A Singapore court jailed a defiant 76-year-old British author for six weeks yesterday for insulting the judiciary by publishing a book critical of executions in the city-state.
In the stiffest sentence imposed in Singapore for contempt of court, Alan Shadrake was also fined S$20,000 (US$15,000) for his book based on the long career of a hangman who allegedly put more than 1,000 convicts to death.
The previous longest jail term for contempt of court was 15 days.
High Court Judge Quentin Loh said he was imposing a deterrent sentence and dismissed a last-minute apology by Shadrake as a “tactical ploy” to obtain a reduced sentence.
Shadrake, a freelance journalist based in Malaysia and Britain, must serve two extra weeks in prison if he fails to pay the fine.
“I don’t have that kind of money,” he told reporters.
In addition, he will have to pay legal costs of S$55,000, but was given a week’s stay before the jail sentence is carried out while he decides whether to appeal.
Shadrake is also being investigated for criminal defamation, which carries a sentence of two years’ imprisonment, a fine or both.
Human rights activists criticized the decision to jail Shadrake, but Judge Loh said the allegations of “judicial impropriety” were without precedent.
“There is no doubt Mr Shadrake’s personal culpability is of the highest order,” Loh said during sentencing, adding that Shadrake had openly declared plans to add more chapters to the book.
The jail sentence was half the 12 weeks sought by the Attorney General’s Chambers.
Shadrake’s lawyer M. Ravi said 6,000 copies of the book had been sold.
Judge Loh was fair to his client, “but I won’t say [Singapore] justice is fair,” Ravi said.
Shadrake was arrested by Singapore police in July while visiting the city to launch his book, Once a Jolly Hangman: Singapore Justice in the Dock.
It includes a profile of Darshan Singh, the former chief executioner at Singapore’s Changi Prison who, according to the author, hanged about 1,000 men and women, including foreigners, from 1959 until he retired in 2006.
The book also features interviews with human rights activists, lawyers and former police officers, and alleges that some cases may have been influenced by diplomatic and trade considerations.
Singapore executes murderers and drug traffickers by hanging, a controversial method of punishment dating back to British colonial rule.
The government does not publish statistics on the death penalty, but Amnesty International said in a 2004 report that more than 400 prisoners had been hanged in Singapore since 1991, giving the city-state the distinction of having the world’s highest execution rate relative to its population.
In a Nov. 3 ruling that found Shadrake guilty, the judge said the author made his claims “against a dissembling and selective background of truths and half-truths, and sometimes outright falsehoods.”
“A casual and unwary reader, who does not subject the book to detailed scrutiny, might well believe his claims ... and in so doing would have lost confidence in the administration of justice in Singapore,” it said.
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