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Li Shengwu speaks at the 2015 state funeral of his grandfather, Lee Kuan Yew. Photo: Singapore Prime Minister’s Office

Lee Kuan Yew’s grandson, Li Shengwu, says he fled Singapore because he feared arrest

Li, whose father is embroiled in a family feud with Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, says he was warned by friends that he faced detention for contempt case

A grandson of Lee Kuan Yew says he left Singapore in July after friends expressed concerns he might be detained by the authorities in a contempt of court case.

“In Singapore, it is possible that one can be detained and interrogated for some time without a lawyer,” said Li Shengwu, whose uncle is the nation’s current Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. “My friends had warned me that they were concerned for my safety if I remained in Singapore.”

Li’s father is Lee Hsien Yang, who has been embroiled in a bitter family feud with Prime Minister Lee over the legacy of Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s late founding father and ruler for more than three decades.

Li declined to identify his friends or disclose if they had specific information. Reuters has no independent evidence that Li Shengwu faced any threats to his safety.

The Prime Minister’s Press Secretary Chang Li Lin said it was “not accurate” to make points about detention and interrogation. “This is a well-established legal process. Clear laws and procedures apply to all cases of contempt, including this case involving Mr Li,” Chang said. “The courts will decide on the merits of the case.”

Li departed from the city-state on July 23 to return to the United States, more than a week sooner than he planned. Two days earlier, the attorney general’s chambers in Singapore had sent him a letter demanding he issue an apology and purge a July 15 Facebook post in which he had said that “the Singapore government is very litigious and has a pliant court system.”

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The Lee family tree. Image: SCMP

In that letter, Senior State Counsel Francis Ng said the post was “an egregious and baseless attack” on the Singapore legal system. He asked Li to sign a declaration that he had made false allegations, was in contempt of the judiciary, and to apologize unreservedly.

On August 4, the attorney general’s chambers began contempt of court proceedings against Li in Singapore’s High Court. This followed Li’s decision not to remove the post or apologise.

Li’s troubles are related to a family feud that has erupted between Lee Kuan Yew’s three children over the fate of Lee’s house. The dispute has been simmering since Lee Kuan Yew died in 2015 but exploded into public view this summer in a highly unusual display of discord at the top of a country that usually keeps such matters behind closed doors.

Li’s father, Lee Hsien Yang, and his aunt Lee Wei Ling have accused their older brother, the prime minister, of opposing their father’s wish as stated in his will to have the house demolished. They say that he wanted to turn it into a monument. The two siblings have also claimed that “the organs of the state” have been used against them in the dispute, though they have not produced specific evidence to back this up.
Family members of Lee Kuan Yew arrive with his portrait at a state funeral on March 29, 2015. Li Shengwu can be seen at top right). Second row left to right; Lee Suet Fern, Lee Hsien Yang, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, Ho Ching, and Lee Wei Ling. Photo: AP

Li, 32, said he had been in Singapore to attend a friend’s birthday celebrations but missed those because of his sudden departure for Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he is a junior fellow at Harvard University. Li said in a previous interview earlier this month that he has no intention of returning to Singapore and would defend himself with legal representation in the city state.

The prime minister has previously said he is not involved in the current decision-making over the future of the house, and has denied there has been any abuse of state power.

A spokesperson for the attorney-general’s chambers declined to comment because the case is already before the court.

During the interview at his office on the Harvard campus, where he is doing post-doctoral work in economic theory and behavioural economics, Li questioned whether the People’s Action Party, which has ruled Singapore since 1959 and received almost 70 per cent of the vote in the 2015 election, has too much control.
Lee Hsien Yang, son of former leader Lee Kuan Yew, delivers his eulogy during the funeral service at the University Cultural Centre at the National University of Singapore March 29, 2015. Photo: Reuters

He called for more room for “healthy, loyal dissent” in Singapore. “I worry that Singapore’s ruling party tries too hard to maintain a monopoly on credibility,” said Li.

Li, who says in an online resume that he has a PhD in Economics from Stanford University and a Master of Philosophy degree from the University of Oxford, said his grandfather’s wish to tear down the house, a humbly furnished house near the Orchard shopping district, was to ensure that it did not become iconic and feed into a cult of personality.

Press Secretary Chang said the PAP forms the democratically elected government and that anyone dissatisfied with its performance can contest elections and try to convince voters they can do better as opposition parties regularly do.

And she said here was “no cult of LKY”, referring to the founder’s initials.

“Singaporeans are grateful to Mr Lee and the other founding leaders, and wish to honour their memory. That is natural and healthy,” she said.

While growing up, Li said his grandfather’s home was a regular gathering place for his family. Sunday lunch together was a regular fixture.

“There was a table for the adults and the children would read books or play games,” he said. “I saw my uncle and my cousins a lot growing up. I’d say we all got along well as late as three or four years ago ... The tragedy of this is that this is not what my grandfather would have wanted.”

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Relative fled over concerns for safety
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