// Adds dimensions UUID, Author and Topic into GA4
Sunday, June 7, 2026
30.5 C
Singapore

Li Shengwu posts photo of LKY’s memoir, says those were better days

Singapore—After being found guilty of contempt of court on Wednesday, July 29, Li Shengwu, the nephew of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong took to Facebook to air his views. He posted a photo of the first page of the memoir of his grandfather, Lee Kuan Yew, which was inscribed with “Love, Yeye,” which is grandfather in Chinese.

Mr Li called it a gift from “better times, before my uncle bullied his siblings and tore the family apart.”

In his verdict in Mr Li’s case, Justice Kannan Ramesh wrote that Mr Li has two weeks to pay a fine of S$15,000, otherwise, he will have to serve one week in jail. Mr Li was ordered by the Judge to pay S$8,500 for the costs of proceedings, as well as S$8,070 for filing fees, photocopying charges, service of documents on Mr Li in the United States, where he is based, and database fees.

Mr Li, the son of Lee Hsien Yang, teaches economics at Harvard University and was not present at the reading of the verdict. In January of this year, Mr Li wrote that he was “declining to engage further in these court proceedings” in the case against him.

He wrote on Wednesday morning in his Facebook post that he disagreed with the verdict and worried “that it will reinforce the PAP’s tendency to suppress ordinary political speech.”

The Harvard professor added,  “In response to three words in a private Facebook post, the government has wasted three years of civil servants’ time.

In a kind of cruel irony, the AGC has spent long hours lecturing me about my grandfather’s values.  The AGC is supposed to be an apolitical agency, even though the current attorney general was my uncle’s personal lawyer.”

He wrote at the end of his post that he had seen a gift from his childhood while arranging his bookshelf recently, the memoir of Lee Kuan Yew, “From Third World to First The Singapore Story: 1965–2000.”

116443747 10158697648788523 4436601474741325524 o
Facebook screengrab: Li Shengwu

The infighting within the Lee family has been in the news for the past few years, pitting the Prime Minister against his younger siblings Dr Lee Wei Ling and Lee Hsien Yang, the father of Li Shenwu.

The younger Lee siblings accused the Prime Minister of wanting to keep the family home in 38 Oxley Road so that he could start a political dynasty, with his son Li Hongyi as his heir apparent, an accusation which PM Lee called “entirely baseless” in a special parliamentary session in 2017.

However, the fight between the siblings does not end there. The wife of Lee Hsien Yang, Lee Suet Fern faces a disciplinary tribunal called for by the Attorney-General’s Chambers (AGC) for her alleged role in helping prepare the will of her father-in-law. In April 2019, Lee Hsien Yang announced on Facebook that the AGC had filed “over 500 pages of complaint” against her.

As for their son, Li Shengwu, he was charged with contempt of court for a Facebook post, set to private, wherein he said that “the Singapore Government is very litigious and has a pliant court system.” His post was put up in July 2017, and by August 4, the Attorney-General’s Chambers filed an application in the High Court to start committal proceedings against him for contempt of court.

The post had been set to a “friends only” setting, and included a link to an article from the New York Times from 2010 entitled “Censored in Singapore.”

Mr Li wrote on his post, “Keep in mind, of course, that the Singapore government is very litigious and has a pliant court system. This constrains what the international media can usually report.” —TISG

Read also: Li Shengwu: “behavior by the AGC is one reason why I decided not to participate in the proceedings against me”

Li Shengwu: “behavior by the AGC is one reason why I decided not to participate in the proceedings against me”

 

- Advertisement -

Hot this week

Life expectancy rises to 83.9 years as Singapore sets new record

According to the latest data released by the Singapore Department of Statistics on June 3, the life expectancy at birth for Singapore residents will reach 83.9 years in 2025. This is not only an in...

SG father rants online after son allegedly squandered S$240k in education fees; Redditors discover why: ‘You had an extramarital affair!’

SINGAPORE: A Singaporean father is absolutely devastated after his son decided to drop out from a prestigious international school, an opportunity he believes could have opened many doors for him i...

Popular Categories

document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", () => { const trigger = document.getElementById("ads-trigger"); if ('IntersectionObserver' in window && trigger) { const observer = new IntersectionObserver((entries, observer) => { entries.forEach(entry => { if (entry.isIntersecting) { lazyLoader(); // You should define lazyLoader() elsewhere or inline here observer.unobserve(entry.target); // Run once } }); }, { rootMargin: '800px', threshold: 0.1 }); observer.observe(trigger); } else { // Fallback setTimeout(lazyLoader, 3000); } });
// //
Enable Notifications OK No thanks