Tag: Singapore

  • FreeMyInternet Expresses Displeasure With The Media Development Authority

    FreeMyInternet Expresses Displeasure With The Media Development Authority

    The FreeMyInternet group expresses our complete and utter disappointment at the Media Development Authority’s (MDA) action in censoring The Real Singapore (TRS), call for this arbitrary and unsubstantiated action to be revoked immediately, and for MDA to come clean on its processes and standards as a regulatory body.

    While not all of us might necessarily agree with TRS’s editorial direction or content, what TRS is alleged to have done is no reason for MDA to force a shutdown on the site. MDA’s actions exhibited two key problems: Disproportionate power vested in a statutory board, and unclear guidelines on actions to be taken against objectionable content.

    The unfettered power given to MDA is disproportionate in that it gives a statutory board the the sole discretion to close down a website without due process, judiciary or otherwise. This is inconsistent with Singapore’s position as a state that is ruled by law, transparency and accountability.

    Furthermore, MDA claimed TRS has “published prohibited material as defined by the Code to be objectionable on the grounds of public interest, public order and national harmony” and “responsible for several articles that sought to incite anti-foreigner sentiments in Singapore”. In relation to the current court case against TRS, this runs the risk of sub-judice. As a statutory board, MDA should have known better than to take actions that can potentially pre-judge the court case.

    MDA has also clearly exhibited inconsistency in how it approaches “objectionable content”, be it online or in traditional media. MDA has claimed that “TRS has deliberately fabricated articles and falsely attributed them to innocent parties. TRS has also inserted falsehoods in articles that were either plagiarised from local news sources or sent in by contributors so as to make the articles more inflammatory.”

    Objectionable, fabricated and plagiarised content is a regular practice in both mainstream and online media, and most certainly undesirable. But what gives MDA the right to stop the operation of a website on this basis? Websites managed by traditional news outlets have also been known to have fabricated content. Does MDA intend to take action against any website that plagiarises or fabricates content? What is MDA’s basis and standards for taking action, and what are the specific examples cited for TRS? Would it not be sufficient to request for the removal of specific articles rather than the termination of an entire website?

    Ai Takagi and Yang Kaiheng with lawyer Choo Zheng Xi (image - CNA)
    Ai Takagi and Yang Kaiheng with lawyer Choo Zheng Xi (image – CNA)

    Without such clarity and accountability, we are left with no choice but to once again call doubt on MDA’s ability to be a fair and effective media regulator. The unsubstantiated and extraordinary actions taken by MDA against TRS cannot be seen as rules-based, transparent, and fair; only arbitrary and selective. As it is, we can only view MDA’s action against TRS as nothing short of a poorly-conceived and brutal attempt at censorship.

    We also wish to highlight that MDA has chosen to take such action on 3 May,World Press Freedom Day. This is an affront to an international movement championed by the United Nations.

    The FreeMyInternet group reaffirms our position that the right way to deal with any content deemed objectionable and offensive is with open discussion and reasoned debate. Such has also been the position championed by the Media Literacy Council. Shutting anyone down for disagreeable content, by anyone’s standard much less that of a regulator that has been inconsistent in its standards, is a trigger happy approach that reeks of blatant censorship and does not speak well of Singapore as a democratic country.

    The above statement was made in exclusion of Mr Choo Zheng Xi, who is currently representing the editors of TRS in their court case.

    * * * * *

    People walk past mock gravestone during protest against new licensing regulations in SingaporeAbout FreeMyInternet

    The FreeMyInternet movement was founded by a collective of bloggers who are against the licensing requirements imposed by the Singapore government on 1 June 2013, which requires online news sites to put up a performance bond of S$50,000 and comply within 24 hours to remove content that is found to be in breach of content standards. The group believes this to be an attempt at censorship and an infringement on the rights of Singaporeans to access information online and calls for a withdrawal of this licensing regime.

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

  • Can We Still Call This The Light Touch?

    Can We Still Call This The Light Touch?

    Forget the irony of the Media Development Authority asking The Real Singapore to cease and desist on World Press Freedom Day itself – and to be honest, someone at MDA must really have a hugely twisted sense of humour.

    What is even more concerning is the fact that there are so-called analysts who are “media observers and academics” who believe that MDA’s move reflects a “light touch” towards content regulation.

    The points made by these “experts” would sound reasonable on any given day – MDA’s action was justified and reasonable because TRS is really an “extreme case”. But when we take a closer look at what this “extreme case” is, the argument becomes problematic.

    For a start, almost all of them cited the legal woes of TRS as a means of justifying MDA’s action. MDA has, of course, lately stressed that it “would still have initiated the suspension even if there were no sedition charges. MDA’s move is also not dependent on the outcome of the sedition charges. As such, the issue of sub judice does not arise.”

    If so, why then would these experts point explicitly to TRS’s legal woes? The views held by these independent observers, evidently based on MDA’s media statement, suggests that MDA need not have the intention for sub judice – really, who would, given our punitive laws? It does not, however, reduce the risk of sub judice. Otherwise, can anyone else charged for contempt now say, “I would have posted those remarks independent of the outcome of the court case”? Go figure.

    Disregarding the legal reasons – which to date has yet to be decided by the courts – we would also find problems with the other reasons cited for the suspension: Namely, TRS’s alleged “bad behaviour”.

    Professor Ang Peng Hwa of the Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information at Nanyang Technological University said that MDA’s decision “helped shed some light on how the Internet Code of Practice… can be used”. Prof Ang justified this by saying that TRS’s case “is not just any case that comes along, but one that has public sentiment against it and a court case”.

    Presumably by “public sentiment”, Prof Ang would have an objective measurement, as a person of academic outlook would, and it might not be wrong to assume that he was referring to the petition for TRS to close down, which garnered about 1,300 signatures. If so, then a necessary comparison was the petition for STOMP to close down, which garnered 24,000 signatures.

    mdaWhen TOC raised queries to MDAabout what they intend to do with the STOMP petition, the reply was for us to identify for the agency where STOMP has done wrong and bring it up to them for evaluation.

    “STOMP, like other class licensed and individually licensed sites, is required to comply with the Internet Code of Practice. If you have come across instances where STOMP is in breach of the Code, you are advised to bring these to our attention and MDA will investigate accordingly.”

    However, MDA’s tone in relation to TRS was vastly different. In its media statement, the media regulator said that it was “satisfied that Takagi and Yang have contravened the Internet Code of Practice (ICOP). They have published prohibited material as defined by the Code to be objectionable on the grounds of public interest, public order and national harmony.”

    How was MDA “satisfied” that TRS was in breach of the Code? Did someone come across instances where TRS breached the Code and submitted a report to MDA? If not, then how different was it from “public sentiment” against STOMP?

    Between STOMP and TRS, how then has this case “shed light” on how MDA used the Internet Code of Practice? Has the light touch gone so light as to become invisible?

    Then we have Singapore Management University law professor Eugene Tan, who opined that “this is the first time that MDA has resorted to suspension, but when you put it against the backdrop of TRS’ alleged egregious conduct, it becomes more of a question of when (to suspend), rather than whether.”

    Earlier, when Breakfast Network decided to close down because it found MDA’s regulatory regime too onerous, media academic professor Cherian George had called it the end to the “light touch” policy. He opined that Breakfast Network tipped the scale because the “death by red tape” was unprecedented.

    “Singapore’s vibrant ecosystem of socio-political blogs was spared the discretionary licensing regime that has blocked the development of alternative print and broadcast media. Blogs could be punished if what they published broke the law – but they were never expected to persuade regulators that they deserved the right to publish before they were allowed to do so.”

    Ai Takagi and Yang Kaiheng with lawyer Choo Zheng Xi (image - CNA)
    Ai Takagi and Yang Kaiheng with lawyer Choo Zheng Xi (image – CNA)

    Indeed, bloggers can be punished if what the published broke the law, and TRS is facing the same now in a pending court case. But since when does it justify closing down an entire website, which is by all counts just as punitive, if not more so, than denying Breakfast Network the right to exist? How can the current order to close a website be a “lighter touch” than requesting its owners to take down objectionable content? To begin with, has MDA tried getting TRS to remove the pages it was “satisfied” contravened the Internet Code of Practice?

    In that sense, the first time that MDA has “resorted to suspension” is not a light touch approach, as Prof Tan would have you believe. If anything, the touch just got heavier, simply because we have no reason to believe that MDA tried any other approach that would have been less heavy-handed.

    And to cap it, we have this comment attributed to former NMP Calvin Cheng – “socio-political websites that operate within Singapore’s laws and social norms have nothing to fear”.

    Unfortunately, Mr Cheng is gravely wrong, and the gravity would be worse if MDA has indeed censored TRS for flouting “social norms”. Efforts to repeal the death penalty, 377A or capital punishment are not “social norms” any way you look at it. Is Mr Cheng then suggesting that websites which champion these causes also go up for a review under the Code? What other “codes” would MDA tag onto the Broadcasting Act for its evaluation? Would it even tell us?

    Personally, I’m not a fan of TRS. I find their content laughable at best, and downright unsavoury at worst. I’m definitely not agreeable to how they source for their content. But what bugs me more than a website like TRS, which I can always ignore, is MDA’s rationale and standards for the action it has taken against TRS, which I definitely cannot ignore.

    To call it a “light touch” approach is to continue dabbling pointlessly in that tiring argument that the government will keep its hands off, until it has to. MDA has thus far not brought to the table clarity about when it has to step in, or on what basis it is stepping in.

    And we are supposed to be assured that there is a “light touch” – TRS got shut down only because it did the bad stuff. If so, can MDA now step up and identify where exactly all this bad stuff is, and why it warrants closing down an entire website? Under what circumstances does a government agency have the right to make that judgement call?

    MDA has been offered the opportunity to respond to this commentary.

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

  • TRS Editor Yang Kaiheng Allowed To Return To Australia To Visit Ailing Father

    TRS Editor Yang Kaiheng Allowed To Return To Australia To Visit Ailing Father

    Yang Kaiheng, one of the editors of socio-political blog The Real Singapore (TRS), had an application to Singapore for Australia on Monday (May 4) approved, subject to conditions.

    The conditions include an additional bail sum of S$40,000 and the submission of his complete travel itinerary. His permission to leave Singapore is valid from Monday until May 17.

    Yang agreed to the conditions and posted bail on Monday afternoon.

    In a bail review hearing on Monday morning, District Judge Eddy Tham heard that the 26-year-old’s father recently suffered a stroke in Australia.

    Deputy Public Prosecutor G Kannan argued that while the prosecution was sympathetic to Yang’s situation, he remains a flight risk, with the authorities relying on his cooperation to return should he be allowed to leave Singapore’s jurisdiction. DPP Kannan noted that Yang’s cooperation has been found wanting, having not complied with orders requiring information related to the investigations.

    The DPP said that a demonstration in good faith of compliance on Yang’s part with regards to the information being sought by the MDA would take this issue out of the flight risk equation.

    Yang and Takagi each face seven counts of sedition charges. They allegedly published seditious articles on the website between October 2013 and February this year, including one that falsely claimed that an incident between police and some members of the public during a Thaipusam procession.

    The pair were also slapped with an eighth charge under the Penal Code for failing to produce documents to a police officer from the Criminal Investigation Department.

    Bail for Yang had previously been set at S$20,000.

    On Sunday, the Media Development Authority ordered TRS administrators to stop posting articles and disable access to its website and social media accounts.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • AHPETC Court Hearing: MND’s Actions Not Part Of Political Dispute

    AHPETC Court Hearing: MND’s Actions Not Part Of Political Dispute

    The Ministry of National Development’s (MND) application to the courts to appoint independent accountants to safeguard government grants to the Aljunied-Hougang-Punggol East Town Council (AHPETC) is not a move as part of a “political dispute”, said its lawyers on Monday (May 4).

    Attorney-General’s Chambers Deputy chief counsel for litigation Aurill Kam, who is acting for MND, said that the Workers’ Party-run town council has “mischaracterised” MND’s actions by saying that it is action between the ruling People’s Action Party and the WP.

    Speaking at the start of a two-day hearing in the High Court, Ms Kam said that it is action between MND, which has regulatory oversight over the Town Council Act, and AHPETC, which is a statutory body.

    “This concerns obligations of a statutory body that is holding funds. The leadership of the town council being WP members is not the point. These are legal questions,” she said.

    The court hearing is the latest development following a report by the Auditor-General’s Office in February that flagged lapses in the town council’s books.

    STEPS TAKEN ‘INADEQUATE’

    On Monday, Ms Kam said that the steps taken to date following the report have been “inadequate”.

    She noted that AHPETC have appointed an external accounting firm Audit Alliance to look at their accounts, and financial consultants Business Assurance to review their processes.

    But she pointed out that Business Assurance – a sole proprietorship that was set up last February – does not appear to have the necessary expertise to advise on or carry out reviews, and does not appear to have a good understanding of town council operations.

    “There is no evidence that the town council has sought help from professionals with good track records,” she added.

    Earlier, the court heard that AHPETC had enough funds to last until June this year – but this would be premised on them not making transfers to the town council’s sinking fund. Quarterly transfers to the sinking fund are mandatory – and the money is used for long-term estate maintenance.

    Before heading into the courtroom on Monday morning, town council chairman Sylvia Lim said she would not be able to comment further as the case was before the courts, but added that the town council would be mounting a “vigorous defence”.

    “We are doing this in the interest of our residents, and we believe this court case is wholly unnecessary,” she said.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Why We Mark The International Firefighters’ Day…

    Why We Mark The International Firefighters’ Day…

    Firefighters dedicate their lives to the protection of life and property. Sometimes that dedication is in the form of countless hours volunteered over many years, in others it is many selfless years working in the industry. In all cases it risks the ultimate sacrifice of a firefighter’s life.

    International Firefighters’ Day (IFFD) is a time where the world’s community can recognise and honour the sacrifices that firefighters make to ensure that their communities and environment are as safe as possible. It is also a day in which current and past firefighters can be thanked for their contributions.

    International Firefighters’ Day is observed each year on 4th May. On this date you are invited to remember the past firefighters who have died while serving our community or dedicated their lives to protecting the safety of us all. At the same time, we can show our support and appreciation to the firefighters world wide who continue to protect us so well throughout the year.

    By proudly wearing and displaying blue and red ribbons pinned together or by participating in a memorial or recognition event, we can show our gratitude to firefighters everywhere.

    The IFFD ribbons are linked to colours symbolic of the main elements firefighters work with – red for fire and blue for water. These colours also are internationally recognised as representing emergency service.

     

    On the first Sunday in May at noon please Sound Off in respect of past firefighters.

    A special time to stop and reflect on the sacrifices made by firefighters is held on the first Sunday in May at noon local time each year when fire sirens sound for 30 seconds followed by a minute’s silence in memory of, and respect for, all firefighters who have been lost in the line of duty or passed on before us. This is known as the “Sound Off“.

     

    Source: www.firefightersday.org

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