Last week, Phey Yew Kok popped up in the news again after
turning himself in at the Singapore Embassy in Bangkok, Thailand. Officers from
the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB) then escorted him back to
Singapore.
I knew some things would come out of the woodwork after the death of
Lee Kuan Yew, but I must say I did not think the first would be Phey Yew Kok. The former NTUC president and Member of Parliament (MP) Phey
Yew Kok has been out of Singapore since 1980 when he ran after facing charges
of Criminal Breach of Trust. Facing four counts of criminal breach of trust
involving $83,000 and two charges “under the Trades Unions Act for investing
$18,000 of trade union money in a private supermarket without the approval of
the minister”, Mr. Phey then mysteriously disappeared.
Many questions still remains about his disappearance. Back then he was a rising star in the PAP and ruled the trade union with an iron-first, so why did he do what he was accused of? If he managed
to get out of Singapore, why come back now just a month after Mr. Lee Kuan
Yew’s death? Did he made any deal with Mr. Lee Kuan Yew (his passport was never
taken away from him) that’s went away with the man’s death? And was there any
deal now before his surrender to the embassy in Bangkok?
I must admit, I barely remember Phey Yew Kok before last
week. The Singapore government has been very good at making the whole saga
disappear from the public domain and if not for the constant questions of deceased
former opposition MP, Mr. J B Jeyaretnam, the case might have been forgotten
altogether. However that is either here or there.
The case is still remembered by many Singaporeans and they have many questions about the whole sordid episode. Now that the man has resurfaced, perhaps those questions can now finally be
answered.
2 comments:
I wouldn't hold my breath!
If it's an open trial, then some things will have to come out. You can't convict if you don't tell the whole of Singapore what happened in the 1970s and how Phew managed to run off in 1980. Unlike Mas Selemat, this guy hasn't been convicted yet, so the government has to tell during the trial.
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