South China Morning Post

EX-MINISTER FACES NEW CORRUPTION CHARGES

Former transport chief pleads not guilty after being handed an additional eight counts over obtaining items worth S$19,000 from executive

- Kimberly Lim kimberly.lim@scmp.com

Singapore’s former transport minister S. Iswaran was hit with eight fresh charges yesterday amid a corruption probe that has rocked the city state, with the new counts involving about S$19,000 (HK$110,210) worth of valuable items he allegedly obtained, including bottles of whisky, golf clubs and a bicycle.

Iswaran, previously a senior politician in the long-ruling People’s Action Party, now faces 35 charges in total, up from the initial 27. These include accepting gratificat­ions as a public servant, corruption, and the obstructio­n of justice.

He has pleaded not guilty to the additional charges, according to local media reports.

Iswaran is accused of receiving the items from Lum Kok Seng, managing director of a company involved in the constructi­on of an MRT station. The Mass Rapid Transit system is the island nation’s railway network. The alleged offences took place sometime between November 2021 and November 2022, the city state’s anti-corruption watchdog said.

The charges fall under Section 165 of Singapore’s Penal Code, which prohibits public servants from accepting gifts from someone they work with in an official capacity.

“Singapore adopts a strict zero-tolerance approach towards corruption. Any person who is convicted under section 165 of the Penal Code can be fined or sentenced to imprisonme­nt of up to two years or both,” the Corrupt Practices Investigat­ion Bureau said in a statement.

Iswaran, widely credited with bringing Formula One racing to the city state, was hit with a raft of corruption and bribery charges at a court hearing in January, ending months of public speculatio­n about the case, which first came to light in July last year. He denies the charges. He subsequent­ly resigned from his positions as transport minister and minister-in-charge of trade relations and stepped down as a member of parliament.

Iswaran was accused of receiving bribes worth a total value of close to S$400,000 from billionair­e Ong Beng Seng, authoritie­s said in a statement in January.

Some of the bribes were allegedly given to advance Ong’s business interests in matters related to a contract between the Singapore Grand Prix and the country’s tourism board, the watchdog said.

Among the bribes Iswaran is accused of taking include flights on Ong’s private plane and tickets to the Singapore Grand Prix, football matches and the stage musical, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, in Britain.

The 50 tickets he allegedly secured to the Singapore Grand Prix were worth about S$145,000, while a trip on Ong’s private jet from Singapore to Doha was valued at about S$10,410.

In a letter, Iswaran earlier rejected the charges and allegation­s made against him, maintainin­g his innocence.

If found guilty, the former top official could be fined up to S$100,000 or face a jail term of up to seven years, or both. For the obstructio­n of justice, he could be fined or sentenced to seven years in prison, or both.

Iswaran returned to Singapore last week after being granted a 16-day extension to a courtappro­ved trip to Australia after contractin­g a respirator­y illness.

The high-profile case emerged in July when Singapore’s corruption watchdog revealed Iswaran was assisting with an investigat­ion, sending shock waves through the city state.

On the same day, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong ordered Iswaran to take a leave of absence, appointing Chee Hong Tat, senior minister of state, as acting transport minister.

Both Ong and Iswaran were arrested shortly after.

The investigat­ion was among a series of political scandals that rocked the city state last year, from a probe into the rented state properties of two other ministers to the speaker of parliament and three other politician­s, including two from the opposition, resigning over two separate extramarit­al affairs.

Singapore has long prided itself on being corruption free, consistent­ly ranking highly on global anti-corruption indexes.

Singapore adopts a … zero-tolerance approach towards corruption

STATEMENT FROM THE CORRUPT PRACTICES INVESTIGAT­ION BUREAU

 ?? Photo: Bloomberg ?? S. Iswaran leaves court yesterday. Prosecutor­s have filed eight more corruption charges against the former minister.
Photo: Bloomberg S. Iswaran leaves court yesterday. Prosecutor­s have filed eight more corruption charges against the former minister.

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