Singapore court hands 17-year jail term to OK LimĀ 


Lim Oon Kuin, the founder of the defunct Singapore oil trader Hin Leong, was sentenced on Monday to 17-and-a-half years in prison for cheating top creditor HSBC and abetting forgery.

The 82-year-old former oil trading and tanker tycoon, better known as OK Lim, faced three out of more than 100 charges initially presentedā€”two for cheating HSBC and one for instigating a Hin Leong employee to forge documents for the purpose of cheating, totalling $111.7m.

He was convicted in May but sentenced in Singaporeā€™s State Courts on Monday. The court has set the bail at S$4m and Lim will appeal against the sentence.

At its peak, Hin Leong was one of Asiaā€™s biggest suppliers of diesel and bunker fuel. The companyā€™s collapse in 2020 was one of the largest corporate failures in Singaporeā€™s history and resulted in a huge fleet sell-off of subsidiary Ocean Tankers.

Last month, Lim and his children agreed to pay $3.5bn to Hin Leongā€™s liquidators and HSBC but said they would be applying for bankruptcy. A High Court hearing has been scheduled for November 26 to hear the familyā€™s bankruptcy applications.