Aloysius Pang's case: Two SAF servicemen to be charged in military court in relation to the death of actor
SINGAPORE – Two soldiers who were in the cabin of a howitzer artillery gun with the late actor Aloysius Pang will be charged in military court on Wednesday (July 31), said the Ministry of Defence.
They are Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) servicemen, Military Expert 2 (ME2) Ivan Teo, 35, and Third Sergeant (NS) Hubert Wah, 31.
ME2 Teo will face three charges: one charge of disobedience of general orders under the SAF Act, and two charges of causing death by negligent act under the Penal Code.
A serviceman convicted of disobedience of general orders may be jailed up to two years. Anyone convicted of causing death by negligent act may be jailed up to two years, fined, or both.
3SG(NS) Wah will face two charges: one charge of causing death by rash act under the Penal Code, and one charge of causing death by negligent act under the Penal Code.
A person convicted of causing death by rash act faces a jail term of up to five years, a fine, or both.
Mindef said in a statement on Wednesday that the two will be charged at the Court Martial Centre in Kranji Camp II, which is presided over by a serving State Courts judge.
Corporal First Class (NS) Aloysius Pang, an armament technician from the 268th Battalion Singapore Artillery, died on Jan 23, four days after he was seriously injured while in the Singapore Self-Propelled Howitzer (SSPH) during a live-firing exercise in New Zealand.
As CFC Pang, 28, died in New Zealand, the Singapore police do not have jurisdiction to conduct investigations into his death, said Mindef.
“Investigations into his death were conducted by the SAF’s Special Investigation Branch (SIB), and the Chief Military Prosecutor has decided to prosecute the two SAF servicemen based on the investigation findings of the SIB,” it added.
The Chief Military Prosecutor is Mr Hui Choon Kuen, a senior legal officer deployed to Mindef by the Legal Service Commission, headed by the Chief Justice.
Reporting the findings of an independent Committee of Inquiry set up to investigate his death, Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen told Parliament in May that each of the three soldiers in the cabin of the SSPH had committed lapses that led to the actor’s death.
Among other breaches, the three men – including the gun commander and a regular technician – failed to follow the requirement that everyone must be in safe positions during the movement of the gun barrel.
The regular technician also did not ensure the gun barrel was locked before starting the maintenance work of replacing the interface card found in the cabin.
Inspections of the SSPH have not detected any machine malfunction of the gun-lowering mechanism. CFC Pang, an operationally-ready national serviceman, was injured when he was caught between the back of the gun barrel and the interior of the cabin.
The regular armament technician in the cabin with CFC Pang had been in service for more than 16 years, with eight years of working experience on the SSPH, said Dr Ng in Parliament on Feb 11.
It was also his sixth time participating as a technician in Exercise Thunder Warrior – which CFC Pang was participating in.
The gun commander was on his eighth in-camp training and had undergone refresher training prior to his deployment in the exercise, added Dr Ng then.
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