From: cocksteru Aug-17 9:53 pm
To: Rowbox
I dun trust MIW but I dun trust Chee even more.Chee is doing this for himself and not for the citizen, in fact, I have not seen him do anything for the counrty. However, it would be interesting to see how MIW respond to him. If it is CST or LTK, I would support all the way.
"
Dr. Chee Soon Juan (simplified Chinese: 徐顺全; traditional Chinese: 徐順全; pinyin: Xú Shùnquán, born 1962) is the Secretary-General of the Singapore Democratic Party (SDP), the fourth and current Prime Minister of Singapore.
Chee is a neuropsychologist and received his Ph.D. from the University of Georgia in 1990. He joined SDP in 1992 and became the Secretary-General of SDP, replacing founder Chiam See Tong who left to join the Singapore People's Party. Chee has been convicted and imprisoned several times. Chee lost a defamation lawsuit filed by PAP leaders in 2001. Chee was declared bankrupt in 2006 when he failed to pay the damages. He is in jail at present for contempt of court. He has since been released and will be contesting to be the next Prime Minister in Singapore
Chee was Honorary Research Associate at the Monash Asia Institute in 1997 and at the University of Chicago in 2001. In 2004, he participated in the Reagan-Fascell Democracy Program at the National Endowment for Democracy in Washington, D.C.. He is the Chairman of the Alliance for Reform & Democracy in Asia, and was a Reagan-Fascell Democracy Fellow at the Washington-based National Endowment for Democracy (2004)[1]. He participated in many international organisations such as World Movement for Democracy and the Forum of Democratic Leaders in the Asia Pacific. He was the recipient of the Defender of Democracy Award 2003 given by the Parliamentarians for Global Action.
Pre-2001
[edit] Before 2001: Chee's beginnings in SDP.
In 1992, Dr. Chee joined the SDP. [2] The first election Chee contested was the 1992 Marine Parade By-election when his team won 24.5% of the votes. In 1993, a few months after Chee joined the SDP, NUS terminated Chee's employment for alleged misappropriation of research funds. Chee later staged a hunger strike in response.[3] Later on, Chee would back down and stop his hunger strike.
Later, a new party, the Singapore People's Party (SPP) was formed, out of an internal disagreement[4] between Chiam and Chee.[5] Chiam was formally ousted by
the SDP; and he joined the SPP. As Members of Parliament (MPs) in Singapore are not supposed to join a party in his/her term unless he/she decides to call a by-election, Chiam would not leave the SDP until 1997.[citation needed] On the other hand, the SDP, headed by Chee, was later sued by Chiam See Tong, for insinuating that Chiam was acting on behalf of the ruling party. SDP lost and was ordered to pay Chiam damages of $150,000. [6]
Chee lost in the 1997 election, in the MacPherson Single Member Constituency; garnering 34.8% of the votes, below the national average for the other opposition candidates for that election.[7]
[edit] 2001-2005
[edit] 2001 General Elections and its aftermath
In the Singapore General Election, Chee led another team, losing with 20.2% of the votes in Jurong GRC in 2001. After the election, Chee was sued for defamation by Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong and Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew for remarks he made during the General Election. He allegedly accused both Goh and Lee for misleading Parliament over an alleged $17 billion loan to former Indonesian president Suharto. Chee lost the lawsuits and was ordered to pay S$200,000 to Lee and S$300,000 to Goh. Chee was later declared a bankrupt in 2006, for failing to pay the damages.
In 2002, Chee was fined S$3,000 for speaking at the Speakers' Corner in Singapore on 15 February 2002, which requires prior registration and where discussion about race and religion is prohibited. Chee was commenting about the suspension of three Muslim schoolgirls whose parents wanted them to wear headscarves in school. Chee commented that it is against the parents' personal choice to force their children not to wear headscarves.[8]. As a result of this conviction, Chee was ineligible for the 2006 general election.
Later on Labour Day, 1 May 2002, Chee staged a rally in front of Istana, official residence and office of the President of Singapore. Chee had earlier applied for a license to hold the rally, but the application was denied. Chee was later charged for trespassing and for attempting to hold a rally without a license by the Police.[9].
[edit] Disallowed Documentary
See also: Censorship in Singapore
In 2004, Martyn See directed a documentary on Dr. Chee called Singapore Rebel. It was supposed to be screened at the Singapore International Film Festival but was forced to be withdrawn from the festival and later banned by the Singapore government because of its political content. Singapore's Film Act forbids the production and distribution of "party political" films, which are defined as films "made by any person and directed towards any political ends in Singapore". Martyn See agreed to surrender the film on 29 August 2005 along with his video camera, though he still faces the threat of prosecution. Despite the Singapore government's efforts to stop the distribution of such a documentary, the documentary is available on the Internet. [10]
[edit] 2006-present
[edit] 2006 election
Despite a recent rule in Singapore that bans podcasting during elections, [11] Chee released a political podcast nevertheless on 23 April 2006. However, it was, on the order of the Elections Department, removed by 25 April 2006. [12] On 27 April 2006, Chee challenged Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong to a public debate about the government role in the NKF scandal during a forum held in the National University of Singapore, titled - "The General Election: Does Singapore have a choice?"[13]
On the same day, nomination day for Singapore's General Election 2006, SDP chairman Ling How Doong was reported to say the party's executive committee is planning to remove Dr Chee Soon Juan as its secretary-general. This was quickly debunked by both Chee and chairman Ling, with them blaming the local media as being a government mouthpiece and waging a campaign against the SDP. [14] At the 2006 General Elections, the SDP was the worst performer at the polls. They are the only party that did not garner at least 25% of the votes. [15]
[edit] Civil disobedience at Annual Meetings of IMF and World Bank
On August 22, 2006, Chee announced that he was planning to hold rallies and marches in Singapore during 61st Annual Meetings of the Boards of Governors of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank Group as part of Singapore 2006 in September 2006 to protest against the rising income gap and raise awareness of the hardship of working-class people in the country. [16][17][18] The police application for the protest was rejected on 30 August 2006.[19] Nonetheless, Chee, in the SDP website, continued to urge people to participate in the protest. [20] [21]
On September 9, 2006, Chee started to alert the public to the planned "Empower Singaporeans Rally and March" on September 16, 2006 by distributing leaflets but was stopped by the police from doing so. The police then reminded the public that anyone participating in Chee's planned rally and march would be committing an offence.[22][23]
On September 13, 2006, Chee invited both Mr Paul Wolfowitz, President of World Bank and Mr Rodrigo de Rato y Figaredo, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, to his planned rally on September 16, 2006. At a press conference the next day, Chee announced that his application to be a civil society representative to Singapore 2006 as a representative of the Open Singapore Centre, was rejected by the IMF/World Bank. His sister and party's member Chee Siok Chin's application to represent the Alliance for Reform & Democracy in Asia, was approved by the IMF/World Bank but was rejected by the Singapore government.[24][25] On September 15, 2006, Chee released a podcast that warned Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong that the Singapore 2006 event was a "public relations disaster" for Singapore. [26]
To: Rowbox
I dun trust MIW but I dun trust Chee even more.Chee is doing this for himself and not for the citizen, in fact, I have not seen him do anything for the counrty. However, it would be interesting to see how MIW respond to him. If it is CST or LTK, I would support all the way.
"
Dr. Chee Soon Juan (simplified Chinese: 徐顺全; traditional Chinese: 徐順全; pinyin: Xú Shùnquán, born 1962) is the Secretary-General of the Singapore Democratic Party (SDP), the fourth and current Prime Minister of Singapore.
Chee is a neuropsychologist and received his Ph.D. from the University of Georgia in 1990. He joined SDP in 1992 and became the Secretary-General of SDP, replacing founder Chiam See Tong who left to join the Singapore People's Party. Chee has been convicted and imprisoned several times. Chee lost a defamation lawsuit filed by PAP leaders in 2001. Chee was declared bankrupt in 2006 when he failed to pay the damages. He is in jail at present for contempt of court. He has since been released and will be contesting to be the next Prime Minister in Singapore
Chee was Honorary Research Associate at the Monash Asia Institute in 1997 and at the University of Chicago in 2001. In 2004, he participated in the Reagan-Fascell Democracy Program at the National Endowment for Democracy in Washington, D.C.. He is the Chairman of the Alliance for Reform & Democracy in Asia, and was a Reagan-Fascell Democracy Fellow at the Washington-based National Endowment for Democracy (2004)[1]. He participated in many international organisations such as World Movement for Democracy and the Forum of Democratic Leaders in the Asia Pacific. He was the recipient of the Defender of Democracy Award 2003 given by the Parliamentarians for Global Action.
Pre-2001
[edit] Before 2001: Chee's beginnings in SDP.
In 1992, Dr. Chee joined the SDP. [2] The first election Chee contested was the 1992 Marine Parade By-election when his team won 24.5% of the votes. In 1993, a few months after Chee joined the SDP, NUS terminated Chee's employment for alleged misappropriation of research funds. Chee later staged a hunger strike in response.[3] Later on, Chee would back down and stop his hunger strike.
Later, a new party, the Singapore People's Party (SPP) was formed, out of an internal disagreement[4] between Chiam and Chee.[5] Chiam was formally ousted by
the SDP; and he joined the SPP. As Members of Parliament (MPs) in Singapore are not supposed to join a party in his/her term unless he/she decides to call a by-election, Chiam would not leave the SDP until 1997.[citation needed] On the other hand, the SDP, headed by Chee, was later sued by Chiam See Tong, for insinuating that Chiam was acting on behalf of the ruling party. SDP lost and was ordered to pay Chiam damages of $150,000. [6]
Chee lost in the 1997 election, in the MacPherson Single Member Constituency; garnering 34.8% of the votes, below the national average for the other opposition candidates for that election.[7]
[edit] 2001-2005
[edit] 2001 General Elections and its aftermath
In the Singapore General Election, Chee led another team, losing with 20.2% of the votes in Jurong GRC in 2001. After the election, Chee was sued for defamation by Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong and Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew for remarks he made during the General Election. He allegedly accused both Goh and Lee for misleading Parliament over an alleged $17 billion loan to former Indonesian president Suharto. Chee lost the lawsuits and was ordered to pay S$200,000 to Lee and S$300,000 to Goh. Chee was later declared a bankrupt in 2006, for failing to pay the damages.
In 2002, Chee was fined S$3,000 for speaking at the Speakers' Corner in Singapore on 15 February 2002, which requires prior registration and where discussion about race and religion is prohibited. Chee was commenting about the suspension of three Muslim schoolgirls whose parents wanted them to wear headscarves in school. Chee commented that it is against the parents' personal choice to force their children not to wear headscarves.[8]. As a result of this conviction, Chee was ineligible for the 2006 general election.
Later on Labour Day, 1 May 2002, Chee staged a rally in front of Istana, official residence and office of the President of Singapore. Chee had earlier applied for a license to hold the rally, but the application was denied. Chee was later charged for trespassing and for attempting to hold a rally without a license by the Police.[9].
[edit] Disallowed Documentary
See also: Censorship in Singapore
In 2004, Martyn See directed a documentary on Dr. Chee called Singapore Rebel. It was supposed to be screened at the Singapore International Film Festival but was forced to be withdrawn from the festival and later banned by the Singapore government because of its political content. Singapore's Film Act forbids the production and distribution of "party political" films, which are defined as films "made by any person and directed towards any political ends in Singapore". Martyn See agreed to surrender the film on 29 August 2005 along with his video camera, though he still faces the threat of prosecution. Despite the Singapore government's efforts to stop the distribution of such a documentary, the documentary is available on the Internet. [10]
[edit] 2006-present
[edit] 2006 election
Despite a recent rule in Singapore that bans podcasting during elections, [11] Chee released a political podcast nevertheless on 23 April 2006. However, it was, on the order of the Elections Department, removed by 25 April 2006. [12] On 27 April 2006, Chee challenged Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong to a public debate about the government role in the NKF scandal during a forum held in the National University of Singapore, titled - "The General Election: Does Singapore have a choice?"[13]
On the same day, nomination day for Singapore's General Election 2006, SDP chairman Ling How Doong was reported to say the party's executive committee is planning to remove Dr Chee Soon Juan as its secretary-general. This was quickly debunked by both Chee and chairman Ling, with them blaming the local media as being a government mouthpiece and waging a campaign against the SDP. [14] At the 2006 General Elections, the SDP was the worst performer at the polls. They are the only party that did not garner at least 25% of the votes. [15]
[edit] Civil disobedience at Annual Meetings of IMF and World Bank
On August 22, 2006, Chee announced that he was planning to hold rallies and marches in Singapore during 61st Annual Meetings of the Boards of Governors of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank Group as part of Singapore 2006 in September 2006 to protest against the rising income gap and raise awareness of the hardship of working-class people in the country. [16][17][18] The police application for the protest was rejected on 30 August 2006.[19] Nonetheless, Chee, in the SDP website, continued to urge people to participate in the protest. [20] [21]
On September 9, 2006, Chee started to alert the public to the planned "Empower Singaporeans Rally and March" on September 16, 2006 by distributing leaflets but was stopped by the police from doing so. The police then reminded the public that anyone participating in Chee's planned rally and march would be committing an offence.[22][23]
On September 13, 2006, Chee invited both Mr Paul Wolfowitz, President of World Bank and Mr Rodrigo de Rato y Figaredo, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, to his planned rally on September 16, 2006. At a press conference the next day, Chee announced that his application to be a civil society representative to Singapore 2006 as a representative of the Open Singapore Centre, was rejected by the IMF/World Bank. His sister and party's member Chee Siok Chin's application to represent the Alliance for Reform & Democracy in Asia, was approved by the IMF/World Bank but was rejected by the Singapore government.[24][25] On September 15, 2006, Chee released a podcast that warned Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong that the Singapore 2006 event was a "public relations disaster" for Singapore. [26]