On 10 February 2022, the Committee of Privileges presented its official report on Ms Raeesah's Khan's lies to the Singapore Parliament.
Here are some of the salient points from the report.
For all intents and purposes, the fat lady has sung |
On 10 February 2022, the Committee of Privileges presented its official report on Ms Raeesah's Khan's lies to the Singapore Parliament.
Here are some of the salient points from the report.
For all intents and purposes, the fat lady has sung |
Politics is a funny business. Both sides of the political divide in Singapore can agree on several immutable facts: Worker’s Party MP Raeesah Khan told several lies in Parliament for months, eventually admitted, apologised, and resigned for lying, a complaint for breach of parliamentary privilege was filed, and a committee of privileges convened to investigate the matter.
According to certain online commentators, given the same facts, it is the People’s Action Party that must pay a political price because the committee of privileges allowed Khan to implicate the leaders of WP (notably Leader of the Opposition Pritam Singh and Opposition Whip Sylvia Lim) for their possible role in abetting her lies, and then to investigate these allegations. When did they know of the lie? What did they say to Khan over the course of 3 months? Why did they keep silent for 3 months? Why, the PAP will pay for the committee going in this direction, not the WP!
Every night for the past two weeks, Singaporeans watched as the Committee of Privileges investigated Raeesah Khan, formerly MP for Sengkang GRC and leading members of her former political party, for lying in Parliament.
Is the Committee of Privileges politically motivated? Is this investigation a witch hunt and a prelude to "fix the opposition"?
Illustration of the Newcastle witch hunt of 1650 from Ralph Gardiner's account in 1655 |
![]() |
Ship of fools, woodcut, 1494 Basel |
Much has been made about the quality of decision-making of Singapore's Interministerial Covid Task Force in this matter. Once again like the initial dithering and delays that led to travellers from Wuhan colonising Singapore with the Covid virus, our leaders dithered for a month while India reported its worst Covid spikes in a year. Just like in the Wuhan case, Singapore's leaders sat on their hands long after India announced the lockdown of its capital. Singapore's leaders allowed travellers from India into the country, in increasing numbers, even after the Indian government blamed the outbreak not on the record crowds at the Kumbh Mela river festival but on the "India variant" of the Covid virus.
It was only when the UK declared its travel restrictions on India that Singapore followed suit, on the same day. Yet why do Singapore's leaders blame Singaporeans for its own India variant Covid clusters and the subsequent lockdown?
Why is trust in TraceTogether at an all-time low?
Singaporeans should be celebrating. After nearly a year of lockdown, Singapore has entered the elusive "Phase 3" despite the inter-ministerial covid task force tripping itself over and over again with poor communication skills and crisis management and a tendency to allow PR agendas to trump medical-scientific expertise and set policy. By refusing to hold daily televised coronavirus briefings during the initial darkest months, this team failed to reassure, educate, guide, and rally the public and to shore up the government credibility and authority during the pandemic. Yes, it's time to talk about TraceTogether fiasco, where this credibility and authority is finally found wanting by the public.
In polling booths across Singapore, Tan Kin Lian is chosen by a slim margin as Singapore's 5th Elected President. Few suspect it, but hardcore opposition supporters do not form the largest portion of Tan's winning coalition. Tan wins the day not on his own merit. Instead, enough voters across Singapore's political spectrum have grown weary of the endless machinations of the PAP to redefine the elected presidency. After 30 years of PAP's tomfoolery, enough voters realised that the presidency has become a clown show and the appropriate way to reward the PAP is to elect the biggest clown they can find on the ballot sheet.
In polling booths across Singapore, Ng Kok Song is chosen by a slim majority of the votes as Singapore's 5th Elected President. Few suspected it, but he has a winning coalition that consists of pro-establishment types who nevertheless do not want an unpopular PAP to monopolise power over the presidency, and pro-opposition types who nevertheless cannot hold their noses to put the X next to Tan Kin Lian's name.
It is not being an "independent" that elevates him to presidency, but being a blank slate. Having expressed no political views and being a social non-entity with zero contributions to social and civic life ironically make him palatable enough to win the highest vote count.
![]() |
"Not all the statesman's power or art could turn aside Death's certain dart" Illustration by Thomas Rowlandson, in The English Dance of Death, 1816 |
![]() |
Will this be a game of chess, or a game of twister? Choose wisely when you play with Death! |
![]() |
Can Minilee pull an FDR? |
![]() |
"S11", a dormitory or worker camp in Singapore Photographer: Suhaimi Abdullah/Getty Images |
![]() |
Wallace Tripp, 1973 illustration from A Great Big Ugly Man Came up and Tied his Horse to Me: A Book of Nonsense Verse |
![]() |
Plague in London, 1625 Title artwork from Thomas Dekker's pamphlet "A Rod for Run-awayes" |
![]() |
Does this fate await Hong Kong? Why would its people protest knowing this will happen? (cartoon copyright of https://latuffcartoons.wordpress.com) |
![]() |
Power is power, or is it? The power to pass laws is absolute power, or is it? |
![]() |
How some activists see themselves |