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[DOWNLOAD] "International Ngos: Filling the "Gap" in Singapore's Civil Society." by SOJOURN: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia # Book PDF Kindle ePub Free

International Ngos: Filling the

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eBook details

  • Title: International Ngos: Filling the "Gap" in Singapore's Civil Society.
  • Author : SOJOURN: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia
  • Release Date : January 01, 2005
  • Genre: Social Science,Books,Nonfiction,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 248 KB

Description

When Reporters Sans Frontieres (1) (RSF) released their annual worldwide Press Freedom Index in 2004, putting Singapore near the bottom of the rung at 147 out of 167 countries, it made local news only because the People's Action Party (PAP) government rebutted the report by noting that "outsiders shouldn't equate freedom with criticizing the government" ("Singapore Slams Media Watchdog for Low Ranking in Press Freedom" 17 November 2004). The Minister of Information, Communications and the Arts, Dr Lee Boon Yang, in responding to a question in parliament by Non-Constituency Member of Parliament (NCMP) Steve Chia, said that RSF's index "imposes a standard that fails to take into account 'special circumstances' in Singapore", where "journalists contribute to the nation's development and are not necessarily adversarial" (Latif 2004). He added that the index is "based largely on a different media model which favours the advocacy and adversarial role of the press" (ibid.). Former local journalist turned academic Russell Heng in a commentary about the incident two weeks later wrote that "The government would probably have ignored the [RSF] insult had Non-Constituency MP Steve Chia not dragged it out in Parliament two weeks ago" (Heng 2004). Soon after this commentary, a journalist with the Straits Times wrote an opinion piece reflecting on the work of organizations such as Freedom House, Amnesty International (AI), and RSF that annually rate Singapore as restrictive and not a free democracy. In that piece, the writer argued that Singaporeans should care that their country is ranked so poorly on human rights indices because a poor international image would perpetuate the perception of limited civil liberties in Singapore and may, in turn, lead to the country losing foreign economic investment (Chua 2004). She suggested that, to correct the perception of poor human rights conditions, Singapore should plead to be evaluated differently. Her view was supported by the Press Secretary to the Minister of Home Affairs, who claimed that "human rights" was a Western liberal idea and that Singapore is unique (Ong-Chew 2004). Singapore should hence be exempt from such evaluations.


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