Lee's Law: How S'pore Crushes Dissent - A New Book by Chris Lydgate

Posted by under Features on 25 February 2003

From the haughty smoked-glass office towers of its financial district to the spotless order of its crowded streets, the city-state of Singapore represents an unprecedented feat of physical, social, and political engineering, orchestrated over five decades by Lee Kuan Yew and the ruling People's Action Party.

But Singapore's prosperity has been purchased at a steep price: the erosion of human rights, the rise of the ‘nanny state,' and the creation of a political system in which individual freedoms are subordinated to the greater good — as defined by the government.

Lee's Law is a case study of the perils of dissent in Singapore, as it traces what befell the country's most prominent opposition politician, JB Jeyaretnam. The book follows Jeyaretnam's stellar career as an ambitious young lawyer, prosecutor, and judge, and shows how he became disenchanted with the system that promoted him. It recounts his stunning political breakthrough at Anson in 1981, and chronicles the devastating consequences of his questioning —let alone, opposing — Lee Kuan Yew and his government.

After resisting for decades, Jeyaretnam was crushed by defamation suits, then bankrupted and expelled from parliament, and denied the right to practise law. His story provides a chilling insight into Singapore's politics, and raises disturbing questions about its unique brand of ‘Asian democracy.' It is also a poignant story of a courageous individual who never swerved from his ideals — no matter what the cost.

Note: This book is currently not yet available in Singapore...whether the bookshops will carry it is another question but those who are interested in it though would like to visit the website of the publisher at Scribe Publications


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