Singapore's Leader of the Opposition, Pritam Singh, has been stripped of his title following a conviction for lying under oath to a parliamentary committee. The decision was made by lawmakers in parliament, which is dominated by the ruling People's Action Party (PAP).
Singh was found guilty by a court last February and fined thousands of dollars after it ruled that he had not wanted Raeesah Khan to clarify her lie during a parliamentary investigation into police misconduct. However, Singh maintains his innocence throughout the closely-watched trial.
Critics have accused Singapore's government of using the judiciary to target its political opponents, with charges authorities always denying. The move by Prime Minister Lawrence Wong follows a three-hour debate where the parliament agreed that Singh should not be the Leader of the Opposition, backed by all 11 WP members voting against it.
Singh will remain an MP and secretary-general of the largest opposition party, Workers' Party (WP), but will lose privileges such as additional allowances and the right of first reply during parliamentary debates. In response to BBC queries over text messaging, Singh responded with a single word: "#WeContinue".
The WP said it will deliberate on the move and respond "in due course". The party holds 12 seats in Singapore's 108-seat parliament.
Singh was found guilty by a court last February and fined thousands of dollars after it ruled that he had not wanted Raeesah Khan to clarify her lie during a parliamentary investigation into police misconduct. However, Singh maintains his innocence throughout the closely-watched trial.
Critics have accused Singapore's government of using the judiciary to target its political opponents, with charges authorities always denying. The move by Prime Minister Lawrence Wong follows a three-hour debate where the parliament agreed that Singh should not be the Leader of the Opposition, backed by all 11 WP members voting against it.
Singh will remain an MP and secretary-general of the largest opposition party, Workers' Party (WP), but will lose privileges such as additional allowances and the right of first reply during parliamentary debates. In response to BBC queries over text messaging, Singh responded with a single word: "#WeContinue".
The WP said it will deliberate on the move and respond "in due course". The party holds 12 seats in Singapore's 108-seat parliament.