Tang Liang Hong
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Tang Liang Hong (simplified Chinese: 邓亮洪; pinyin: Dèng Liànghóng) is a senior lawyer and politician from Singapore. He was born in 1935 to parents who came from agricultural backgrounds. He speaks three local languages.
In the 1997 elections in Singapore, Tang ran as a candidate for the Workers' Party in the Cheng San GRC (group representation constituency).
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[edit] 1997 general elections
[edit] Post-election legal action
After the election, Tang Liang Hong faced thirteen defamation suits from PAP Ministers and Members of Parliament (MPs) - including the Senior Minister, the Prime Minister, and his two deputies. The suits were filed because Tang called the PAP ministers and MPs liars when they had labelled him anti-Christian, a Chinese chauvinist, and a dangerous man. Tang left Singapore for Johor after receiving death threat letters. He subsequently also faced charges from the Inland Revenue Department for evading taxes. His wife's passport was impounded but later released. Eventually, Tang found refuge in Australia, where he was reunited with his wife.
After Tang left Singapore, the plaintiffs obtained the Mareva injunction against him to restrain him from disposing of assets and to require him to disclose the whereabouts of his assets. When Tang failed to file an affidavit disclosing his assets, the plaintiffs obtained default judgements against Tang in all their suits. Damages were assessed by a judge of the High Court at a total of $8,075,000. Tang's appeals against the default judgments were argued by an eminent British Queen's Counsel, Charles Gray, before the Court of Appeal in September 1997. Judgment has been reserved at the time of writing.
[edit] Source
- Life on the run by James Gomez (April 4, 2000)
- Worker's Party history 1991 to 2000
- Singapore dissident went beyond mere insult - Letter to the Editor, New York Times from Chan Heng Chee, Ambassador of Singapore to the United States
- "The politics of judicial institutions in Singapore"
More details about the circumstances leading to the above legal action and about the lawsuit itself can be found in this website: http://www.singapore-window.org/1028judi.htm [1]