After "a long period of consultation", amendments to the Criminal Procedure Code will be submitted to Parliament next week, said the Law and Home Affairs Minister.

SINGAPORE: Jumping bail will be made a criminal offence, as part of proposed changes to the Criminal Procedure Code, said Law and Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam on Thursday (Feb 22).

There will also be stricter criteria for those who want to post bail, and authorities are considering electronic tagging to monitor those on bail, he added.





Speaking at the Police Cantonment Complex, Mr Shanmugam made clear that the proposed changes are not triggered by the case of former City Harvest Church leader Chew Eng Han, who was arrested on Wednesday morning for attempting to flee the country in a motorised sampan.

Chew was on bail of S$1 million when he was caught.

"It will come as a surprise to many that jumping bail is not in itself an offence. You put up bail and you lose your bail but we haven’t made that an offence. Jumping bail will be made an offence," said Mr Shanmugam.

"We will be tightening up the bail conditions – not as a result of this case - as I said, the Bill is already ready, it will be put in Parliament next week.



“It’s been a long period of consultation … it will be groundbreaking,” he added. “You will see the changes are substantive, as they were in 2010 (when the CPC was repealed and replaced).”



POLICE CANNOT BE TRACKING EVERY PERSON ON BAIL: SHANMUGAM

Mr Shanmugam said the question of jumping bail has been on his mind for some time, even before Chew's attempted escape bid, as it is "too much of a burden" to expect the police to keep track of every single person on bail.



"At any given time, from the time you’re charged to the time your case comes to court, it can be months, it can be even longer," he pointed out.

"In some cases, you are in remand, but obviously from a public good perspective, we don’t want to keep people in remand. We want to try and help them lead their lives outside until the case is disposed of and a verdict is given ... So at any given time, you have thousands of persons on bail, walking around."

Monitoring them is "not the best use of police resources," he added. "Police should be focused on counter-terrorism, on solving crimes."

In regard to Chew's case, Mr Shanmugam said he did not want to comment too much as legal proceedings are ongoing. Chew was charged on Thursday for attempting to flee the country.

He did say, however, that the police "did exceptionally well" to foil his bid to escape.

Chew had asked to be allowed to start serving his sentence for criminal breach of trust on Thursday, after the Chinese New Year holiday.

"It would seem exceptionally harsh for the prosecution to say no, go in (to jail) straight," said Mr Shanmugam.

"Usually when it is Christmas or Chinese New Year or one of the other festivals and the person is celebrating it, and he’s been sentenced one or two days before or a little bit before … the practice has been to take a give-and-take approach and allow them to spend the holiday with their family and then come in – it’s in the spirit of humanity," he explained.

"But then there are people who will then take advantage of that ... These things can happen and police did very well here."