Archbishop writes to Function 8 to withdraw the letter.
We will never know the truth.
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Subra
*The writer blogs at http://article14.blogspot.sg/
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[h=2]No disrespect, Bertha, but you’re missing the woods for the trees[/h]
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September 22nd, 2012 |
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Author: Contributions

Bertha Henson, who describes herself as “officially an ex-journalist”, wrote the following post on her blog on 22 September:
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With all due respect, Bertha has missed the most crucial point – and indeed the reason why Function 8 has chosen to release its letter to the Archbishop which it sent earlier this year, after the Archbishop retracted his purported support for the 25[SUP]th[/SUP] anniversary event in June.

Lets rewind a little and go back to what the Archbishop had said in his statement on 19 September [emphasis mine]:
“Au’s article confirmed my fear that the group would use my letter in a manner that I did not agree with, and make use of the Office of the Archbishop and the Catholic Church for their own ends.

“These irresponsible actions can easily cause serious misunderstanding between the Catholic Church and the Government, and damage the longstanding trust and cooperation between the two. It is most regrettable that Au and the group have acted in this manner.”
The next day, the Ministry for Home Affairs released its own statement on the matter. It said [emphasis mine]:
“The actions by this group to publicise the matter through Mr Au is disrespectful of the Archbishop, and contrary to his views and intentions as conveyed to the group after he had decided to retract his letter. This deliberate breach of the Archbishop’s trust confirms the objective of this group to publicly involve the Catholic Church and the Archbishop in their political agenda.”
I don’t know how Bertha feels about the statements from the Archbishop and the MHA but they carry some rather very serious allegations against Function 8.
Underlying the accusations is the insinuation, at least from an observer’s standpoint, that Function 8 had solicited support from the Archbishop and/or Catholic Church and had in mind to use this for its own “political aims”.

Function 8 has rejected any such insinuation.

But how does and how would Function 8 prove that it had not in fact sought support from the Archbishop or Catholic Church for its 2 June event at Speakers’ Corner?

It tried to do this by asking the Archbishop to release the letters he had sent to the group. The Archbishop has since declined to do so.

Function 8 has decided to release its letter to the Archbishop which it had sent earlier this year – on 1 June (see here).
Why did Function 8 do so?

To my mind, its intention is to disprove the assertion or accusation that it had somehow solicited the Archbishop’s support – that Function 8 is “using” the Catholic Church “for political aims”, as the MHA statement asserts.

This is the heart of the whole saga.

Bertha Henson has thus missed the woods for the trees – and talks about “respect”. Indeed, she also says:
“I am not sure transparency is the key element that should be respected in this tangle.”
I would have thought transparency is exactly the thing which we need here for clarity and truth. Evidently, the good ex-journalist seems to be disagreeable to this!

With all due respect to the “ex-journalist”, when one is accused of serious things, one has the right to defend oneself. By doing so it does not mean one is disrespectful of the one making the charges, even if it is someone such as the Archbishop. As with anyone, the Archbishop, in making the allegations, must – not should – must be the one to prove his allegations. This is especially so when the charges are such serious ones.

Also, Bertha could do well to ask some questions of the Ministry for Home Affairs too. Questions such as:

• What really happened between the issuance of the first letter by the Archbishop and the last letter which asked for the first letter to be returned? Why the sudden apparent change in position by the Archbishop?
• Why did the DPM ask to see the Archbishop? Was this really a routine meeting as the MHA statement claimed?
• What was said at the meeting? Who was there? Did the Archbishop go alone? Was he asked to go alone? Was the June event mentioned or discussed? What were discussed? What was the DPM’s position on the June event?

The answers to these questions would shed more light on the matter. Asking for “every side” to “back down” while at the same time ignoring the serious allegations made against Function 8 is not the way to go.

On the contrary, Bertha should be asking for more answers. And she would do well to direct them to the MHA, more than the Archbishop.
Otherwise, it is indeed disrespectful that she would seemingly accept that allegations made against another – without proof – are fine.
That would be most unbecoming of someone with a journalistic background. No disrespect, Bertha, but you’re missing the woods for the trees.

For the record, read this: MHA’s “unwarranted allegations” forced us to show reply to Archbishop: Function 8.
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Andrew Loh
* Andrew helms publichouse.sg as Editor-in-Chief. His writings have been reproduced in other publications, including the Australian Housing Journal in 2010. He was nominated by Yahoo! Singapore as one of Singapore’s most influential media persons in 2011.
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(Photo www.wan-ifra.org)

Editor’s note: Bertha Henson describes herself as “officially an ex-journalist” and “no longer entitled to free newspapers” from SPH on her blog. She had been a journalist with SPH for 26 years. She also said that she gets a 10 per cent discount for subscribing to newspapers from SPH.
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Coffeeshop Chit Chat - Function8’s letter to Archbishop
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If Teo Chee Hean could pressurize the parents of a 17 yrs old who fucked him online, what else can't Teo Chee Hean do ??

Your guess is as good as my guess.

I have totally lost my respect for Teo Chee Hean immediately after Tang Liang Hong's case.
 
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