Ex-Singapore cabinet minister starts 1-year sentence over illegal gifts
UNB
Publish: 07 Oct 2024, 03:26 PM
KUALA
LUMPUR, Oct 7 (AP/UNB) - A former Singaporean Cabinet minister began a one-year
prison term Monday for receiving illegal gifts after saying he would not appeal
his sentence in the rare criminal case involving a government minister in the
Asian financial hub.
Former Transport
Minister S. Iswaran said it was important to him that prosecutors reduced two
corruption charges to charges of receiving illegal gifts at the start of the
trial last month. Iswaran had pleaded guilty to one count of obstructing
justice and four of accepting gifts from two businessmen with whom he had
official business.
His sentence of 12
months in prison exceeded what the defense and prosecution had requested, but
the court agreed to let him start serving the sentence Monday.
"I will not be
appealing the sentence handed down by the Court," Iswaran said in a
statement on social media. "I accept that as a minister, what I did was
wrong under section 165 (of the Penal Code). I accept full responsibility for
my actions and apologise unreservedly to all Singaporeans."
With his prison term, he
said he hoped he and his family can put "the pain and anguish behind us,
move forward and rebuild our lives together."
Singapor e's ministers
are among the world's best paid, and the case has embarrassed the ruling
People's Action Party, which prides itself on clean governance. The last
Cabinet minister charged with graft was Wee Toon Boon, who was found guilty in
1975 and jailed for accepting gifts in exchange for helping a businessperson.
Another Cabinet minister was investigated for graft in 1986, but died before
charges were filed.
A day after Iswaran's
sentence last week, a Malaysian hotelier who brought Formula One to Singapore
was charged Friday for allegedly obstructing justice and abetting Iswaran's
wrongdoings. Ong Beng Seng did not indicate how he would plead to the charges,
and his case has been adjourned until next month.
The second businessman
will not be charged.
Ong, a Malaysian
businessman based in Singapore, is the managing director of Hotel Properties
Limited, which owns 38 hotels and resorts in 17 countries. He is known for
bringing Formula 1 to Singapore in 2008, and holds the rights to the Grand Prix
night race in the city-state.
End/UNB/AP/MB