PM Lee, DPM Wong did not disclose Iswaran’s arrest as it is CPIB’s call to make: PMO

Transport Minister S. Iswaran leaving the CPIB at around 6.50pm on July 19. The online article had alleged that PM Lee Hsien Loong and DPM Lawrence Wong did not disclose the fact of Mr Iswaran’s arrest because it was politically embarrassing. ST PHOTO: DESMOND WEE

SINGAPORE – Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and Deputy Prime Minister Lawrence Wong did not disclose Transport Minister S. Iswaran’s arrest when they spoke about the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau’s (CPIB) probe on July 12 as revealing such information is CPIB’s decision to make.

The Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said on Thursday that it is usually the CPIB that releases information on people who have been arrested in connection with its investigations, not ministers.

The PMO revealed this in its statement that online blog Political Sophistry has been asked to put up a correction notice, under the law against fake news, on its article about the CPIB’s investigation into Mr Iswaran.

The article titled “Upfront and transparent? A timeline of the CPIB investigation into Transport Minister Iswaran” falsely conveyed two points, said the PMO.

First, that on July 12, PM Lee and DPM Wong did not want to disclose the fact about Mr Iswaran’s arrest because it was politically embarrassing.

Second, that during his media interview on July 12, DPM Wong had deliberately withheld information that Mr Iswaran and tycoon Ong Beng Seng had been arrested in connection with the case because he wanted to conceal the truth.

The PMO said that both PM Lee’s statement and DPM Wong’s media interview kept to what the CPIB had announced earlier that day.

The CPIB said in a statement on July 12 that Mr Iswaran was assisting with an investigation it had uncovered. It did not give details on the nature of the probe.

The anti-graft agency said on July 14, in response to media queries, that Mr Iswaran and Mr Ong had been arrested on July 11 and were subsequently released on bail.

The PMO said PM Lee and DPM Wong did not want to deviate from what the CPIB had announced in its statement as it was related to operational matters.

“Whether to arrest a person under investigation is an operational judgment by the CPIB. In addition, whether and when to make public that a person has been arrested in connection with their investigations is a decision for the CPIB.”

In view of that, PM Lee’s statement on July 12 and DPM Wong at his media interview on the same day were consistent with the CPIB’s July 12 press release, said the PMO.

“It is therefore untrue that PM Lee or DPM Wong did not want to disclose the fact of minister Iswaran’s arrest because it was politically embarrassing, or that DPM had deliberately withheld information on the arrests because he wanted to conceal the truth,” it added.

“It is also not a case of PM Lee and DPM Wong abdicating their responsibility to disclose such information.”

The PMO said ministers have to let the CPIB independently decide on the release of operational information. “CPIB must be afforded the necessary time and space it needs to conduct a proper, thorough and independent investigation,” it added.

Minister in the PMO Indranee Rajah instructed the Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act (Pofma) office to issue a correction direction to Political Sophistry.

As required, the blog has posted a correction notice at the top of the article and at the top of the main page of its website. This is so that readers can read both versions and draw their own conclusions, the PMO said.

Political Sophistry said on its website on Thursday that it will conduct a thorough review of “all other potentially controversial articles”.

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