AGC to be joined as party in blogger’s case involving stat board
Friday, 17 May 2013 16:20 Published in Top StoryThe Attorney General’s Chambers (AGC) has indicated that it has “no objections to being joined as a party” in the case brought by blogger Ms Han Hui Hui involving a statutory board.
Ms Han is being sued by the Council of Private Education (CPE) for libel with regards to two emails Ms Han had sent to various parties alleging impropriety on the part of CPE corporate communications manager Andy Ong. (See here.)
In April, Ms Han applied to the courts to declare that since the CPE is a public and statutory body, it cannot sue for libel. She also claimed her legal right to freedom of speech under Article 14 of the Constitution.
At the pre-trial conference on 8 May, the court’s senior assistant registrar instructed CPE’s lawyers, Allen and Gledhill (A&G), to enquire with the AGC if it wished to be joined in the proceedings.
By Ng Jing Song
It was the following exchange that might have brought Stand Up on May Day more publicity than the organisers could have ever bargained for.
“Labour Day is a day for rest.”
“Ya, like lepak in a corner.”
“Which corner?”
“Speakers' Corner lor!”
One of the organisers from StandUpFor.SG recounted the above dialogue to a group of prospective volunteers.
Recently, this event, which is due to take place on the 1st of May at Hong Lim Park, has come under fire. Less than four hours later on the very same day at the very same venue, Transitioning.org is putting together a protest against the population White Paper.
By Jewel Philemon
From Singapore…
Close to forty participants were seen setting up base at the Speakers Corner on Saturday. These people - from different walks of life, different nationalities, different races, different professions, different income groups, different education backgrounds – had only one thing in common: Silence.
Silence at Speakers Corner? Ironic, but yes.
Organized by a group of concerned individuals, the event – entitled, ‘தமிழில் பேசுவோம், தமிழனை நேசிப்போம்’ (“Speak in Tamil and love the Tamil people”) - involved a peaceful demonstration, where participants undertook an oath of silence in support of displaced Tamilians in Singapore.
This show of silent solidarity was deliberately held during April (the month where the Tamil Language is celebrated in Singapore), and stressed the message that, “where there are no Tamil people, there will be no Tamil language.”
By Angela Oon
The recent case of Nizam Ismail and his resignation from the AMP got me thinking, again, about the kind of single-identity politics that keep getting shoved down our throats. It's the you-are-your-affiliation card.
The crazy idea is that if you are a member of any organisation, you then wear that organisation's hat wherever you go and whatever you do. You are no longer a private individual. Nor can you even be an individual who wears multiple hats.
This idea is illogical and absurd. We all know that.
In our lives, we wear many hats. We are fathers, employees, friends, daughters, heads of corporations, Sunday school teachers, charity workers and so on. We find ourselves in different positions at different points in time. We all understand how that works.
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