SINGAPORE: Restriction orders issued under the Internal Security Act (ISA) against two Singaporeans were allowed to lapse this year, the Internal Security Department said on Wednesday (Apr 2).
One of them - Dickson Yeo, 44 - had been detained for acting as a paid agent of a foreign state.
He was arrested after returning to Singapore in December 2020 and was interviewed to establish if he had engaged in activities prejudicial to Singapore’s security.
He was then detained under the ISA in January 2021 for acting as a paid agent for a "foreign state".
Although ISD at the time did not name the foreign state, Yeo was in 2020 sentenced to 14 months' jail in the US for spying for China against the US.
Yeo was subsequently released on a suspension direction in December 2021 and issued with a restriction order in January 2023.
The order then lapsed upon expiry in January this year.
“The threat posed by Yeo as a foreign agent has been effectively neutralised and he no longer requires close supervision under the (restriction order) regime,” said ISD.
Those on restriction orders cannot travel out of Singapore or change addresses or jobs, without approval. They also cannot access the Internet or social media, issue public statements, address public meetings or print, distribute or contribute to any publication without approval.
The other Singaporean whose restriction order was allowed to lapse is Asyrani Hussaini. The restriction order for the 35-year-old lapsed in March.
Asyrani, who was self-radicalised, was detained in March 2013 after he attempted to engage in the armed insurgency in southern Thailand. He was released from detention in March 2019 and issued with a restriction order.
ISD said he has made “good progress” in his rehabilitation and no longer requires close supervision under the restriction order regime.
A 54-year-old Singaporean man was also released from detention on a suspension direction under the ISA in February this year.
Mohamed Kazali Salleh, a self-radicalised ISIS supporter, was detained in January 2019.
Following a parallel terrorism financing investigation by the Commercial Affairs Department, Kazali was sentenced to three years and 10 months’ imprisonment under the Terrorism (Suppression of Financing) Act in September 2021.
This was for providing money to Syria-based Malaysian ISIS militant Wan Mohd Aquil Wan Zainal Abidin @ Akel Zainal to facilitate terrorist acts.
Kazali was redetained under the ISA in February 2024 upon the completion of his imprisonment term as he was assessed to remain vulnerable to re-radicalisation, said ISD.
He was released on a suspension direction as he had made good progress in his rehabilitation and was assessed to no longer pose a security threat requiring preventive detention.
A suspension direction is a ministerial direction to suspend an existing detention order. The Minister for Home Affairs may revoke the suspension direction, and the person will be redetained if he does not comply with the conditions stipulated in the suspension direction.
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One of them - Dickson Yeo, 44 - had been detained for acting as a paid agent of a foreign state.
He was arrested after returning to Singapore in December 2020 and was interviewed to establish if he had engaged in activities prejudicial to Singapore’s security.
He was then detained under the ISA in January 2021 for acting as a paid agent for a "foreign state".
Although ISD at the time did not name the foreign state, Yeo was in 2020 sentenced to 14 months' jail in the US for spying for China against the US.
Yeo was subsequently released on a suspension direction in December 2021 and issued with a restriction order in January 2023.
The order then lapsed upon expiry in January this year.
“The threat posed by Yeo as a foreign agent has been effectively neutralised and he no longer requires close supervision under the (restriction order) regime,” said ISD.
Those on restriction orders cannot travel out of Singapore or change addresses or jobs, without approval. They also cannot access the Internet or social media, issue public statements, address public meetings or print, distribute or contribute to any publication without approval.
The other Singaporean whose restriction order was allowed to lapse is Asyrani Hussaini. The restriction order for the 35-year-old lapsed in March.
Asyrani, who was self-radicalised, was detained in March 2013 after he attempted to engage in the armed insurgency in southern Thailand. He was released from detention in March 2019 and issued with a restriction order.
ISD said he has made “good progress” in his rehabilitation and no longer requires close supervision under the restriction order regime.
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RELEASE FROM DETENTION
A 54-year-old Singaporean man was also released from detention on a suspension direction under the ISA in February this year.
Mohamed Kazali Salleh, a self-radicalised ISIS supporter, was detained in January 2019.
Following a parallel terrorism financing investigation by the Commercial Affairs Department, Kazali was sentenced to three years and 10 months’ imprisonment under the Terrorism (Suppression of Financing) Act in September 2021.
This was for providing money to Syria-based Malaysian ISIS militant Wan Mohd Aquil Wan Zainal Abidin @ Akel Zainal to facilitate terrorist acts.
Kazali was redetained under the ISA in February 2024 upon the completion of his imprisonment term as he was assessed to remain vulnerable to re-radicalisation, said ISD.
He was released on a suspension direction as he had made good progress in his rehabilitation and was assessed to no longer pose a security threat requiring preventive detention.
A suspension direction is a ministerial direction to suspend an existing detention order. The Minister for Home Affairs may revoke the suspension direction, and the person will be redetained if he does not comply with the conditions stipulated in the suspension direction.
Continue reading...