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Singapore opposition leader Pritam Singh to appeal conviction, sentence for lying to Parliament on November 4

Singapore opposition leader Pritam Singh to appeal conviction, sentence for lying to Parliament on November 4

Malay Mail09-07-2025
SINGAPORE, July 9 — The appeal hearing for Workers' Party chief Pritam Singh, who was convicted in February of two counts of lying under oath to a parliamentary committee, will take place on November 4 at 10am.
The Straits Times reported that lawyer Andre Jumabhoy confirmed the date in response to media queries.
After Singh was fined a total of S$14,000 (RM46,471) on February 17 following his trial, he said he would appeal against his conviction and sentence.
Deputy Principal District Judge Luke Tan ruled that Singh 'wilfully lied' to the Committee of Privileges about how he dealt with the falsehood told by former Workers' Party MP Raeesah Khan in Parliament on August 3, 2021.
Khan had lied about accompanying a sexual assault victim to a police station and repeated the false claim in Parliament on October 4, 2021.
Singh received the maximum fine of S$7,000 for each of the two charges.
The 13-day trial began on October 14, 2024, with Singh, Khan, former Workers' Party cadres Loh Pei Ying and Yudhishthra Nathan, and former party chief Low Thia Khiang taking the stand.
The defence sought to portray Khan as a habitual liar while the prosecution, led by then Deputy Attorney-General Ang Cheng Hock, argued that Singh tried to cover up his involvement in Khan's lie to Parliament.
Judge Tan said the court needed to 'send a message on the importance of giving truthful information under affirmation or oath.'
Singh retained his Aljunied GRC seat in the recent general election, where the Workers' Party team won 59.68 per cent of the votes against the People's Action Party's 40.32 per cent.
Following the election, Prime Minister Lawrence Wong said Singh would remain Leader of the Opposition with staff and resources to support his duties.
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Simplified: How judges are selected in Malaysia vs UK, Australia, Singapore, India
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Simplified: How judges are selected in Malaysia vs UK, Australia, Singapore, India

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India (Had JAC for a few months) After amending its Constitution and creating a new law in 2014, India introduced the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) — which had the duty of recommending individuals 'of ability and integrity' for the President to appoint as judges. The NJAC was meant to be a six-member panel, chaired by the Chief Justice of India, two senior Supreme Court judges, the minister in charge of law and justice, two eminent persons. (A three-member committee comprising the CJ, the prime minister, the Opposition Leader would nominate the NJAC's two eminent persons, with one of the eminent persons required to be a woman or from a minority or marginalised group.) But just months after the constitutional amendment and the NJAC Act came into effect in April 2015, India's highest court, the Supreme Court, in October 2015 struck down both laws as unconstitutional. 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