SINGAPORE - The former president of Serangoon Gardens Country Club, who sued a former employee and her supervisor for defamation after she filed a work complaint against him, has lost his case in the High Court. Mr Terrence Fernandez alleged that Ms Genevieve Lim Shao Ying, who was the club's membership relations manager, had conspired with Mr Goh Juak Kin, who was the general manager, to injure him. In a written judgment on Wednesday (Dec 30), High Court judge Valerie Thean rejected Mr Fernandez's assertion that the complaint was defamatory. Justice Thean said a workplace complaint "necessarily entails levying allegations". "The ordinary reasonable person would have understood the complaint to be part of a larger disciplinary framework. The truth of Ms Lim's allegations would, in other words, be unsettled until due process has been accorded to it," said the judge. The judge found that Ms Lim filed the complaint not out of malice, but to protect herself against what she perceived as workplace harassment and victimisation. Justice Thean added that Ms Lim's statements were justified because Mr Fernandez's acts of micromanagement led her to feel victimised. The case arose out of a formal complaint against Mr Fernandez made by Ms Lim in 2018. At the time, he was chairman of the club's membership relations department sub-committee. Ms Lim, who headed the department, did not have a good working relationship with him. Within three weeks of starting work in January 2017, she told human resource manager Linda Loke that she felt "tremendous work pressure" and sought confirmation that she reported to Mr Goh rather than Mr Fernandez. Ms Lim went on to discuss her grievances with Ms Loke seven times over three months. In April 2017, Ms Lim wrote to Mr Goh, criticising Mr Fernandez's "damaging and disruptive behaviour". She alleged that working with him had been "painful" and on several occasions, "belittling". Despite a mediation session arranged by then club president Randy Sng, their relationship remained strained. Things came to a head on Dec 8, 2017, when Ms Lim told a non-member named Alfred Wong that he should not be on club premises. Later that day, Mr Wong wrote to Mr Goh about his "unpleasant encounter". Mr Fernandez learnt of the incident from Mr Wong and raised concerns about the matter in e-mail correspondence with Mr Goh, which was copied to Ms Lim and Mr Sng. The matter with Mr Wong was resolved amicably on Dec 26, 2017. But Mr Fernandez continued to pursue the matter and even proposed a meeting involving the club's trustees or patrons. Ms Lim filed a complaint on Jan 4, 2018 and Mr Goh forwarded it, together with his own views, to Mr Sng. Mr Sng tried to set up a meeting but Mr Fernandez did not attend, despite multiple attempts to accommodate his schedule. On Jan 30, 2018, Mr Fernandez was removed as chairman of the sub-committee. A disciplinary inquiry was started against him but before it could conclude, he was elected club president on June 24, 2018. Mr Goh and Ms Loke resigned that day, while Ms Lim resigned the following month. The disciplinary charges against Mr Fernandez were dismissed in September 2018. He sued Ms Lim and Mr Goh in February last year, claiming they were in a conspiracy to sabotage his bid for club presidency, among other things. Mr Fernandez is no longer club president, as a new general committee was voted into office in September this year.
BARCELONA • Lionel Messi has yet to make up his mind if he will terminate his two-decade long relationship with Barcelona at the end of this season, hinting that he could see out his playing days in Major League Soccer. The Argentinian's future has been a hot topic ever since his aborted attempt to leave in August. He had to put those plans on hold till after this season as the club insisted on enforcing a €700 million (S$1.14 billion) exit clause. But with the Catalans languishing in fifth place in La Liga, eight points behind leaders Atletico Madrid, Messi has labelled the club's plight as "really bad". From next week, the Barca captain will be free to negotiate his next move as he enters the final six months of his contract, with Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain known pursuers. "I don't know what I'm going to do yet, I'm going to wait until the season ends," Messi said in an interview with Spanish television channel La Sexta on Sunday. "I'd love to experience living in the United States, playing in that league and living that life but I don't know whether it'll happen. "Right now the most important thing is to focus on the team and finish the season well, to focus on trying to win trophies and not get distracted by other things." The Argentina skipper did not hide his pessimism about his club, who have made their worst start to a season in 33 years and are in a financial crisis because of the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. "It's a difficult moment for the club, for everyone, but those inside the club know that it's in a really bad situation, things are very bad and it's going to be difficult to return the club to where it used to be," he added. Following Barca's 3-0 La Liga victory over Valladolid last Tuesday, coach Ronald Koeman allowed Messi to return to his home town of Rosario in Argentina. While the club confirmed he will miss today's home game against Eibar as he "completes the treatment for his right ankle", Spanish daily AS said Messi has been given an extended Christmas break to spend more time with his family. FAR CRY FROM GLORY DAYS It's a difficult moment for the club, for everyone, but those inside the club know that... things are very bad and it's going to be difficult to return the club to where it used to be. BARCELONA STAR LIONEL MESSI Messi is, however, expected to return to Barca in time for their next La Liga meeting at bottom side Huesca on Sunday. REUTERS BARCELONA V EIBAR Singtel TV Ch109 & StarHub Ch213, tomorrow, 2.10am
LONDON • The Fifa Club World Cup, originally planned for December, will now be held from Feb 1 to 11 in Doha, Qatar, organisers said on Tuesday. The tournament brings together the six continental champions and the hosts, with Champions League winners Bayern Munich the first to qualify. Last season's tournament saw Liverpool beat Brazilian club Flamengo in the final. World governing body Fifa did not state if supporters would be able to attend any of the games, noting only that "in line with Fifa's international match protocol, Fifa and the host country will provide the required safeguards for the health and safety of all involved". A new expanded 24-team Club World Cup was due to be held in June to July next year in China but with Euro 2020 and the Copa America being held next year because of the Covid-19 pandemic, the tournament is set to be rescheduled. Fifa also opted against moving two postponed age-group Women's World Cups to next year, instead allowing the planned hosts to hold those tournaments in 2022. Costa Rica and India will organise the Under-20 and Under-17 events respectively. Separately, the Asian Champions League (East), suspended because of the pandemic since early March, resumed yesterday after an eight-month delay. First-half goals by Peng Xinli and Yu Hanchao secured Shanghai Shenhua a 2-1 win over Perth Glory in their Group F tie. Fifteen teams will race through 33 matches in a little over two weeks to complete the group stage, with eight teams then playing the knockout phase to decide who reach the Dec 19 final. Players and officials, who have all been cleared of Covid-19 pre-and post-departure, will have to undergo polymerase chain reaction tests every three to six days and games will be played behind closed doors in the Doha bio-secure bubble. All those involved are limited only to the hotel, stadium and training sites, and Qatari officials are confident that refinements made to health protocols will prevent any infections from again influencing the outcome of the competition. The Asian Champions League (West), completed last month, was hit by a raft of cases, including within Saudi title-holders Al Hilal, who were unable to finish their fixtures due to a lack of players. Dr Abdul Wahab Al Musleh, the adviser to the Qatari Minister of Public Health, said the local authorities had learnt from the experience. "This time we are doing the testing more often," he told Reuters. "And there are several other public measures that we have undertaken. "For example, we limit their interactions with others, including their own team in the hotel, so we encourage strongly all their technical meetings are happening online or outdoors." REUTERS


