Saturday, June 13, 2020

Rosheen's story

I read Rosheen's story as a rape survivor this afternoon - here
It made me recall of the first time I met her.
I remember sitting in an auditorium attending a closed dialogue, wide-eyed, listening first-hand to the personal stories of three brave survivors - Rosheen, rape survivor and writer of this article, Nisha Ayub - internationally renowned trans-activist, Dorian, a transman activist. 
Their experiences really changed my perspectives and starkly highlighted my privilege. Invisible privilege which I never thought twice about and took for granted, for example, simply being able to enter a women's restroom in peace, freely expressing my gender expression without fear of violence and being able to travel without being interrogated for looking different from the name in my passport. 

Monday, June 1, 2020

Concluding my Term as Bar Council Family Law Committee Co-Chairperson wef 1.6.2020

This farewell post was written on 30.5.2020 to the FLC members. 

Dear members,

I am so grateful to have had the privilege of serving the Bar Council as the Chair and Co-Chair of the Family Law Committee for the last few years. I have tried to give my best in leading our committee in our various projects/ engagements with the judiciary/authorities with the aim of improving the practice of family law for our members and the public. However, due to new commitments, I will no longer be able to continue as the Co-Chair of the Family Law Committee beyond 1.6.2020.
I have spoken to our President and my Co-Chair, Dato' Tharuma, both of whom are aware and understanding of my present constraints. The FLC will be in the good hands of Dato' Tharuma. 

FLC's strength is our teamwork and warm camaraderie, enhanced by good nasi lemak/muruku/cookies/cakes! This is reason why we have been able to achieve some measure of change in the family law landscape. No doubt there is always so much more to be done. Rest assured, I will continue to support FLC and the Collaborative Law Movement behind the scenes.

My deep appreciation to my Co-Chairs, Deputy Co-Chairs, BC Officers, Rajeswari and Florence for their support and hard work. I thank our experienced and knowledgeable senior members of our committee for their mentoring and guidance. I am also grateful to so many of you who have volunteered selflessly - at a drop of an email, telephone call or WhatsApp message and taking on a myriad of tasks from attending brainstorming meetings, delivering talks/webinars, proof-reading grammar, drafting countless papers/research to attending meetings in Putrajaya. Your support has made this journey as Co-Chair less lonely and intimidating. 

Yesterday, I received a copy of Presiding Judge Justice Debbie Ong's Workplace Address dated 21.5.2020. This is attached. Singapore is moving from an adversarial system towards a system which is "problem solving" with a focus on delivering "Therapeutic Justice" under  a multi-disciplinary family system.  I've extracted and reproduced paragraphs 35 to 37 below which set out issues that I'm sure many of us commonly face:

A Sharpened Vision for Family Justice

35. In our sharpened vision for family justice, what needs to be done in preparation for the parties’ ‘new future’? Some parents think that they alone are enough for their child; they think they can take care of the child better than the other, and in fact they think that the child does not need the other parent. Other parents use their child as a tool for revenge. Here is a list of things NOT to do:

Do not send inflammatory letters to each other, and kill the chances of cooperation.

Do not allege the worst of the other spouse in affidavits in divorce proceedings, especially personally hurtful things, even going back 20 years or more.

Do not file many applications, only to increase costs and deplete savings, shrink the size of the matrimonial assets, and increase complexity unnecessarily.

Do not let the children suffer the conflict of loyalty and other sorts of stress, or burden them with your own issues. Do not ‘parentify’ the children and deprive them of a normal childhood.

Do not turn the children against the other parent; you may not need your ex-spouse anymore, but the children do.

36. Parties should not use the court proceedings to vent their frustrations. They should use therapeutic services to support them in respect of the emotional consequences of family breakdown. This list of DON’Ts will be part of our system. We will incorporate this list in considering the conduct we expect from parties as their legal responsibility.

37. What then should we do instead? We should focus on Therapeutic Justice in our sharpened vision for family justice. ...."

Family lawyering is indeed difficult and draining, but so very important as we have the opportunity to add positive value to the lives of the families we represent.
To end, let me leave you with a quote from former Chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia, "I want to thank the profession. Your work can be dangerous, confronting and exhausting but the system would not function without you."
Wishing you a good weekend and keep Covid-19 safe!
Warmest regards,
Goh Siu Lin