Showing posts with label Marxist conspiracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marxist conspiracy. Show all posts

Monday, December 3, 2012

Forbidden (by PAP) thoughts of Tan Wah Piow (Publichouse.sg's video interview)

Tan Wah Piow, the alleged mastermind behind the so called Marxist Conspiracy (1987) in Singapore, speaks his forbidden thoughts (effectively suppressed in Singapore before the internet) on a range of topics.


Source: Tan Wah Piow - Exile with a cause, publichouse.sg (here)


Sunday, June 3, 2012

Dr Vincent Wijeysingha: Lies of the "Marxist conspiracy" (video, text)

Dr Vincent Wijeysingha's speech (text below) on June 2, 2012 marking the twenty-fifth anniversary of Operation Spectrum. 



Part 1 (Youtube)


Part 2 (Youtube)

Another video (with better audio) of the speech: here

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Text of Dr Vincent Wijeysingha's speech on ISA and Operation Spectrum (source1, source2):


We gather this afternoon on a moment of high historic significance. There are many people -many, many people – who have no conception of why we are here and why we have not forgotten. But even they exist, just as we do, still in the shadow of the 21st of May 1987: a shadow that has not lifted from over our minds and our hearts.

There are those who have told me in these last few weeks, as I have joined others in trying to publicise the facts of Operation Spectrum, that the government probably had a reason to do what it did; that we are experiencing the benefits of the hard decisions that were taken at the time; that we should learn to move on. The very reason their words seem convincing to them is an outcome of Operation Spectrum.

Now, let’s put one thing to rest. I have grown tired of covering my words, every time I speak on this subject, under a cloak of legal ambiguity. Let’s examine the facts.

We know that former minister, S Dhanabalan resigned from the Cabinet because of Operation Spectrum. We know that Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam is on record in 2001 as saying that he did not believe the twenty-two detainees were engaged upon a Marxist conspiracy. And we know that Lee Kuan Yew, the engineer of Operation Spectrum himself, told Archbishop Gregory Yong that he was not interested in those who were arrested but his real objective was some Catholic priests; that Tan Wah Piow was a simpleton; and Vincent Cheng and his group were mere novices. In fact, it was on this day 25 years ago, the 2nd of June, that he met the bishop at the Istana, and uttered these words. The minutes of that meeting are in public circulation.

You may remember the pre-election debate on CNA last April when I said that Operation Spectrum was based on trumped-up charges that history had shown to be untrue. The two PAP members on that panel – Josephine Teo and Tharman Shanmugaratnam – neither one of them denied it. Even though they had the last words in the debate and had every opportunity, they did not deny it.

So I think today, we can finally dispense with the legal niceties, and we can tell the truth. The truth is this: Operation Spectrum was a fiction, invented by our government, to innoculate us against the idea that poverty and repression arre wrong and we should do something about it. Because that is what the twenty-two were actually doing: working among the poor and trying to raise our consciousness of their existence. There was no Marxist conspiracy: it was a lie.

The Prime Minister at the time, the Senior Minister, Deputy Prime Ministers, every Cabinet Minister, every Minister of State, Parliamentary Secretary, and every Member of Parliament except Mr Chiam was complicit in that lie. And every single one who has joined their ranks since is a co-conspirator of that lie.

That is the reason why we are here today. We come to acknowledge that we were lied to and that we will not forgive the government for what it did, not just to the twenty-two who were detained but to our whole community.

You should no longer be afraid to speak against the ISA; against detention without trial; against confessions obtained under torture. But you should be troubled if you still believe that our wealth and success are prizes worth sacrificing our humanity for. We want to be rid of the fear our government put into our hearts that day. We want to reclaim a humanity that is offended by fear just as much as it is offended by violence.

And to those who say we must move on, I say yes, wholeheartedly, our community must move on. But it can never move on until we have scrubbed out the blood-red stain of Operation Spectrum that still covers the walls of our hearts and minds.

My profession is social work, just like the twenty-two detainees, I say proudly. I worked with abused children. And I can tell you from all the years I worked in that field, that when abuse is commited against a human being, the entire family, the community, is infected with the horror of the abuse. The entire community becomes a little bit darker, a little bit more soulless, a little bit less joyful. And it is only by acknowledging the truth of what happened, by evicting the ghost of that abuse, that we can recover and move on. Otherwise we crawl within ourselves, and we avoid knowing that to live is to live despite our past, not because of it.

I have never been able to imagine what it must be like to hear a knock on my door at 5am in the morning and to be hauled away by shouting, screaming policemen. I don’t know what it is like to be thrown into an unknown jail. I don’t know what it is like to be tortured, to be beaten.

Last year on the 21st of May, I happened to be with one of the twenty-two. I acknowledged the date. He looked down at his watch and responded, very simply, “It was at this time that they were preparing to interview me.” An entire history of an entire generation stood behind those brief words.

We all now what happened next. Well, some of us still don’t, and the members of our government still pretend it didn’t. What happened next continued for the next three years as far as the twenty-two were concerned and for us, it lodged deep in a place in our psyche from where it will not budge until we step out from the shadows into the sunlit places of the truth. It is a truth that will harm us like the sun harms our eyes if we look directly into it; it is a truth that will hurt.

Because for so many of us, the hideous image of Operation Spectrum, cast upon the walls of our collective mind was, for so long, the truth. And to fashion a new truth is painful. But we must, if we are to grow up. On that day, only one generation ago, the government drew a heavy curtain across the humanity of our people, across the courage and compassion and fellow-feeling and self-sacrifice that should be our finest qualities, and turned us into frightened associates in a police state. And from that day onwards, the government stopped talking to us. Because it knew it could.

Lee Kuan Yew once told Charlie Rose, the American interviewer, that his was not a police state, and he was not a policeman. All he needed, he said, was the administration of the law. Let me say to him today: in your name, in the name of those he imprisoned and tortured, and even in the name of the officers he made to do his grubby work, that was not all you needed. What you needed, and you worked so hard to achieve it – and you did – was to degrade the humanity of your people. You hobbled the trade unions, you threw the politicians into jail, you silenced the newspapers, you co-opted the professional bodies, you impoverished the universities, and you bankrupted and exiled so many honest, decent Singaporeans, some of the best of our people.

In a sense, you exiled and bankrupted us all.

To breathe the air of freedom, to know that I am able to share my thoughts, come together in groups, try to improve the world, these should be the first of our rights.

And what is most offensive, what is most objectionable, what was the greatest crime of Operation Spectrum was this: That twenty-two young people, idealistic people, filled with justice and compassion, were thrown in jail and were tortured because they looked around them and saw that poverty was increasing, that people were being bullied by their employers, losing their jobs, and set out to help them.

By doing research, by setting up shelters for battered women and training centres for foreign maids, by helping Mr Jeyaratnam, by staffing helpdesks and welfare programmes, by providing warmth and shelter and hope to our most disadvantaged brothers and sisters. Gently, with determination, and with courage, they put a question mark on the soul of the assumptions upon which the PAP had presumed to recreate our country, where wealth and status became preferred over kindness and community. And so, allow me to repeat it because it bears repeating, they were imprisoned and tortured. Think about that for a moment in the silence of your hearts: for helping their fellow men, the poor and the disadvataged, they were imprisoned and tortured. Who will still say that he has even begun to understand the violence that was done to us that day? And who will say that it was justified?

I hope you will read what has been written in the three books which are launched today. Because they represent the only published truth of Operation Spectrum. And when you are finished, you will no doubt ask the pressing question: Why did our government do it? In a nutshell, in the middle 1980s Singapore faced a severe recession because of the economic policy named the Second Industrial Revolution by Mr Goh Chok Tong. Wages went down and factory hours increased. Putting the twenty-two in jail was their way to silence the dissent, the suffering. But if you think that the repression of those years has departed the scene, you are wrong. It has only replaced the mask that it wears.

This morning we read how Jolovan Wham, one of our most respected civil society activists, twice awarded for his work – and also a social worker – was told by a large multinational on Thursday that he must not speak at these proceedings; that to do so would jeopardise his standing among donor organisations.

In 1995, Ken Saro-Wiwa, the distinguished – probably the greatest – Nigerian writer, was hanged on trumped-up charges because he opposed the degradation of the Ogoni Delta by the Shell corporation. In Singapore almost 20 years later, a multinational corporation presumes to tell a Singapore citizen what he may or may not say; and when. Mr Wham will not be hanged, we hope. But silence is still silence, whether it is achieved by threats and bullying or at the end of a rope. And when you become silent about injustice, you start to die inside. To his credit, Mr Wham has not become silent.

Silence, achieved through a complicit media, allowed our government to achieve Operation Spectrum; only silence.

Today, if you keep the silence, if you pretend that old women do not work as cleaners; that old men do not collect tin cans to stay alive; that jobs are not being lost to those who would accept starvation wages; that workers are not still deprived of their rights; that people don’t commit suicide to avoid hospital costs, that one in ten of our people doesn’t suffer a mental illness, and if you console yourself that all you need is a high GDP; rising house prices; bars, nightclubs and fast cars; covered walkways, and estate upgrading, and that our rights are a price worth paying, you have begun to die inside.

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Extract of Martyn See's speech (full text) on ISA and Operation Spectrum


"If you are a member of PAP, if you have voted for PAP, if you are an admirer of Lee Kuan Yew or PAP, you are endorsing and indirectly responsible for the following. . . . . . . . The ISD with its network of informers and goons have quietly terrorized and intimidated two generations of Singaporeans to political submission. It has created a nation where its citizens are afraid to participate in politics. It has created a democracy where until the last general election, about half of the electorate have never voted, because the opposition could not find candidates to contest in general election. This has allowed the PAP to rule uninterrupted for 50 years, implementing policies that has increased the income gap and forced many of our senior citizens to work till their death."


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25 Years after Operation Spectrum

Singapore Democrats 5 June 2012 (source)




Leaders of Singapore’s social and political scene gathered at Hong Lim Green on 2 June 2012, Saturday. They joined about 400 Singaporeans to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Operation Spectrum in 1987.

Academics, political party leaders, NGO leaders, prominent bloggers, and members of the media joined the ex-detainees as they were entertained by local bands and took in the well-crafted exhibition that included mock-ups of cells and investigation rooms at Whitley Road Detention Centre.

Included in the exhibition were actual artefacts collected by the detainees during their imprisonment: prison garb, sketches, and greeting cards for family members made by the detainees. There was even a set of the drawstring pyjamas worn at Whitley Road Detention Centre.

Booths offering free drinks and donated ice cream were manned by young volunteers, while two makeshift bookstalls struggled to organise the crowds determined to get copies of the three new books launched that day as well as Ms Teo Soh Lung’s autobiography, Beyond the Blue Gate: Recollections of a Political Prisoner, published in 2010.

The three titles, which are available at Function8 and Select Books, are: That We May Dream Again, edited by Fong Hoe Fang; Escape from the Lion’s Paw: Reflections of Singapore’s Political Exiles, edited by Teo Soh Lung and Low Yit Leng; and Smokescreens and Mirrors: Tracing the ‘Marxist Conspiracy’, by Tan Wah Piow.

Activists Ms Braema Mathi, Mr Siew Kum Hong, Ravi Philemon, Martyn See, and Alfian Sa’at addressed the crowd. NSP's Ms Jeanette Chong-Aruldoss and former detainee Mr William Yap, who spoke speaking in Mandarin, also took to the stage. All the speakers denouced the 1987 arrests.

The final speaker, Dr Vincent Wijeysingha, the SDP's Treasurer, rounded off the speeches with a ringing 20-minute denunciation of Operation Spectrum (see text of speech above). He said emphatically that Operation Spectrum was a fiction, invented by our government, to innoculate us against the idea that poverty and repression are wrong.

He called on Singaporeans to work for change because that is what the 22 who were arrested were actually doing: working among the poor and trying to raise our consciousness of their existence. There was no Marxist conspiracy: it was a lie.

As the sun set behind the skyscrapers that tower over the single valley of free expression that exists in Singapore, chairs were arranged in small circles for the audience to quiz the former detainees on their experiences of Operation Spectrum. Youths sat spellbound as the detainees told them the unadorned truth, answering questions and recounting their experiences.

The circles got smaller and smaller as the young people huddled closer and closer as the detainees recounted their stories of torture, intimidation and betrayal. At the end of the evening, the organisers had to literally chase the audience away as the contractors moved in to clear away the stage and the other furniture of the event.

Among those who were present at the event included the Rev Yap Kim Hao, founder of the Free Community Church; the Rev Jim Minchin, the Australian Anglican priest who wrote the groundbreaking biography of Lee Kuan Yew, No Man is an Island; and Prof Christopher Tremewan who wrote The Political Economy of Social Control in Singapore.


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Related:

The ghosts of Whitley Road: An essay by Dr Vincent Wijeysingha (here)

The Ghost of Operation Spectrum Lives On: An essay by Jolovan Wham (here)

Index to essays and videos marking the 25th anniversary of Operation Spectrum, sgpolitics.net (here)


At long last, the great exposé? Dr Lysa Hong (historian) (here)

 


Time for Commission of Inquiry on Alleged Marxist Conspiracy: an online petition by Singaporeans



Answer here (photo source)




MARUAH petition for Inquiry into alleged Marxist conspiracy (source)

For more background information, please visit: http://maruah.org/category/isa/

It has been 25 years since Operation Spectrum, when 22 persons were detained for allegedly being “Marxist Conspirators”. Even then, there were doubts about the accusations and whether these citizens should be detained without trial. 25 years later, doubts continue to linger, and the calls for a review of this dark episode in Singapore’s history continue to grow louder.

MARUAH as a human rights group calls for an independent Commission of Inquiry to be established, to review the detentions of these alleged “Marxist Conspirators” in 1987. We ask for this for the following reasons:-


1. Existence and Nature of the Alleged Threat

The Government has tried to show that there was a security risk. But they have done so almost exclusively through statements and press releases, with little more being shared. The scant evidence presented in newspapers included limited clippings of letters [1], guilt by association [2], and the circumstantial evidence of some members having contact with Tamil extremists.[3] The paucity of information continues to raise questions about the Government’s case.

More disturbingly, even the political leaders of the day themselves seem to have expressed doubts over the years. No less than the then-Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew himself had described the alleged “Marxist Conspirators” as “do-gooders”.[4] Then-Deputy Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong had revealed that former National Development Minister S.Dhanabalan left the Cabinet in 1992, due to his discomfort over the detentions.[5] Most recently, Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam had stated: “although I had no access to state intelligence, from what I knew of them, most were social activists but not out to subvert the system”.[6]

There is also growing literature from the detainees themselves, to date unrebutted by the Government, which provides important insights into their actions and their motivations. It seems that more than anything else, the detainees had been driven by their naivete and social consciousness to help fellow human beings in need – and nothing more. There are also analytical and introspective articles written by academics and the Catholic Church that raise many questions about the validity of the detentions of these 22 individuals.

Despite all these questions being asked, the evidence to support the allegations of a “Marxist Conspiracy” and of a threat to national security, and to justify the detentions themselves, continues to be unavailable. This failure to respond to the growing body of work rebutting the Government’s version of events is unsatisfactory and unacceptable.

The contradictions from the political leaders themselves, coupled with the detainees’ own accounts which conflict with the official version of events and the absolute lack of transparency, make a compelling case for an independent Commission of Inquiry into this matter to address this wound in the national psyche once and for all, so that the nation can truly begin to heal and put this traumatic event in our history behind us.



2. Treatment of the Detainees

The government has denied any mistreatment of the detainees. However, there have been persistent accounts by detainees of sleep deprivation, physical assaults, lengthy interrogations [7] in very cold conditions and limited access to family and lawyers, all unchallenged by the Government.

Even if detention without trial can be justified, detainees must still be treated lawfully and in accordance with universal human rights norms. The continued failure to account for the allegations of mistreatment remains troubling. This is an area that requires accountability and appropriate compensation to detainees if the allegations are proven to be true.

MARUAH calls for an independent Commission for Inquiry to be established to review all aspects of Operation Spectrum, including the nature of the allegations against the 22 detainees and the supporting evidence, so that Singapore can truly begin the process of healing.

We the undersigned agree with and support the call made for an independent Commission of Inquiry to be established to review all aspects of Operation Spectrum, including the nature of the allegations against the 22 detainees and the supporting evidence.


References:

[1] "Wah Piow letters tell of plans." The Straits Times, May 28, 1987.http://newspapers.nl.sg/Digitised/Page/straitstimes19870528.1.1.aspx (accessed March 6, 2012).

[2] "Those who were arrested." The Straits Times, May 27, 1987. http://newspapers.nl.sg/Digitised/Article/straitstimes19870527.2.20.21.3.aspx (accessed March 6, 2012).

[3] “In action, at camp of terrorists." The Straits Times, May 30, 1987.http://newspapers.nl.sg/Digitised/Article/straitstimes19870530.2.6.aspx (accessed March 6, 2012).

[4] Mr Lee made this statement in court documents filed in the case of Lee Kuan Yew v. Derek Davies [1990].

[5] Sonny Yap, et al., Men in White: The Untold Story of Singapore’s Ruling Action party (Singapore: Benchmark Books, 2010), 467-8.

[6] Hong Lysa, Huang Jianli, The scripting of a national history: Singapore and its past (Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2008), 145.

[7] The Online Citizen, "Teo Soh Lung – In her own words (Part Two)." Last modified May 22 2009. Accessed March 6, 2012. http://theonlinecitizen.com/2009/05/teo-soh-lung-–-in-her-own-words-part-two/



Singaporeans may sign this petition here.


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Related:

Investigate, not obfuscate publichouse.sg (here)   

Blue pill or red pill?  Jeannette Chong-Aruldoss (here)

The ISA is an impediment to building an inclusive society, Ravi Philemon (here)

Saturday, June 2, 2012

The Ghost of Operation Spectrum Lives On: an essay by Jolovan Wham

The ‘Marxist Conspiracy’ and Me: The Ghost of Operation Spectrum Lives On

by Jolovan Wham on Saturday, 2 June 2012 at 01:19 (source)


In 2003, I was a third-year social work student at the National University of Singapore. A friend forwarded me an email from The Working Committee II (the precursor of Transient Workers Count Too), a coalition of individuals who were promoting the rights of migrant domestic workers. In that email the Catholic Church’s Commission for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People was looking for volunteers for its Hope Haven Help Desk. The role of the volunteer was to talk to Filipina domestic workers in distress. I signed up immediately.

I had always been sympathetic to the exploitation of domestic workers because I grew up with them. As a child, I was alarmed at agents and employers who were verbally abusive, refused to grant days off, and had the right to dismiss them at short notice even when the dismissals were unfair. I decided to attend a presentation given by the Chairperson of the Commission, Mrs. Bridget Lew (now President of HOME), to find out more. Even though there were no more than 5 people in the room that day, what she said blew my mind. She spoke with passion and conviction of the grave injustice and abuse many of these women faced. I was deeply moved; it was a moment of inspiration and I made a resolution that I would do something to assist the Catholic Church in this mission.

I was not, and still not, a Christian. In fact, I am not a religious or spiritual person. But in Bridget, I saw someone who translated the teachings of Christ into an actionable programme for human rights and social justice. When I told a friend of my intention, he warned me that the people - many of whom were Christian - who were detained in Operation Spectrum had been doing exactly what I was planning to do: assisting migrant workers and speaking for their rights and their dignity. I had heard of Operation Spectrum and the so-called Marxist conspiracy. However, this was the period when social media was not as developed as it is now and information about this shameful episode in our history was scant. I reasoned to myself that Lee Kuan Yew’s reign in Singapore was drawing to its end and it was highly unlikely that this could happen again.

Even though I am not in Whitley Road Detention Centre today, the legacy of Operation Spectrum lives and continues to instill fear among activists and social workers through other forms of government harassment. In 2008, the Ministry of Manpower found it fit to summon us to a meeting because I had said to The Straits Times that ‘Singapore’s labour laws offer little real protection to foreign workers.’ My comment elicited a strong response from the Ministry the next day. See : http://www.asiaone.com/News/the%2BStraits%2BTimes/Story/A1Story20090120-115808.html

Complaints have also been made about me when I urged 1000 of my Facebook friends to email the then Minister of Manpower, Gan Kim Yong, to do something about the slum-like living conditions of foreign workers. This was after my friends, Stephanie Chok and Patrick Chng, had taken a clip provided by one of the construction workers I was assisting, and turned it into an awareness-raising video. http://theonlinecitizen.com/2009/09/toc-special-feature-is-singapore-really-slum-free/
Another meeting was called by the Ministry and this time I was accused of instigating people to write to the Minister. The Minister’s email address is out there on the internet for all to see.

Last year, after I wrote a piece for The Online Citizen criticising the government’s poor handling of the repatriation company issue http://theonlinecitizen.com/2011/11/repartriation-companies-manpower-ministers-response-belittles-the-efforts-of-migrant-workers/, another complaint was made and we had to appease the ministry yet again. Complaints have even been made of me critiquing MOM’s policies on their Facebook wall, even though the government is itself using social media to engage people and encourage ‘active citizenry’.

In 2007, when UN Women, HOME and TWC2 launched the Day Off Campaign and wanted to start a petition to gain support for a legislated weekly day off for migrant domestic workers, MOM summoned all three organisations to a meeting. They met us separately: HOME in the morning, TWC2 and UN Women in the afternoon and evening. We faced a firing squad of more than 10 civil servants grilling us on our motivations to launch the campaign, and discouraging us from doing so. They objected to the use of the word ‘slavery’ in our campaign poster along the Northeast Line (which mysteriously disappeared from public view after the meeting). They were concerned that our campaign would cause ‘social instability.’ Teacher friends also informed us that circulars were sent out to schools instructing them to avoid engaging us.

In 2009, I was also accused of 'instigating' Chinese construction workers to gather outside MOM because their employer was not paying their salaries and the workers found the intervention by the Ministry unsatisfactory. Once again, a meeting was called to discuss the issue and for the ministry to express its 'concerns'. See here: http://littlepeoplepress.blogspot.sg/2009/01/china.html

Last year, the Singapore Association of Social Workers retracted the Outstanding Social Worker Award from me one week after they informed me and my nominators that I would be its recipient. Two reliable sources told me that the award was retracted because of state intervention and political interference. See here: http://publichouse.sg/categories/community/item/243-sasw-owes-public-an-explanation-on-award-fiasco

What has all this to do with the Internal Security Act?

Two days ago I was informed that a large and influential Multinational Corporation was unhappy that I might be speaking at Saturday’s commemoration of Operation Spectrum, That We May Dream Again, co-organised by Function 8 and Maruah. I was urged not to participate because I should not be associated with 'Marxists' and our work with migrant workers might suffer.

The knock on the door in the middle of the night that took the 22 into detention is no longer heard. But it has been replaced by veiled threats, warnings and funding cuts. The government appears to have found proxies to do its censorship and its oppression. This is Singapore’s twenty-first century version of the ISA. It is scary. And it makes people who work for social change nervous.

The legacy of 1987 will continue to oppress us if we do not speak out and take action for the change we want to see. I am optimistic that it will come but we can only do it when we are united and work in solidarity with one another.



'Dignity Walk' My first major project with the Catholics Church's Commission for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant People, May 2004

Comments

  • Gilda Magote Malaluan Just speak up when you know what is right...thank you for your passion to help the migrant workers. God bless you!

  • Stephanie Chok Thanks for speaking up Jolovan! People really need to know what goes on "behind-the-scenes" of the so-called "new normal".

  • Patrick Chng The "new normal" is doing the same old thing in a "new way".

Andrew Loh It is never easy to speak up, despite what others might think. It is thus with great admiration that I applaud you, Jolovan, and others who continue to do so, in spite of all that you face (as you mentioned in the note).

We need leading lights for the movement for change - and you are one of these lights.
 





  • Regardless of the number of times the government repeats that the ISA will not be abused to stifle political beliefs and civil society activities, it's too late. It has ALREADY been abused in such a way, and the people remember, even if they don't know the details of Operation Spectrum. It is the fear that lives in the back of the mind of every Singaporean, even if they don't realise it.

    When I first started volunteering with TOC, when I first started blogging about socio-political issues, when I first started working in the anti-death penalty campaign (and being seen to do so), my friends were telling me to be careful. My family told me that I was putting my need to "save everyone" over my concern for my family. At the beginning my granddad was calling me almost every day to warn me against getting too involved, to tell me that I couldn't write like that, to tell me to take down blog posts, etc. etc.

    In the end it got to the point where I wasn't actually feeling any pressure from the government, but from the people around me. The government didn't need to directly intimidate me anymore; they'd done a fantastic job breeding a society in such a way that my family would do the policing on their behalf. And the history of Operation Spectrum has a lot to do with that.

    It's that fear that "something" will happen to you, and that the truth will not help you because "they" have the power and "they" can do whatever "they" want to you. There is simply no trust between the people and the authorities anymore, and no matter how much the current government wants to talk about engagement and building bridges, the ISA needs to be abolished and this habit of veiled threats needs to be kicked before the disconnect can really be fixed.

  • Lucy Davis Thank you Jolovan for daring to speak out and expose this kind of harassment. Much admiration.  Thanks also for writing this for others who still do not have your courage to speak out.



  • Kirsten, you're right. Only yesterday, a friend related to me how he was being intimidated by pro-establishment types who told him not to associate with "those keyboard warriors" or else he will get into trouble. There was also threats to "...ban" him from gov't-related contracts. Good thing my friend is not the scared-scared type. He told them to go fly kite.

    When each of us start standing up for ourselves, and show those around us that it is ok to do so, society will start to change. So, really, it is not about whether the govt changes or not. It is about whether we care enough and have the courage to stand up - in spite of what the govt does.

    It is not easy to do, as you can see from so many past examples. But it is necessary. I fully understand what you went through when you first started being an activist. It happened to me too - same familial fear, from friends, even I was a little fearful too, to be honest.

    Good thing is that the people have come quite some ways from just a few years ago. The Gov't however is still firmly stuck in the mud, and sinking in quicksand, in their old ways of doing things.

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    Over 400 people mark 25th anniversary of ISA arrests

    By Ewen Boey, Yahoo!News June 2, 2012 (source)





    More than 400 people gathered at Hong Lim Park's Speakers' Corner on Saturday to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the first arrests and detentions in Singapore of alleged Marxist conspirators.

    Human rights non-governmental organisation MARUAH and Function 8, a citizen-led move to facilitate civic discussions, remembered those who had been arrested in "Operation Spectrum" between 1987 and 1988 for their alleged involvement in a "Marxist conspiracy" to topple the government.

    The two groups also called for the abolition of the Internal Security Act (ISA), under which such detentions without trial have been made.

    Playwright Alfian Sa'at and Singapore Democratic Party treasurer Vincent Wijeysingha, among others, aired their personal views on why they believe ISA is no longer applicable today.

    "I think today's turnout was really invigorating, because I think hopefully people in Singapore are getting concerned on a lot of issues that matter to them, and are willing to stand and and speak up for these issues… I think we will have a better civil society who will engage the government on issues that will matter to them," said MARUAH president Braema Mathi.

    Present as well were eight ex-detainees of 1987, who shared their experiences with members of the public in a breakout session after the event. The 24 who had been detained under the ISA were a mix of social workers, church workers and professionals.

    Teo Soh Lung, one of the 24 who had been detained, said, "I'm actually happy with the turnout and the weather. The turnout is beyond my expectations. I think the young people is the most important in the crowd. The younger ones may not know (about what happened).

    William Yap, the only former detainee to have spoken on stage, said, "There were so many people who wanted the speak. All the ex-detainees were prepared to speak, but we thought we should give our guests precedence. Since there was nobody going to speak in Mandarin, they asked me and I said okay… I got some feedback and people were quite happy with the speech."

    The event also featured exhibits of the detention cells and interogation rooms, which were set up in two weeks by the ex-detainees themselves, with the help of some of their friends.

    The organisers also urged the public to support the call for the abolition of the ISA by signing a petition.

    "This is a very difficult issue to come and talk about the ISA and 'Operation Spectrum', and yet there are number of people who are willing to support their names with IC numbers. I'm very proud of Singaporeans," said Braema.

    The MARUAH president added that their organisation, together with Function 8, intend to take 2012 to raise awareness of this issue and plan for more activities.


    Related:

    Hundreds turn up at rally against arbitrary detention, by Yawning Bread  (here)     
    Online Petition for Singaporeans: Time for Commission of Inquiry on Alleged Marxist Conspiracy (here)

Friday, June 1, 2012

In focus: Tan Tee Seng, alleged Marxist conspirator

By Kumaran Pillai and Cheong Yaoming
Published by The Online Citizen on May 31, 2012 (source)

Tan Tee Seng



In 1987, a group of civil activists were arrested in relation to an alleged plot to overthrow the government through violent means and to bring about social revolution through Marxist inspired practices. Till today, the 16 of those who were detained without trial claim that they were innocent and have committed no crime against the state. Yet, the government is steadfast in their claim that these individuals were indeed conspirators and their intention was to "subvert Singapore's political and social order using communist united front tactics.”

TOC has previously published many articles on the ISA (including a full feature week in 2009) and shall continue to do so in the future. The ISA is seen as an archaic, outdated, outmoded, and a ‘sharp instrument.’ While some perceive that the ISA is even more relevant today than in the past (given the threat of terrorism related activities in the region) there are those who believe that ISA can be ‘misused’ for the political ends of any sitting government.

Some political observers say that the Marxists arrest of 1987 had a chilling effect on Singapore’s socio-political scene. People voluntarily withdrew from political activities and they traded political freedom to economic progress. Singapore did exceptionally well, economically, through the late 80’s and the 90’s. But, with an economy that is under pressure and because of the effects of globalisation, inflation, demographic changes and the growing wealth gap there is an increasing awareness that speaking up freely could at least be a beginning to solving these problems, to allow the best ideas a better chance of being aired.


With that in mind, I spoke to Tan Tee Seng, a former ISA (Internal Security Act) detainee. He spoke about the circumstances surrounding his detention, his political persuasions (then and now) and whether the ISA is still relevant in today’s political climate.



KP Tell us more about yourself in 1987 and what were you doing back then?

TS: I was a 28 years old Marketing Executive with a publishing and design company as well as a specialist in publishing technology. I was in the midst of the preparation for my wedding. All invitations were already sent out and our big day was just a few days away.

KP: The newspaper reports labelled you as a Marxist and said that you wanted to use violent means to overthrow the government of the day. What is your reaction to that?

TS: Consider the following facts:

(1) I was supposed to be a “conspirator” of a conspiracy which I did not know existed. My activities were all open and I was involved in legitimate organisations that existed.

(2) I did not know many of the people that were detained.

(3) I was not personally acquainted with Tan Wah Piow, the alleged master mind. I finally got acquainted with Tan Wah Piow in 2002 some 15 years later.

(4) I was in solitary confinement for first six weeks of my detention and did not have any clue of the “network” published by the government. When I first got a glance of the newspaper clipping during my lawyer’s visit, I almost fell off my chair. By then I was already served with a detention order – indefinite detention without trial. During my detention, I was constantly reminded by ISD officers of Chia Thye Poh, who was still languishing in detention after more than two decades of imprisonment without trial. My release and freedom lied in the hands of a small group of people – it was not for what I did, it was for what they thought I did! I wanted to get out.

KP: How were you arrested and where were you at the time of arrest?

TS: I was arrested at our matrimonial home, a flat in Serangoon Central. I remember watching Miss Universe contest with my young fiancée till early in the morning and went to bed only at about 2 am. They came at 4ish in the morning. Before I unlocked the gate of my house, they showed me an Immigration Officer’s ID and told me that they were looking for illegal immigrants.

When I unlocked the gate, the officers then identified that they were from ISD and I was under arrest. They handcuffed me and pushed me into one of my room while they proceed to search the house. I was not allowed to see what they did; this was upsetting because I wouldn’t know if they had planted anything in my house. I was not given a list of what they had taken. The search took about 2 hours and I knew that because I noticed the first light of the day was already coming through. I was blind folded before I stepped out of the house; my fiancée was detained as well. We were then led by two agents on each side into a car, presumably unmarked.

KP: What was going through your mind when you were in detention?

TS: I was confused and tried to search for the reason for what was happening. I thought I was very careful and had put a ten-foot pole between my activism and what I considered subversive. The initial interrogation was over a continuous period of more than 65 hours. I practically collapsed and was dragged to the cell by two Gurkhas. I was concerned of the impact of my detention on my family and my friends.

KP: Can you share with us what happened during the interrogation?

TS: I was brought to the basement of Whitley Detention Centre, stripped of all clothing and forced to wear prison garb with no footwear. The interrogation took place in a dark cold room 10 feet by 8 feet (about the size of a standard HDB flat room). The air con was turned on full blast and I was interrogated continuously by 2 teams of 3 people (1 investigating officer and 2 ISD officers) on rotating shifts. I was confused and disoriented by their continual harassment to admit because I was not sure what I was admitting to and if they even had evidence to support the charges against me!


At one point during the interrogation the ISD Deputy Director entered the room and asked the team if I was cooperating. Suddenly, he threw a full blooded slap to my face before anyone could answer him. Despite the physical abuse, the worst aspect of the interrogation was the mental torture – “We can lock you up indefinitely and throw away the key”. I was afraid I would remained imprisoned till I die and never get to see my loved ones.

KP: What followed next? What was the first thing you did after you were released?

TS: After the exhausting 65 hours interrogation, I was put in solitary confinement for 6 weeks. The cell had barely enough ventilation and only one small fluorescent light that was turned on 24/7 so that I would have no sense of time. I had to bang the door and ask the guards permission to use the toilet. They did provide me 3 square meals daily and 20 minutes of ‘outdoor time’. For “outdoor time”, they just brought me to a bigger room than my cell with an air-well to see outside.

I was allowed my first family visit after 2 weeks in solitary confinement. After I was released, I went back to work almost immediately but was placed under restriction orders.

KP: Now, you have been asking for a full investigation into your arrests and detention. How is your progress on that front?

TS: ISA is a bad law and it has strangled the political development of this country. Look at countries in the region such as South Korea, Taiwan, Philippines and Indonesia. They have undergone political reformation and we are witnessing now is an active citizenry in place of dictatorship. The young people are striding ahead confidently. Here in Singapore we are still stuck in political divisiveness carried forward from the politics practiced some 50 years ago. ISA is a divisive law and it has no place in modern society.

It is more important that we abolish the law than conducting any inquiry at this stage. With the abolishment of the ISA, the country can then move on. Another important step is to embrace political diversity and allow all our political exiles (from abroad) to come back to rebuild their lives in Singapore. I am optimistic, I believe that I will live to see the change because all we need is the political will from the ruling elites and if that is not forthcoming, then civil societies of Singapore with increased political awareness of Singaporeans of the current political repression and with the a politically awaken citizenry, the government of the day shall be persuaded towards a more liberal democracy – ISA will have to go!


I agreed to this interview because I want Singapore to move forward, not settle political scores or personal vendettas. After the Operation Spectrum incident, civil society shut down in fear of not knowing what the OB markers were. It took a whole generation to find their voice and active citizenry was reborn. I don’t want history to repeat itself. The government cannot see all the problems from their perspective and they certainly cannot provide all the solutions. This is the gap only active citizenry can fill.

KP: Thank you for this interview and I wish you all the best in your endeavours.

TS: You too!

A session themed "That We May Dream Again – Remembering the 1987 “Marxist Conspiracy” will be held on 3pm to 7pm | Saturday 2 June 2012 | Speakers’ Corner, Hong Lim Park.



Kumaran Pillai is the Chief Editor of The Online Citizen. Cheong Yaoming is the Interim Executive Editor of The Online Citizen


Related: Where are the "Marxist conspirators"? (here)

Monday, May 21, 2012

The ghosts of Whitley Road: An essay by Dr Vincent Wijeysingha

An essay by Dr Vincent Wijeysingha - to mark the 25th anniversary of Operation Spectrum

publichouse.sg, May 21, 2012 (source)

In 1987, I was at junior college. Just across the road, twenty-two other Singaporeans were at Whitley Road Detention Centre. They were locked up under the Internal Security Act, a sinister law designed to silence critics, first of the colonial government and later of the People’s Action Party who had promised to bring freedom to the people of our island.

Speaking to the press in 1995, after a whole generation had been effectively silenced, then Senior Minister, Lee Kuan Yew, told The Straits Times:

"As Prime Minister, I reserved executive powers in the Internal Security Act and the Criminal Law (Temporary Provisions) Act, both inherited from British times, which I did not repeal in order to be able to act against subversives or criminals like drug traffickers against whom there is insufficient evidence for a court of law, without having recourse to the courts.

In other words, I was my own carrier of a hatchet. I needed no hatchet man.

All those who have been dealt with by me know that I have never flinched from going into a dark street on a dark night and it happens to be a cul-de-sac. No outlet – either the gangster of I will come out alive.

I have done this a few times. I am prepared to do this again."

These brave words belie an insecure man; a man who has never had to meet a gangster in a dark alley. A man who played out the dismal drama of his bullying oppression by recourse to powers outside and beyond himself. Power operated by henchmen against those who dare to think a different world. Power to make men torture one another. Powers which allowed Operation Spectrum to happen.

I was too young at the time of the arrests to take much of an interest in them. I knew none of the detainees or their families personally. And even if I wondered what lay up Onraet Road which I passed every day on my way to the bus stop I was insufficiently curious to find out. Today, having read Teo Soh Lung’s book, Beyond the Blue Gate, an autobiography of her two-year detention, I know I would have been met by a blue metal gate and another world beyond. A world I was entirely innocent of until I arrived at Sheffield to commence postgraduate work in August 1996. Suddenly I was exposed to the truth of Operation Spectrum.

I devoured what I found: books and articles and newspaper clippings about that distant moment in our past when, like a key slammed in a bolt, Singapore suddenly stopped being a community and became a police state. It was a world where people were imprisoned for helping the poor; where men were ordered to torture their fellow citizens and found it agreeable to do so. A world where rulers reshaped their actions into a truth recognisable only to them: a government determined to stamp out even the possibility of ideas or activity contrary to its worldview.

The Singapore in which the detainees happened to find themselves in the mid 1980s was beset by a deep recession, the result of the government’s ambition to upgrade the economy from one where low-skill production manned by cheap labour gave way to high technology. A programme aimed at what the then Minister for Trade and Industry, Goh Chok Tong, described as a Second Industrial Revolution. The failure was widespread and deep. It was typical of centralised management, of insufficient forward planning and limited understanding of the global economy.

Singapore was not ready for such a massive and wholesale restructuring. It was too small on the world stage to effect such change and too dependent on capital and production flows which were decided far away. The result was the worst recession the nation had known in twenty years.

Unemployment numbers soared and the factories began to operate on 24-hour shifts to recoup losses. The social impact was considerable although the controlled media, by and large, were silent. It was left to social workers, lawyers, student activists, playwrights, and religious leaders to highlight the problems and try to alleviate the distress of the unemployed and the poor.

On the political side, the middle eighties was a period of neoliberal strongmen. In Manila, Ferdinand Marcos still oppressed his poverty-stricken people, once one of the wealthiest in the region. Further south in Jakarta Suharto continued his harsh reign. Across the Causeway, Mahathir Mohamad had just come through his second General Election. In the west, Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, loud proponents of economic growth at the cost of individuals and communities, were secure in office. So was the Chilean dictator, General Pinochet, who had seized office in a coup that despatched the popular leader, Salvador Allende. In Rome, a right-leaning, anti-Communist Papacy looked less than unfavourably upon the dictators of the world and when it raised its voice to call for justice was less strident against leaders of the right than of the left.

But a wind of change was beginning to blow across the world. In 1986, Marcos was toppled in a bloodless, almost elegant coup led by the widow of his slain enemy who was strongly championed by the Catholic Church. Advocates of justice all over the world saw in the ascent of that diminutive, kindly lady to the leadership of her nation the sign of a new dispensation, one which would place people at the heart of governance.

In Singapore, the nation’s Parliament now contained two opposition members after a hiatus of more than a decade during which only People’s Action Party members occupied its leather couches. The people of Anson and Potong Pasir had responded positively to the call for better treatment of the poor emanating from the Workers’ Party member and more democracy and accountability from the Singapore Democratic Party Member. A fairer, kinder world was not far off.

But at the Istana Annexe a startled Lee Kuan Yew, jockeying hard to establish the next generation of PAP leaders, saw only unrest and a threat to the settled order. An order that, to be sure, brought significant economic growth to a tiny island only twenty years away from, in his words, “an independence we never sought”. An order founded, in his words, on “a very tightly organised society”. Confidently, he had said,

"I am often accused of interfering in the private lives of citizens. Yet, if I did not, had I not done that, we wouldn’t be here today. And I say without the slightest remorse, that we wouldn’t be here, we would not have made economic progress, if we had not intervened on very personal matters – who your neighbour is, how you live, the noise you make, how you spit, or what language you use."

As the late President Devan Nair recounted, he had greeted the news of Mr Jayaratnam’s entry into Parliament in 1981 “like a caged fury”. No doubt his return to Parliament in1984, joined there by another opposition Member, terrified him. The downfall of the once unassailable Marcos in 1986 would only have added to his alarm. It became a time to act.

When Pope John Paul visited the city state in late 1986 the Prime Minister raised his fears with him. Claiming a reverential esteem for the church’s stand against communism, he alluded to “funny goings on” in the modern church. No doubt he was mindful of the role played by the Filipino church in the defeat of his friend. (Indeed he protested to the Pope that he was no Marcos.) And of course in terms of that man’s blatant ransack of his people’s wealth, he was not. In terms of the general uplift of the population that Lee’s government had achieved in the past thirty years the assertion must be accepted as true. But not all of the community had shared in the progress and there were significant pockets of deprivation and poverty, enlarged by the recession.

Twenty-two young men and women, motivated by the relief of suffering, went among the poor, comforting the afflicted, cataloguing their hardships and educating the community. The worst fallout was borne by local factory workers whose wages and conditions were not keeping pace with the overall (in some years, spectacular) economic growth. Among their number were lowly-paid, badly-treated migrant workers whose rights and conditions Jolovan Wham, the social worker who runs a labour welfare organisation, and won two awards this year for his work, will confirm have shifted very little.

That Wham is able to continue his work, in many ways far more outspoken than that of the activists of 1987, unmolested by the state, is testament to how much our society has grown. But these days are a long way off from 1987 when in the early morning of the 21st of May, the men and women of the Internal Security Department were despatched to arrest from their beds, in the silent hours of the morning, sixteen men and women (later to be joined by a further six) whose values had become so despised of the government.

The foundational principle of the work that social activists do is the dignity of the individual rooted in a rights discourse that is such a valuable part of our human heritage. We recall the uplifting words of the first article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights:

"All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood."

The idea of rights being inherent in individual conscious entities is an old one. We instinctively know that everyone is endowed with certain entitlements merely by reason of being human. As human beings, we draw from our common spiritual and philosophical heritage and we agree that by virtue of having consciousness, being able to feel pain, being moved to share in (and therefore alleviate) the sufferings of others, we enjoy certain rights. We basically agree that our fellow human beings should have access to the full range of resources that enables them to grow and develop not merely as homo economicus but also as entities with hopes and dreams, creative urges and compassionate impulses. Those same attributes that lead us to detest suffering also guide men and women to work for their removal.

But in years following, an almost convincing argument crept in: that social justice must take second place to economic development. This found a conceptual home in the theory of ‘Asian values’ with Lee Kuan Yew as a most vociferous proponent, declaring, “A country must have economic development, then democracy may follow." The Asian financial crisis of 1997 decisively put paid to that idea and Lee himself, in his autobiography published three years later, went so far as to say that actually such values are shared by humanity as a whole. Thanks to the important work of the Nobel laureate, Professor Amartya Sen, among others, today we know instinctively that human rights and economic development should and can go hand in hand. Otherwise, the denial of rights becomes the very means by which adequate resources are restricted from the broad mass of the community and distributed more abundantly among the rich and the powerful. Singapore’s cabinet ministers’ wages are a case in point.

Instinctively, these ideas of fairness and justice formed the basis of what the twenty-two who came to be referred to as "Marxist conspirators” were advocating through their writings, their literary productions, and their work among the poor. They laboured peacefully to uplift their brothers and sisters from whose hands we secure our wealth. Though they were called conspirators, they worked entirely in the open. Though they were accused of seeking the violent overthrow of the state, in all of their writings they denounced aggression and advocated collaboration and partnership.

The government made no case against them apart from fanciful assertions duly reported in the press complete with illustrations and charts. But from all the available reliable evidence, and there is much, these men and women were as far away from conspiracy and violence as it is possible to be. The simple and very straightforward reason is that there was no case. Prime Minister Lee said in 1988,

"It is not a practice, nor will I allow subversives to get away by insisting that I’ve got to prove everything against them in a court of law or evidence that will stand up to the strict rules of evidence of a court of law."

As a lawyer schooled in the English legal tradition, he would have been aware that the rules of evidence have been carefully built up precisely to safeguard against the caprice of rulers. It is no wonder that the PAP government has refused international calls for a commission to investigate the claims of a violent Marxist conspiracy. When the Home Affairs Minister recently pronounced on the use of the Internal Security Act he was unable to offer any evidence of the veracity of the government’s assertions in 1987 and had to resort to allegations and hyperbole.

And significantly, Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam, speaking in 2001, declared, “Although I had no access to state intelligence, from what I knew of them, most were social activists but not out to subvert the system.” He should know for not only was he a friend of one of the detainees, he himself was investigated for similar false charges.

The twenty-two were not out to subvert the system. The singular evidence of their work was that they functioned within the system. The government did not act to avert disorder and carnage. The reality is that the government’s objection was to their work among the casualties of the economic policies of the 1970s and 1980s. They told them that, regardless of Lee’s characterisation of them as “economic digits”, they were in fact beings of worth and prestige. That their privations mattered; that they were a blot on the government’s copybook, an insult to its claim to Confucian government. It had turned a deaf ear to their cries and intimidated the media and the academe into silence so that their fellow Singaporeans might not know they existed. The spoke truth to power and power was offended. It responded in the most brutal way: by taking away their freedom and by inflicting pain on their bodies.

Recalling the case of Operation Spectrum, and reading the papers gathered by concerned parties all over the world, I am suddenly struck by the realisation that the real conspirators, the real practitioners of violence were the government and its officers. Its construction of this elaborate tale of shadowy fifth columnists patiently and painstakingly planning the violent deposition of the PAP government to usher in a Marxist utopia would be laughable were it not for the psychological damage it left on our society and on the detainees. They constructed poor arguments and made clumsy allegations of clandestine networks. They told convoluted stories that imputed culpability from innocent, pedestrian activities. They humiliated a senior religious leader. Most shameful of all, they used brutal torture to elicit false confessions. This is the real narrative of the era. Our government forfeited its moral right to lead the nation the instant it resorted to torture.

Now, let us be clear. The interaction between economic stability and human rights is a reality: a perennial exchange and a constant weighing up of priorities. But today we countenance a nation whose GINI coefficient (high even in 1987) is almost double that of the First World, whose ratio of income between the top and bottom 20% of earners has doubled in twenty years, whose elders work into their old age or scavenge the dustbins of our nation while our leaders still draw the highest wages of politicians anywhere in the world. We are entitled to wonder why the persistent promise of future wealth has never arrived for the common man. Have we not mortgaged our values to pay a cheque drawn upon the hopes and dreams of our people only to be told that the cheque has bounced?

This question was posed in 1987. Doing research, writing reports, engaging in public debate, the detainees sought answers to these questions. But they did not vest the responsibility to find solutions solely with the government. Nor did they enter into a quarrel. Instead they went out quietly among the poor and the marginalised to work out what to do. They crafted many solutions: legal advice, social activities, language classes, support for poorly-treated workers to negotiate with their employers. They also sought to enlighten the community and train us to care for the oppressed.

The government’s alarm was not at the possibility of a Marxist revolution. It was that the status quo was being challenged. It was that the economic digits, whose quiescence and docility facilitated the wealth that Singapore became renowned for, were being made aware of their rights. The cardinal sin that the detainees committed was to tell the poor that their state was neither inherent in their genes nor characteristic of their ethnicity but the outcome of government philosophy. Lee famously said, “God did not make the Russians equal. Lenin and Stalin tried to. You are too long, they chop you down. The end result is misery.” In the pursuit of meritocracy, a laudable idea, his government formed instead a society intolerant of the weak and sceptical of compassion. The twenty-two paid heavily for their audacity and presumption.

Today, we are twenty-five years from that dark moment. There are many Singaporeans alive today who were not born when Operation Spectrum took its terrible course but its effects are yet with us. Individuals and organisations still act under a cloud of uncertainty, unsure of where the famous Out of Bound Markers lie since ministers have said they cannot identify them until they are breached. Such a formulation would be immediately recognisable in a civilised society as an insidious authoritarianism.

Twenty-two young idealists, optimistic of our society’s capacity to become better, decided to make it so. That they (and we) are only just recovering from the effects of Operation Spectrum is testament to its dreadful effectiveness. If on the anniversary of that day we celebrate their courage, it is because we know their work was right. The government was wrong. It is only the passage of time - nothing more - that has sent them from the political stage and released them from the obligations of justice.

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Related:

* A Reprehensible History: The Internal Security Act, Dr Vincent Wijeysingha (here)

* Dr Vincent Wijeysingha: Lies of the Marxist conspiracy (video) (here)


* “I have always loved the Catholic Church”: former priest Edgar D’Souza gives a detailed and frank account of his experience of the harrowing time during Operation Spectrum (here)


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Dr Vincent Wijeysingha is a lecturer is social work and Treasurer of the Singapore Democratic Party. He writes in his personal capacity.

On Saturday 2 June 2012, That We May Dream Again, a commemoration of Operation Spectrum including speeches by Dr Wijeysingha and others as well as an exhibition, will take place at Speakers’ Corner from 3 to 7pm.