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- Aug 20, 2008
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When Fricker told PAP mata that he had painted similar arts in his own country and the police there did not border, PAP gave that information to Swiss Govt and repatriated him to back to be charged:oIo:
, he is now liable for several cases there and look to spend 10-12 years in prison at home! 
:oIo::oIo:
That is FT #1, wait till you recall FT #2. Surely not just these 2, there are too many examples, these are the 2 within just today's news. PAP forced FTs to learn about the hidden truth regarding who is their REAL ENEMY. And PAP will have to be made to pay back by BOTH Singaporeans and FTs TOGETHER. That will be the BIG REVENGE coming soon.
Alan Shadrake is FT reporter and only for writing a book regarding M Ravi's Anti-DP Campaign, he is going to prison.
http://www.todayonline.com/Singapore/EDC101118-0000083/Fricker-arrested-in-Switzerland
FT #1
Fricker arrested in Switzerland
by Ansley Ng
05:55 AM Nov 18, 2010
SINGAPORE - Swiss national Oliver Fricker, released from jail here on Monday after serving time for breaking into a train depot and vandalising an SMRT train, was arrested at Zurich Airport after he had landed.
Swiss police suspect he was involved in several cases of train vandalism in as many as five cantons - or districts - from 2002, causing damage valued at 200,000 Swiss francs ($262,000).
The 32-year-old was picked up by the Swiss police after his plane landed on Tuesday at 7am local time. He is being detained while the police complete their investigation.
According to Mr Marcel Schlatter, a police spokesman at the Zug canton, Fricker will be charged in court today or tomorrow for the alleged offences.
When asked if the Swiss police believed Fricker had allegedly acted alone in these cases, Mr Schlatter told MediaCorp: "We assume there are more of them but so far, it's just him."
Under the Swiss criminal code, the former software consultant faces between one and five years in jail for vandalism.
Fricker also has a previous conviction in 2001 for property damage, Mr Schlatter added.
Mr Schlatter could not comment if Fricker had been deported from Singapore, or if he knew he was a wanted man in Switzerland.
In May, Fricker - together with alleged accomplice Dane Alexandra Lloyd, who is still at large - had cut through a fence surrounding the protected place at Tanah Merah and spray-painted graffiti on two train carriages. He was sentenced to seven months' imprisonment and three strokes of the cane, but was released from jail less than five months later, after he received a one-third remission for good behaviour.
On Monday, Fricker left Changi Prison Complex and was taken to the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority building in Lavender for repatriation procedures.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/11/17/3068917.htm?section=justin
Jailed author refuses to be silenced
FT #2
By Karon Snowdon for Radio Australia
Posted Wed Nov 17, 2010 1:13pm AEDT
The British author facing a jail sentence in Singapore says he will continue to campaign against the use of the death penalty by the state.
Alan Shadrake, 75, faces six weeks jail and a $US20,000 fine for publishing a book critical of Singapore's legal system.
The Malaysian-based writer told ABC Radio Australia he has a week to decide on an appeal and he will not be silenced.
"I don't care what I say, they can do what the heck they like, I'm not going to shut up," he said.
"I'm very much against the death penalty in Singapore and everywhere else."
Shadrake, who lives in Malaysia and Britain, was arrested by Singapore police in July after launching the book Once a Jolly Hangman: Singapore Justice in the Dock.
It includes a profile of Darshan Singh, the former chief executioner at Singapore's Changi Prison who, according to the author, executed about 1,000 men and women from 1959 until he retired in 2006.
It also features interviews with human rights activists, lawyers and former police officers on cases involving capital punishment.
The book also alleges the law was administered unfairly, with some cases influenced by diplomatic factors.
Shadrake has denied his court case is a publicity stunt.
"No, I didn't do it for publicity. I took legal advice [saying] as long as it's accurate, they cannot do anything to you and the book was not banned," he said.
Shadrake says he thinks his case will generate debate in the region about the death penalty.



That is FT #1, wait till you recall FT #2. Surely not just these 2, there are too many examples, these are the 2 within just today's news. PAP forced FTs to learn about the hidden truth regarding who is their REAL ENEMY. And PAP will have to be made to pay back by BOTH Singaporeans and FTs TOGETHER. That will be the BIG REVENGE coming soon.
Alan Shadrake is FT reporter and only for writing a book regarding M Ravi's Anti-DP Campaign, he is going to prison.
http://www.todayonline.com/Singapore/EDC101118-0000083/Fricker-arrested-in-Switzerland

Fricker arrested in Switzerland
by Ansley Ng
05:55 AM Nov 18, 2010
SINGAPORE - Swiss national Oliver Fricker, released from jail here on Monday after serving time for breaking into a train depot and vandalising an SMRT train, was arrested at Zurich Airport after he had landed.
Swiss police suspect he was involved in several cases of train vandalism in as many as five cantons - or districts - from 2002, causing damage valued at 200,000 Swiss francs ($262,000).
The 32-year-old was picked up by the Swiss police after his plane landed on Tuesday at 7am local time. He is being detained while the police complete their investigation.
According to Mr Marcel Schlatter, a police spokesman at the Zug canton, Fricker will be charged in court today or tomorrow for the alleged offences.
When asked if the Swiss police believed Fricker had allegedly acted alone in these cases, Mr Schlatter told MediaCorp: "We assume there are more of them but so far, it's just him."
Under the Swiss criminal code, the former software consultant faces between one and five years in jail for vandalism.
Fricker also has a previous conviction in 2001 for property damage, Mr Schlatter added.
Mr Schlatter could not comment if Fricker had been deported from Singapore, or if he knew he was a wanted man in Switzerland.
In May, Fricker - together with alleged accomplice Dane Alexandra Lloyd, who is still at large - had cut through a fence surrounding the protected place at Tanah Merah and spray-painted graffiti on two train carriages. He was sentenced to seven months' imprisonment and three strokes of the cane, but was released from jail less than five months later, after he received a one-third remission for good behaviour.
On Monday, Fricker left Changi Prison Complex and was taken to the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority building in Lavender for repatriation procedures.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/11/17/3068917.htm?section=justin
Jailed author refuses to be silenced

By Karon Snowdon for Radio Australia
Posted Wed Nov 17, 2010 1:13pm AEDT
The British author facing a jail sentence in Singapore says he will continue to campaign against the use of the death penalty by the state.
Alan Shadrake, 75, faces six weeks jail and a $US20,000 fine for publishing a book critical of Singapore's legal system.
The Malaysian-based writer told ABC Radio Australia he has a week to decide on an appeal and he will not be silenced.
"I don't care what I say, they can do what the heck they like, I'm not going to shut up," he said.
"I'm very much against the death penalty in Singapore and everywhere else."
Shadrake, who lives in Malaysia and Britain, was arrested by Singapore police in July after launching the book Once a Jolly Hangman: Singapore Justice in the Dock.
It includes a profile of Darshan Singh, the former chief executioner at Singapore's Changi Prison who, according to the author, executed about 1,000 men and women from 1959 until he retired in 2006.
It also features interviews with human rights activists, lawyers and former police officers on cases involving capital punishment.
The book also alleges the law was administered unfairly, with some cases influenced by diplomatic factors.
Shadrake has denied his court case is a publicity stunt.
"No, I didn't do it for publicity. I took legal advice [saying] as long as it's accurate, they cannot do anything to you and the book was not banned," he said.
Shadrake says he thinks his case will generate debate in the region about the death penalty.