MSF apologised to Beyond Social Services for ‘finger-pointing’ in initial response: Desmond Lee

MSF apologised to Beyond Social Services for ‘finger-pointing’ in initial response: Desmond Lee


SINGAPORE – The Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF) has apologised to the agency running Megan Khung’s pre-school for the misunderstanding over “finger-pointing” in its initial response in April to the girl’s case.

Minister-in-charge of Social Services Integration Desmond Lee said this on Nov 5 in response to a question by Mr Cai Yinzhou (Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC) concerning the case of four-year-old Megan.

Mr Cai said earlier reports of MSF’s statement in April seemed to pin blame on Beyond Social Services (BSS), the agency that runs Megan’s pre-school.

Replying, Mr Lee said there is a balance between setting out the facts of what happened and keeping the social service sector cohesive.

“The aim is to reflect on what happened and see how those gaps should be closed. And so there was not and should not be an intention to point fingers,” he said.

“At the same time, the public expects some accountability and the laying out of the facts. That is what happened with the report of the independent panel, and we’ve read the report and seen what happened.

“And so, to the extent that there was a misunderstanding that there was finger-pointing, we have apologised to the relevant agencies, including Beyond Social Services, for the misunderstanding that had occurred.

“It was not the intention, but if that was perceived, we have apologised as well.”

MSF said in April that the BSS report did not fully describe the severity of Megan’s injuries and gave no reason for the Early Childhood Development Agency to suspect that she was being abused. The ministry also said BSS did not escalate the case to the Child Protective Service (CPS).

An independent review panel later found that BSS had called CPS, but the CPS officer did not register the call in its logs.

Megan died in February 2020 after months of physical and emotional abuse by her mother and her mother’s boyfriend.

The review panel released its findings on the case on Oct 23, and

detailed several lapses at various agencies



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