Singapore Democrats

Home Perspective Vantage Singapore: Offending the sensibilities of government
Singapore: Offending the sensibilities of government Print E-mail
Sunday, 13 December 2009
Kevin Childs
Online Opinion


The time must be fast approaching when Australia considers human rights when it gets into cosy deals with places such as the repressive city-state of Singapore. The Singapore government’s reach into our telecommunications is a worry, especially considering the authoritarianism of its government.

Recently Singapore booted out a British journalist, Ben Bland, who had offended the sensibilities of that most touchy of places. The latest Reporters without Borders press freedom index rates Singapore 133rd out of 175 countries, below the likes of Kenya and Congo.

Singapore’s law minister, K. Shanmugam, was quick to rubbish the rating as “quite absurd and divorced from reality”, telling a group of visiting American lawyers that his is not “a repressive state” and does not “unfairly target the press”.


“Our approach on press reporting is simple: the press can criticise us, our policies. We do not seek to condemn that,” he said.

Bland, a freelance journalist, had spent a year in Singapore, contributing to publications such as The Economist, London’s Daily Telegraph and the British Medical Journal. He says his application to renew his work visa was rejected without warning, explanation or right of appeal.

And while the law minister’s comments are clearly hypocritical, to describe them as such while still in Singapore would have meant for Bland the inevitable ruinous defamation suit.

Expelling foreign correspondents, destroying the careers of local journalists, while owning all domestic newspapers and news broadcasters, the Singapore government also uses harsh libel laws to restrict further the freedom of the press.

Recently the about-to-close Far East Economic Review had to pay $300,000 in damages and costs to the prime minister, Lee Hsien Loong, and his father, Singapore’s founding father, Lee Kuan Yew, after being found guilty of defaming them in a 2006 article based on an interview with Chee Soon Juan, an opposition politician. Sam Zarifi of Amnesty International said the ruling further illustrates how press freedom is under threat in Singapore and sets a dangerous precedent for freedom of expression and journalism in the region.

He called on said Singapore to allow the media to act as a watchdog and bring in laws on freedom of expression in line with international law and standards.

"Laws that allow the authorities to impose restrictions on freedom of expression together with a pattern of politically motivated defamation suits, have created a climate of political intimidation and self-censorship in Singapore," he said.

Critics, including opposition leaders, say Singapore applies defamation laws selectively to silence criticism. The government says restrictions on speech and assembly are necessary to preserve the economic prosperity and racial stability of the multi-ethnic city-state of 4.8 million people. It says any slight on its leaders will hinder their ability to rule effectively.

The elder Lee founded the People's Action Party, which has ruled Singapore since 1959 and has 82 of Parliament's 84 members. Prime Minister from 1959 to 1990, he now has an advisory role in the government with the title of mentor minister.

As for the Murdoch-owned Far East Economic Review, it denied any wrongdoing but said it would pay up to avoid a protracted legal battle.

Journalists in Singapore generally agree that the government’s targeting of libel suits against global news organisations such as The Economist, the International Herald Tribune, the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg has had the required chilling effect.

Astonishingly, international news organisations have been largely silenced by the threat of having to pay substantial damages or having their access to the lucrative Singapore market curtailed.

Stories that quote an opposition politician or civil society expert are rare, while hard-hitting investigative journalism is virtually non-existent.

Says Bland, “The real victims of this repression are not foreign correspondents like me, who can re-locate, or large news organisations such as Dow Jones, which can afford to bear the costs of an occasional libel suit, but Singaporeans.”

The government’s regular attacks on the foreign press and its exercise of direct control over the domestic media means a corrosive atmosphere of self-censorship is all-pervasive.

The ruling People’s Action Party refuses to clarify what it is that journalists can and cannot report. By doing so it ensures that most journalists and other commentators err on the side of caution - especially Singaporeans, who have much more to lose than their foreign counterparts if they fall foul of the authorities.

The Committee to Protect Journalists, a press freedom campaign group, says Bland is "the latest on a long list of foreign journalists who have been targeted by the government for their news coverage".

Intriguingly, one of the recent pieces Bland wrote was on a forum run by opponents of the death penalty in Singapore. There, activists, including human rights lawyer M. Ravi, suggested that the government was perhaps becoming more open to providing information on how many people it hangs and for what crimes.

Amnesty International has described such killings as a hidden tool of the government, but while denouncing this report as wrong, the government refuses to release up-to-date figures on the deaths.

Singapore believes that censorship is needed to keep its people in line, harking back to riots in 1950, 1964 and 1969.

The 1950 riots are blamed partly on uninhibited reporting and are often cited as examples of how the press can incite racial and ethnic violence. The Malay press is accused of playing up an angle that Maria Hertogh, a Dutch girl raised as a Muslim by a Malay family was being forced to take up the Christian religion. The story was read by the Muslim community as a case of religious injustice and the resulting riot left 18 people dead and 173 hurt.

Again, sometimes Singapore goes too far and attracts global derision. Such was the case in 1994 when 18-year-old American Michael Peter Fay was sentenced to caning for theft and vandalism. While caning may be a routine punishment in Singapore, this was the first caning involving an American citizen. The number of strokes was reduced from six to four after US officials requested leniency.

More seriously, in 1991 a Filipino domestic worker named Delia Maga was found strangled to death in Singapore. A four-year-old in her care, Nicholas Huang, was discovered drowned. Police suspicion centred on a Filipina maid, Flor Contemplacion, and they interrogated her until she confessed to both murders.

She was sentenced to death by hanging, but just before her execution, two Filipino witnesses claimed that Huang's father had framed her. They said he killed Maga in a rage after finding his son to have accidentally drowned. The son was an epileptic and said to have an attack while in the bath. The Singaporean court considered and rejected the testimony. Contemplacion was hanged even though Philippines’ President Fidel Ramos made a personal plea for her life. Contemplacion became a rallying cry against the inhumane, abusive, and exploitive working conditions of many Filipino domestic workers and labourers abroad.

Events like these are used to justify the need for tight censorship in a Multi-racial/multi-religious society. It is said the unimpeded flow of ideas instead of leading to enlightenment can sometimes have negative effects.

This, of course, extends to the internet. Back in 1996, ASEAN member nations, Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam agreed to collaborate on restrictions on internet communication.

Human rights, free expression and electronic privacy organisations protested to the ASEAN secretariat about the deal, organised by the Singapore Broadcasting Authority.

Content-based restrictions on online communication violate internationally guaranteed rights of free expression, said the free speech groups from Europe and North America.

A number of ASEAN delegates reportedly expressed support for Singapore's Internet Code of Practice. Human Rights Watch/Asia has written to the Singaporean government to oppose these regulations, which impose sweeping controls on content, including political discussion. The regulations have already resulted in arbitrary censorship of at least one newsgroup message.

So Singapore is a handy model for repressive regimes, such as in Vietnam.

As the protest note said, the most effective means of responding to offensive content is by disseminating more content. Censoring offensive material will not remove it from the internet; it will simply cause it to be reproduced on additional internet sites.

Removing journalists such as Bland simply means that they move elsewhere in Asia and still report, perhaps even more freely, on what the Lee family regime is up to. But certainly, the time is well overdue when Australia took more than a moneymaking interest in Singapore.

http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=9795&page=0 
Share this article:
Facebook Technorati Stumble It! Newsvine Reddit Del.icio.us Digg This!
Comments (8)
  • Jufrie
    Unfortunately truth hurts. But if you have done no wrong you need not fear of being exposed. You should be prepared to defend your words and actions in a just, civilised and as robust a manner as possible.

    Why must you resort to shutting off your critics and deny them the right of of being heard?

    Singaporeans are no fools. Before they pass any judgement they must be allowed to hear both sides of the argument.

  • quantum
    This can easily turn into xenophobia.
  • alamakspore - WHY I WONT VOTE FOR THE PAP
    TAKEN FROM AN INTERNET FORUM:



    1. I want to buy a house without paying a Cash-Over-Value of $100,000

    2. I don’t want to be accused of being fussy if I don’t want to live on the first floor or basement bomb shelter, or ulu ulu places like Kusu Island

    3. I don’t want keep hearing that flats are “affordable” when I really cannot afford flats.

    4. I don’t want to see foreigners flood our condos, HDB estates, MRT trains, buses, schools, EVERYWHERE

    5. I don’t want to know about how ministers are getting lots of landed and prime property both local and overseas when I have trouble getting a 3-room flat.

    6. I don’t want ministers who get multi-million dollar salaries when I do odd jobs and some months I don’t make more than $2,000.



    7. I don’t want to pay ERP just because foreigners’ cars are clogging my roads. Especially, when ERP do not solve congestion problems!!! We still have terrible traffic jams!

    8. I don’t want to do NS and reservist to protect my country against foreign invaders when:
    (A) I don’t have a house to protect
    (B) I cannot afford to start a family to protect
    (C) I have to protect foreigners and their property with my life when they run away during war.
    (D) Foreigner PRs do not have to serve
    (E) I get paid worse than a Bangala worker. To think that National Service needed people donation’s in 1967, after a year, it gathered S$ 3 million from Singaporeans when we were all so poor.

    9. I do not want to see PRs and New citizens flashing their blue and pink ICs on their national days.



    10. I do not want to see the shamelessness of importing foreign athletes and claims that Singapore won when a foreigner won. Oh yes, we pay these foreigners millions of dollars so that Singapore can claim that it won. WOW!

    11. I do not want to hear jeering against the SG local soccer teams from foreigner spectators when we play against other countries IN OUR OWN COUNTRY!

    12. I don’t want to pay 7% more for everything I buy in my whole life when the government gives my $200 in “compensation” handouts!

    13. I want to see a local student being the top student. Not some China kid. Not hearing from our kids that there is no point to work hard as some foreigner is going to squeeze them down inevitably.

    14. When there is public curiosity, I expect my government (especially Law minister) to be transparent enough let us know about Temasek and HDB cost to build a flat, etc.

    15. I want my country to be known as a COUNTRY. My country is NOT just a city like some idiot claims.



    17. I don’t like how China suckered us in the Suzhou park initiative and we still have to kiss their assess.

    18. I cannot understand why local siblings cannot buy flats when foreigner PR siblings can buy flats.

    19. Singles are not allowed to buy flats before 35? Are singles supposed to be forced into marriage just because of this? By the time singles reach 35, the flat prices will be higher by $100,000 to $300,000. These singles worked very hard to scrimp and save only to see savings ERODED away by inflation!

    20. I do not want to read the paper when it is pro-PAP and there is major censorship and selective publishing and late publishing for what cannot be hidden.

    21. I don’t want my life-savings to be belittled as the salt on the “peanuts”.



    23. I want important national assets key to our security like power stations to BELONG to our country, not sold to foreigners.

    24. I like to add hum to my mee siam by the way.



    26. I don’t want to have my next national day parade at the silly riverside place….AGAIN! How long does it take to make a stadium? We are a country but we don’t even have a national stadium?? How about loaning Malaysia’s Merdeka Stadium for Singapore’s National day?

    27. I want job security. A contract for 1 or 2 years, Then look for work again. The cycle repeats. We have to worry for our jobs and livelihoods on a daily basis. When we are over 40 years old, who want us anymore? I might as well join the army as sign on. But wait, that is contract TOO!

    28. I don’t want the next generation to suffer like me in university. I had to work part-time to support my uni fees in NUS, while foreign students get free uni education thanks to MOE PLUS $500 allowance every month. After that, NUS still has the cheek to call me up and ask me to donate to NUS. Why they need money? They lost hundreds of millions of endowment in the financial crisis. I can still remember working and saving for 3 months before I could afford a 2nd hand laptop.

    29. I want to protest in the streets to voice my discontent without being put to jail by the ISA act or made bankrupt. For goodness sake, I don’t even dare to accept Singtel’s offer of giving me free 6 months internet if I switch from Starhub to Singtel, because I am scared that my IP address and my name will be blacklisted by the government. (considering Singtel’s afflictions with the govt)

    30. I want an opposition party in power. Any opposition is welcome. As educated and smart as my current and soon-to-be-ex ministers may be, I want people who CARE and LISTEN. Even if it is a guy who had graduated from kindergarten would be welcomed if he cares.

    31. Elites who have been born with a silver spoon, who never had trouble finding a job, who never had money difficulties, who never went hungry, who breezed through NS, do NOT deserve my respect nor should they be in the government. We need people who UNDERSTAND what it is like at the pits and bottom!

    32. I want a better electoral system! I don’t want WALK-OVERs again. Some of the seniors did not even get to vote ONCE in their whole lives. How is that democracy?

    33. I want fairness. Is it a coincidence that certain estates under certain members of our government are especially well-cared for with upgrading etc incentives? Is this fair? Are residents of areas under the opposition similarly cared for? I quote a resident from Potong Pasir “the lifts here are so old and I can’t climb the flight of stairs to reach my place anymore.” I supposed the 60 year old aunty would be forced to vote for PAP to get new lifts.

    34. I want a limit to the number of years the PM can hold office, so that as bad and as lousy as the PM is, we can at least have a chance to start afresh.

    35. I want small quotas/ratios legislated for foreigners.

    36. I want foreigners to be restricted to less than 20% of our population instead of 36%.

    37. MBT actually said that foreigner PRs were under-represented in HDB flats. Pah! No more than 2 flats in a block should be sold to PRs! Otherwise, how can the many old uncles and aunties have pocket money for retirement by renting out flats?

    38. I want their CPF contribution percent to be much higher and that their CPF to be forfeited if they leave SG.

    39. I want higher income taxes and property taxes for foreigners.

    40. I want NS for foreigners.

    41. Foreigners who bought HDB flats cannot be allowed to rent their flat out EVER!

    42. I want the SGD to be moderated downwards! A higher SGD may benefit those who can afford to holiday overseas, those who are rich enough to send kids to overseas for studies, or PRs and foreigners when they remit money home. BUT overly high SGD deters investments into Singapore.

    43. I want curbs on inflation. To that effect, we need to install restrictions on property speculation, raise reserve ratios in banks, and have more stringent criteria before loans are issued. AND OF COURSE, GST lower back to 3%

    44. When foreign talent enters my country. I want these people to be REALLY foreign talent. I don’t want my country’s pink IC and PR to be handed out like toilet paper.

    45. I want more heavily subsidized birth-delivery, child-care, pediatric health and education care to boost local numbers. If S.Korea can do it, why not us? The practice of replacement diminishing local numbers with foreigner number MUST STOP.

    46. Instead of always saying Singapore does not have enough talent, will the government spend more money and effort in education and grooming the young? Every time they say that there is not enough of certain type of people, the government will import these people in masses and hordes.

    47. I expect government-affiliated institutions to not indulge themselves with luxuries when other citizens have bread-butter problems:

    When NTUC income unilaterally announced major cuts in its bonus for insurance-policy-holders, the MAS allowed this to happen. NTUC income claimed financial woes, but took HUNDREDS of agents to Australia for an exorbitant expense-paid holiday as they made the announcement earlier this year!!! Do they think about the widows and orphans when they dine fine with wine???

    At first I could not believe NTUC Income to be capable of this, then I checked on the web and saw the NTUC CEO hugging 2 BIKINI girls and drinking champagne in Australia too.
  • quantum
    This can be a party manifesto! :)
  • Disappointed Citizen - Spore Genius
    Dear Alamakspore,

    This is one of the articles that said it all as a Sinkaporean living in a political-and-human rights controlled place called home.

    I am disappointed with what things are going in Singapore. As said by Alamakspore, we served NS, Reservists to protect the foreigners who in turns take our opportunities away and left fighting for jobs belonging against Bagaleshi and Indians nationals who come here for brighter future.

    Once worked with Civil Servants who use power to suppress me and my work and trying to control my life, I walked out from the job and disappear from home then..no point working for these bullies.

    I am back in one piece with God's blessings that I dare not sell Singapore to my foreign friends. If given another chance, I dont want to be a Singaporean because there is no benefits of doing all the hard work all our life but cannot taste and feel your own monies, less talk about retirement.

    Human rights, this is what it lacks in Singapore. May how it paints a beautiful picture to foreign investors, it cannot fool the smart Singaporeans who know exactly what it happened and good for them.

    Personally, I prayed that "Power to be given back to the people"...

    God Bless

    Disappointed Citizen
    Overseas
  • quantum
    http://www.straitstimes.com/BreakingNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_467653.html


    Dec 17, 2009
    Educate students about politics
    PAP must convince young voters about virtues of current system
    By Zakir Hussain
    The way for the PAP to stay in power, Mr Shanmugam feels, is to provide greater political education for Singaporeans, in particular, students. -- ST PHOTO: CHEW SENG KIM

    FOR 50 years, the PAP has stayed in power because it has delivered progress to the people, its leaders often point out.

    But Law Minister K. Shanmugam feels younger voters can erode its dominant position should the party fail to convince them that Singapore, more than most countries, needs a strong leadership and a political system that allows for effective and speedy decisions to be made.

    He gave this warning to his party members in an editorial in the latest People's Action Party bi-monthly magazine, Petir.

    Mr Shanmugam appears to have his eye on the clock when he issued his word of caution, saying no political party had stayed in power continuously for more than 70 years.

    The way for the PAP to outlive this record, he feels, is to provide greater political education for Singaporeans, in particular, students.

    However, he said: 'The education should not trumpet the virtues of any particular system.'
  • alamakspore - WHO IS KIDDING WHO? Please..lah!!
    Our Law Minister, in NY recently,tried valiantly to defend why we are 133 in the freedom of press stats. The press corps hearing him politely listened.
    Each time an item about Singapore is reported in an overseas press statement.. it is prefaced with .."state controlled radio, TV and newspaper."

    Any wonder why the ST is called the lap-dog ST.

    So, now, our Minister says that students should be educated about politics.
    HURRAH!!!
    Has someone finally realised we have all grown up, these last years!!

    But, come come, Sir,with respect.
    Its a bit rich to suggest that politics should be taught when it can NEVER be discussed at any level, anywhere, anytime.
    The ST wont print anything from the public about the government. The only way the public can voice their opinion is through the Online Forum pages.

    There are the constant reminders in the online forum pages that BIG BROTHER is watching, us, even in Hong Lim Green.
    So whats this about teaching politics!
    Anyone aged 50 and under, knows nothing else but the PAP.
    Not really a bad thing as the government has delivered.
    Albeit too, without an efffective Opposition.

    But it is something else to suggest to educate our students about politics when the very word sends shivers down spines.

    So much for politics.
    And is it not reasonable to say that a fair if not a great majority of Singaporeans have absolutely no idea of what its like to vote?
    And now we hear about a cooling off day before the next GE!! As if its going to make any difference to the result.
    That is politics?
    And is it not true that the lap- dog ST will not publish much of what the opposition parties are saying and doing, at any time, even without a GE in sight?

    So how dow we begin to educate our students?
    By introducing a "PAP style politics" subject into the curriculum?
    And who pray are going to be the educators? Ex Ministers , ex SPH journalists?? Giimme me a break!!

    If the minister is serious about what he said, then allow fair and open debates.
    Maybe the Minister should have a word with his friend at the helm at SPH to suggest that the lap-dog ST should begin a series about writing on this subject. Because until the minister gives the go -ahead., its still strictly taboo to use the p (for politics) word.
    Okay, of course we know that only..after it has been edited, re-edited and then re-edited again and passed by .."you know who" can in a series of articles on this subject ever be published,that is.
    But that's a start.

    ps.. by the way.. I am still trying to figure out why ST buried and relegated this topic to the archives so soon after it appeared in the ST Discussion Page. That's politics for you, I suppose.

  • alamakspore - NOTHING LASTS FOREVER...STEADY ..SLOW AS SHE GOES.
    Disappointed Citizen:
    NOTHING will change until the passing of LKY.
    Then the foregners who will become the NEW SINGAPOREANS will then decide and realise how to do.
    It may take a generation, but it will happen.
    After all, nothing lasts forever.
Please login or register to post your comments.
 

Ads



 

Awesome Words

In a political point of view, nothing can possibly afford greater stability to a popular government than the education of the people.

Samuel Whitebread

Other languages

Banner
Banner
Banner

Act Now

More options
 
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
Banner
 

News feeds

Singapore Democrat News
Joomla Templates by JoomlaShack