Their claim that they did not know nature of contents rejected
By
Elena Chong
Ong and his wife Dorothy Chan leaving the Subordinate Courts yesterday. The couple is in hot water for distributing seditious tracts. -- ST PHOTO: CAROLINE CHIA
A CHRISTIAN couple who mass-mailed evangelical tracts to the public for many years were on Thursday found guilty of distributing seditious or objectionable publications to three Muslims.
About this case
ONG Kian Cheong, 50, and Dorothy Chan Hien Leng, 46, claimed trial to two charges each of distributing seditious publications and one each of distributing an objectionable publication and possessing seditious tracts. Two of the recipients, Madam Farharti Ahmad, 36, and Mr Irwan Ariffin, 32, received an evangelistic comic tract titled The Little Bride through the mail in March and October 2007 respectively. Another recipient, Mr Isa Raffee, 35, was sent Who Is Allah? in December that year.
All three told the court that they felt angry, insulted and offended, and believed a Christian group had sent them.
Ong Kian Cheong, 50, a SingTel technical officer, and his wife, Dorothy Chan Hien Leng, 46, a UBS associate director, were also convicted of having 439 copies of 11 seditious publications at their Maplewoods Condominium on Jan 30 last year.
This is the first time a full trial under the Sedition Act has been heard.
In 2005, a man was jailed a month for posting inflammatory and vicious remarks about Muslims and Malays on the Internet.
The following year, a 21-year-old accounts assistant received a stern warning for posting an offensive cartoon of Jesus Christ on his blog.
Ong was arrested on Jan 30 last year after he was seen by police dropping off a stack of brown envelopes into a post box outside his office at ComCentre at Exeter Road.
He subsequently led the officers to his car and his home, where more of the Chick Publications materials were seized. Chan was arrested the same day.
The case centred on whether the couple, who were then attending Berean Christian Church at Havelock Road, knew or had reason to believe that the publications they had mailed to the three were seditious.
The prosecution argued that the couple had carried out their evangelical mission 'with eyes wide open', and that they were fully aware of the offensive nature of the contents.
They distributed those offensive publications to members of different faiths in Singapore with no regard for their feelings or sensitivities, said Deputy Public Prosecutor Anandan Bala in his closing submissions.