Tycoon Ong Beng Seng pleads guilty in corruption case

BBC News, Singapore
BBC News, Singapore

A Singapore-based billionaire hotelier has pleaded guilty to a charge connected to a rare corruption scandal that shocked the country last year.
Ong Beng Seng has admitted to abetting the obstruction of justice by helping ex-transportation minister Subramaniam Iswaran cover up evidence while he was being investigated for corruption.
Ong had been accused of giving expensive gifts, including tickets to the Formula 1 Grand Prix and a ride on a private jet, to Iswaran while they were engaged in official business.
Ministers in Singapore cannot keep gifts unless they pay the market value of the gift to the government, and they must declare anything they receive from people they have business dealings with.
At Iswaran’s sentencing last October, the court heard that Iswaran requested Ong bill him for a business class flight to Doha, after he discovered that he was being investigated.
The judge said that he acted with deliberation and premeditation to avoid the probe.
On Monday, Ong pleaded guilty on Monday for helping Iswaran pay the Singapore Grand Prix for the flight ticket from Doha to Singapore.
The judge said that Ong’s sentencing would be held on 15 August.
Ong faces up to two years in jail for abetting a public servant in obtaining gifts, while the maximum jail term he faces for the abetment of obstruction of justice is seven years.
The 79-year-old is also accused of abetting Iswaran in obtaining an all-expenses paid trip to Doha, said to be worth around S$20,850 ($16,188; £12,194).
The two men were arrested in July 2023 and charge sheets revealed that Iswaran was gifted more than S$403,000 ($311,882; £234,586) worth of flights, hotel stays, musicals and grand prix tickets.
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