Showing posts with label Self-censorship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Self-censorship. Show all posts

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Singapore's Shame 2 - A Culture of Fear

Singapore’s Shame (Chapter 2 - A Culture of Fear)‏

By Dr James Gomez, Author, Self-Censorship: Singapore’s Shame

Self-Censorship: Singapore’s Shame (2nd Edition) is an updated version of the original book written by Dr James Gomez in 1999. In James Gomez’s view, the time has come to re-look at the strategy of generating increased political advocacy in Singapore, and in this context, to ask what is the status of self-censorship in Singapore — has it decreased, or evolved into something else? Dr James Gomez is of the view that self-censorship remains alive in Singapore’s political landscape, in mainstream society, in academia, and even in certain Opposition parties. He is currently working on the 2nd Edition of his original book based on feedback and input, and will be pondering on what’s next for civil society and Opposition politics.

CHAPTER 2: A Culture of Fear

When it comes to discussions of political culture a commonly used phrase is the “culture of fear”. In Singapore, a culture of fear is seen as driving self-censorship. This culture of fear is something that has been constructed by the PAP government through its historical tightening of political controls in spite of its occasional rhetoric of openness. This deliberately manufactured fear is aimed at securing social and political control over citizens and foreign residents in Singapore. It is the reason why people become anxious about political participation and justify self-censorship because a culture of fear exisits. How has this fear been created in Singapore?

The culture of fear is related to political development in Singapore. Discussions on the political development in the city-state have been reviewed from a number of perspectives over the last three decades. One writer attributed this political conservatism to the ideological hegemony of the ruling party and to Asian values (Chua, 1996). While another argued that the economy of Singapore was used to as tool of social control and to nurture political conservatism in the republic (Tremewan, 1994).

Others have suggested that the character of the middle class has something to do with this state of affairs (Rodan, 1992; Jones and Brown, 1994). The tactics of the PAP and its authoritarian character have also been identified as having explanatory potential (Rodan, 1993). Much earlier, local political scientist Chan Heng Chee had explained conservatism as a result of “politics” being absorbed into the state bureaucracy (Chan, 1975).

Former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew’s political style, together with his use of legal action at the courts, have also been proffered as contributing to the state of political conservatism here (Haas, 1999; Seow, 1994 and 1998; Selvam, 1991; Minchin, 1986). However, the centrality of Lee’s role in Singapore politics is now being challenged on several fronts. For instance, one book that tries to map the contributions of his other colleagues (Lam and Tan, 1999) while others include political autobiographies such as that of Said Zahari (2001 and 2007) which collectively challenge the centrality of Lee Kuan Yew in Singapore`s political history.

The contemporary structures of changes in Singapore have also been identified as shaping political conservatism in Singapore. Analyses have focused on the strategies of the PAP, the institutional restrictions against independent political expression and the reforms that have taken place to “accommodate” the demand for greater political participation (Heng, 1997; Rodan, 1997; and Lam, 1997) as well as restrictions place over the internet, political films and public protests.

Issues concerning elections have also been considered relevant to the local political culture. One writer has provided an overall description of the Singapore electoral system and the accompanying changes over the years (Thio, 1997) while another has focused on the failure of the electoral system in representing alternative voices (Rodan, 1996). There are also several local academics have sought to explain the general and other elections in Singapore (Mutalib, 1992 and 1993; Singh, 1992; da Cunha, 1997). In my own PhD thesis on the impact of the internet on the electoral system, I concluded that political culture contributed in part to upholding the electoral system in Singapore that continuously returns the PAP into power (Gomez 2008).

Some works on civil society, mainly emanating from PAP government think-tanks, seek to make a distinction between civil and political society (Ooi and Goh, 1999). Others claim that civil society will be the site of future political contestation (Tay, 1998). Implicit in local discussions on civil society is that “neutral” or “non-partisan” political culture of such groups is the preferred choice.

There are only a few studies that have directly commented on political culture and behaviour in Singapore. Most works on the Republic’s political development, if they refer to political behaviour, use the term “political culture” (Soin Tan, 1993; Khong, 1995; Jeyaretnam, 1997), though it is not adequately explained, described or gauged. Often, it is mentioned in passing, without any depth of deliberation. Most discussions on self-censorship have often been used in relation to the media and local media in particular. The application of the concept self-censorship has only been used in a limited way to explain Singaporean political culture. Almost none discuss its role in a post-internet environment in Singapore.

Discussion on domestic political culture often go back to the features of traditional heritage, religion, political history of the region and ethnic origins of the migrant population in Singapore. Conventional explanations often state that the nature of political conservatism on the island can be attributed to ethnic culture. Understood in rigid ethnic categories, Singapore is made up of 75% Chinese, 14% Malay, 6% Indians and 5% Others. However, such categories are increasingly becoming irrelevant as more foreigners from non-traditional sources of immigration countries such as the Burma, Nepal, Philippines, Vietnam and elsewhere settle and work in Singapore.

One piece of work that attempted an ethnic explanation was an early study, which focused on the Chinese community (Clammer, 1985). The writer argued that their large numbers in Singapore sinicised the political culture of the Republic. Hence, the disdain that the Chinese hold for politics is reflected across the board in Singapore, he said. The writer pointed out that the majority Chinese, as opposed to the minorities, are politically conservative. He believed that this was one reason why political development in Singapore has largely mirrored the cultural conservatism of the ethnic majority. He offered as reasons, the social structure and attitudes of the Chinese community towards politics.

The PAP government has been able to manipulate and stretch this cultural argument to all ethnic communities in Singapore, in the 1990s, to sell the idea of an “Asian values” system, which tries to render democracy as a culturally Western-style alien concept. Modeled after Confucianism, Asian values instead are said to entail a belief in good government by honest men and includes a reverence for authority. As such, direct opposition is not to be encouraged; instead, consensus building is to be supported. While, arguments from ethnicity can hold some explanatory relevance, the uncritical use of ethnic explanations for political behaviour, needs to be guarded against. For instance, it is important to recognise that Singapore`s minority communities in the broad sense of the word are generally not involved in politics. In political parties, especially opposition parties, ethnic minority community participation is small, token or non-existent. Minority communities in Singapore have essentially abandoned politics and live their daily lives as a community unto themselves.

Often the plural ethno-religious make up of the city-state is used to pre-empt political change. Pictures of ethnic strife drawn from two early riots in the Republic’s history have been well utilised in government discourse to help the citizens and foreign residents to internalise risk aversive behaviour when it comes to politics. On the basis of frailties of statehood and a narrow range of policy instruments available for ethno-centered policies, the use of culture in this way aids the retention of the existing system. The argument from ethnic culture attempts to paint alternative views as dangerous, anti-establishment, unreflective of aspirations of the majority and as “fringe” interests. In this way, it perpetuates popular attempts to endanger and marginalise alternative views. For instance, demands for political space are often represented as the wants of minorities. The demand for political space is frequently depicted as a concern only of ethnic minorities, the English-educated, sexual minorities, academics and eccentric elements of society. Additionally, the push for liberal values and democracy is portrayed as the demand by a small group of people who use such ‘romantic’ notions as a strategy to gain political attention.

But the explanation via ethnicity does not clarify why political participation in other East Asian countries such as South Korea and Taiwan is large and highly impassioned. Further, it does not explain why a very disparately constituted group of Chinese-educated, blue-collared workers and the man in the street elbowed for political space some 40 years ago in the Republic. There is nothing inherent in Asian cultures that make self-censoring a necessary feature. Instead, much of the promotion of group solidarity and the rejection of self-assertion and individual rights are systemic of Asian one-party dominated regimes or military dictatorships such as in Burma, China, Laos, Vietnam and even Japan. Thus, there is a need to go beyond ethnic culture to look at structures to explain the political culture that is uniquely Singaporean, cutting across ethnic lines and affecting even those of other nationalities residing in the Republic. There is something deeper than ethnicity that explains the state of political culture and fear in Singapore.

Economics has also been used to explain local political behaviour. Linked to the presence of a patron-client relationship between the PAP and the majority of the voters, the economic success of the republic is said to have created gratitude, loyalty and dependency among citizens and foreigners residing in Singapore for the ruling party. The fact is the PAP government is literally the largest employer in terms of percentage of total jobs in the economy. This position as the lead employer includes the number of government jobs (not just civil service, but includes all quasi-government and non-government entities that receive government funds or come under some form of government control). Add to this the percentage of total value of the stock market under state control (through Temasek, Government Investment Corporation, etc) versus that which is in truly private hands (bearing in mind that a lot of ‘private’ owners are active participants in the patronage system). Work in also the size of small and medium enterprises versus the size of MNCs and PAP government controlled businesses (Singapore Airlines, SingTel, etc) and this shows the link between the level of self-censorship how much the PAP government controls the livelihood of its citizens and foreign workers. Most people are not willing to do something to jeopardize their career or livelihood. The connection of the Republic’s economic success to the PAP is manifested in the way individuals and groups preface remarks about politics, especially their desire for greater political participation, with accolades for the ruling party and its leaders that is at the same time coupled with expressions of gratitude and loyalty. It is a ritual that is clearly observable at local conferences, meetings and speeches at events.

The political behaviour of the middle-class is highly relevant in any study of the nation’s economic culture. Based on it; size, some commentators note that middle-class behaviour represents the political culture of Singaporean society. They argue that the republic’s large middle-class, whose material consumption is linked to the state, does not want to upset the status quo. This special dependency is in part supported by the people’s obsession with material gain. Since citizens and foreign workers alike in Singapore are motivated by the need to constantly gather material advantage and get ahead, a national trait referred to locally as kiasuism is seen as an intrinsic character of this middle class. The ruling party taps this deep-seated desire of the people for materialism and therefore continually plays the economic card for its political ends. Feelings of anxiety and uncertainty displayed by the economically dependent middle class’ whenever the ruling party raises the spectre of economic downfall have been linked to the slow rate of the democratisation process in Singapore (Jones and Brown, 1994).

Even though some have endeavoured to show that the middle class itself is complex (Chua and Tan, 1995), economic dependency has been accepted as one explanation why the Singapore middle-class does not initiate political change. One writer speaks in terms of an ideological consensus between the PAP government and the electorate that has been based on a shared interest in economic growth (Chua, 1998). In 2008 when the mini-bond issues broke out in Singapore following the collapse of the Lehman Brothers, the initial crowds that gathered at the Speakers Corner eventually dissipated without building on the momentum for mass political action.

But the similarity between the political culture of the elite class and the masses, arising out of a centralised and punitive political system, goes beyond economics and the citizenry. This phenomenon has also affected the behaviour of foreign residents in the Republic and other foreigners who have dealings with the country. Those who do not publicly subscribe to this larger political culture or have actively taken part in what is seen as antagonistic political activity have been deported or their resident, work or student permits terminated or not renewed. This larger impact of political culture reveals lacunae in theories of democratisation that expected a course of political action from the middle-class.

Another account of political conservatism in the Republic focuses on the popular fear that the PAP will persecute any independent political expression. This fear originates from the perception that the government takes punitive action against its political opponents. In Singapore, there have been numerous examples of individuals who have challenged the political leaders of the country and suffered from detention without trial or have had defamation, bankruptcy and tax evasion suits filed against them. The challengers’ names and characters have been subjected to negative campaigning through a compliant local press. Such examples of negative campaigning of civil society activists and various opposition politicians in the past and present stay vivid in the minds of the people and perpetuate the fear. Memories lead opposition figures subjected to negative campaigning include Chia Thye Poh, Tan Wah Piow, JB Jeyaretnam, Francis Seow, Chee Soon Juan, and in 2006 when I contested the general elections against the PAP, I joined the ranks of these figures.

Fear is also due to the presence of the Internal Security Department (ISD) and its surveillance of political activities. The ISD makes its surveillance activities fairly visible, especially during opposition party activities or when political figures meet members of foreign embassies, overseas opposition politicians and civil society actors. The surveillance also covers religious activities, academic, social and theatre gatherings. Tertiary institutions such as polytechnics and universities are also monitored by handlers through student and academic informers. The public can get a fairly detailed account of the workings of the ISD, and its detention and interrogation techniques from Francis Seow’s book To Catch a Tartor: Dissident in Lee Kuan Yew’s Prison (Seow, 1994), supplementary information can also be found in (Tan, Gomez, 1999) and ( Hong 2009; Tan, Teo and Koh 2009).

There is also an informal culture of curiosity over each others` perceived political activity and the accompanying rumour mongering that acts as a mass surveillance device that feeds the formal surveillance network. The fear against surveillance is so widespread that presence of the ISD is evoked even when lay people speak of politics, make telephone calls or send messages via the Internet or post articles on blogs. With the arrival of the internet, there is a perception and acceptance that internet content is constantly being monitored by the authorities. Further, online anonymity that features prominently in internet chat rooms and in the comment sections of blogs is accepted as non-existent. The belief is that the PAP government and its agents have the technical and financial means to track every single anonymous online entity and that “radical” bloggers are invited out for a chat by government agents and persuaded to moderate their stance! Adding to this, are revelations that a Singapore-based company has supplied sophisticated intelligence gathering equipment to Burma’s military-rulers that is capable of intercepting all sorts of telephone and fax messages as well as e-mail and radio communications aggravates the situation even further (2nd September, Far Eastern Economic Review 1999).

Fear has also been attributed to an underlying apprehension that the vote is not secret, that voting against the ruling party could have a negative impact on voters’ livelihood, or that any alternative political views that individuals may have might be held against them. This mind-set is prevalent among many civil servants, employees in government-linked companies, and those who see themselves as being in one way or another connected to the state for their livelihood in Singapore. Being the largest employer and financial patron on the island, the PAP government has a psychological influence over the way a significant number of the people vote during elections. In 1997, the direct threats to withhold funding for precincts voting against the PAP had an immediate influence on voter behaviour (da Cuhna, 1997). In the last two general elections in 2001 and 2006, the PAP has turned to giving cash incentives such as Singapore Shares and other cash rebates to appeal to voter materialism.

Perceptions of a whole network of informal pressures that pulsate through the state machinery also contribute to fear. This is believed to take the form of “advice” and “pressure” put on civil servants or those in employment outside the civil service but who are nonetheless susceptible to pressure in having their actions deterred or curtailed. A frequently cited example is that immediate superiors advise their junior workers on the wisdom of engaging in particular political activities or associating with certain individuals and their causes. Failing to adhere to such advice is viewed as courting risk in losing one’s job, being demoted, being passed over for promotion or transferred to lesser departments in the organisation.

It is easy to agree that fear caused by perceptions of the surveillance and intimidation activities of the ISD, the wrath of the service machinery plus informal government pressures can be a powerful deterrent to alternative political activity and thought. However, ethnicity, economics and fear offered as individual explanations of a typically Singaporean political culture are not satisfactory. They do not demonstrate clearly the relationship between the political structure and behaviour, and how the two are part of a complex interdependent and mutually constitutive relationship in a dominant one-party regime. More importantly they do not reveal the dynamics of political self-censorship and the act of censoring others that are central to how this political culture manifests itself in material form. Thus other perspectives and ideas are needed to complement present understandings of how the system is constantly reproduced.

Culture is often treated as an abstract value system but it has its physical manifestation in people’s behaviour. The structural determination of a dominant Singaporean political culture and its material manifestation are significant. Censorship should not be understood in negative terms as an “absence” or failure in political life, of what is not done, but as an active material behaviour that itself shapes events in the real world. Censorship impacts on political structure and participation and is in turn constituted by these. Simply put, the current system is responsible for facilitating the censorial behaviour one witnesses in Singapore and such behaviour in return helps keep same the structure and fear in place. Each is necessary for the other.

In such an environment how does one think of political development or reform? What is the way forward? What strategies should one adopt?

In the next chapter, Singapore’s political history is briefly surveyed to trace the emergence and character of this dominant culture of self-censorship and the act of censoring others. It shows that it is mainly in contemporary Singapore that such a censorial climate emerged - a consequence of a systematic attempt by the PAP to contain alternative political expression.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=26000.1

Monday, March 30, 2009

Singapore's Shame 1 - Political Culture

Singapore's Shame (Chapter 1 - Political Culture)‏

By Dr James Gomez, Author, Self-Censorship: Singapore’s Shame

In political science, the term “political culture” has largely been understood as involving the norms, beliefs, values, sentiments and understandings that support a people’s perception of modalities of power and authority within a particular political system.

It is seen as setting theunrecorded ground rules as to how the political process will be played out (Pye, 1995). A particular political culture is assumed to arise as a result of historical development, contributing to the reproduction of the system or the processes that support such a culture.

There is an elite culture that operates among the leadership and its allies of a polity while a mass culture, which is less sophisticated but not very different from the top,operates among the people. Often the operation of political culture has been considered within the confines of the nation-state.

In contemporary times with the advent of the internet, globalization and the movement of labourand capital across continents, the production and maintenance of political culture also includes those who are accepted and expelled from theparameters of the nation-state as part of migration and immigration process.

“Political culture” shapes “political behaviour”, that is, patterns of political participation. It dictates and determines the political preferences of individuals in a system. In Singapore, it explains why people (both local and foreign) are willing to conform and engage only in politically sanctioned behaviour.

This holds true of not only Singapore citizens but also foreigners who take up citizenship and work rights opportunities in Singapore. Political culture and behaviour also seeks to explain individual or collective participation as well as non-participation in the political process. For instance, it can explain why in the Republic, with its limited political participation, there is little that falls outside of “approved” channels.

At the same time to also shed light on the reasons many Singapore citizens migrate and some why foreigners resident eventually move out or not continue their employment in the city-state. The net result is that the constraints on political participation have led to the rise of a dominant apathy in Singapore. But I do concede that in the last ten years there has been some movement towards political participation via online expressions with some of it spilling over into the offline world. However, the number of actors initiating such activities remains small but it contributes to the growing tensions with the dominant political culture.

Intertwined with political culture is “political attitude,” which marks the persistent psychological orientations and belief that underpin political opinions and voting patterns of the citizenry. It explains why citizens and foreigners alike residing in Singapore do not generally condone alternative political expression, why the ruling PAP is viewed as the only legitimate or “safe” choice, or why there is a general lack of ability to imagine a non-PAP government.

It accounts for the climate of fear surrounding opposition politics, political oriented civil society groups and individuals as well as acts of civil disobedience. Collectively, political “behaviour”and “attitudes” are part a complex interactive system that contribute to the production, re-production and operation of a political culture in a given society.

In the Singapore this is largely a politically self-censorial one. Although the whole notion of political culture (Almond Powell 1966; Almond and Verba 1988; Pye l995) has been made problematic with the post-modernist deconstruction of essentialisms, the debate within cultural studies is an ongoing one.

In this respect, political culture, behaviour and attitudes can be debated and meaningfully used to explain the phenomenon of politicalculture in Singapore. They are all aspects of the same thing. Still, the scientific recording of political culture is often raised as an issue, complicated by philosophical questions concern over what is scientific as well as the subjective nature of the topic.

Culture, which is marked by the uncertainties of human behaviour, is a difficult phenomenon to record through quantitative methods such as surveys and other quasi-quantitative procedures. Interpretative analysis by those knowledgeable of certain countries, the people and the system has beenrecognized as a helpful way to bridge this impasse.

Given the difficulties in methodology, in my first discussion of self-censorship ten years ago I modestly build on the limited works that have attempted to describe and record this phenomenon without actually employing a formal quantitative social science means.

Instead, I collaboratively employed secondary sources, participant-observation and interpretative analysis to unpack this political feature. Ten years on as a Singapore watcher and participant, I reflect further on the initial analysis and bring into the discussion the post-internet environment and how it has come to bear on the political culture of self-censorship.

In this exercise to understand the dominant political culture in Singapore,one needs to distinguish censorship by the state from acts of individual self-censorship, and actions taken by individuals to censor others and plot the relationship between them.

The two are separate and different mechanisms. Thus, they require dissimilar tools of argumentation, even though the former may lead to the latter. In between the two are the normal and frequently agreed agents of socialisation that determine censorship bythe people. These are the family, school, the various para-political institutions, national service, the work place, the local mainstream media and sub-structures in society at large.

These institutions contribute to the formation of attitudes but, in a centralised state as Singapore, these are principally influenced by the political. Therefore, the fostering and operation of such attitudes must be understood as being derived, to some extent, from the political system. For instance, the state’s censorship of information through the decades has contributed to an inability of the people to formulate a sustained political critique or opinion, even if they want to.

The internet to some extent has mitigated this situation but the mainstream media still dominates the information landscape. The self-censorship that emerges as a result can be attributed to a lack of confidence or a perceived incompetence in political matters because of a critical lack of information.

Even more importantly, it can be argued that phenomenon of self-censorship is one of the tools the PAP indirectly uses to maintain its political hold over the republic and itspeople. This is what I demarcate, describe and evaluate when I scrutinise the issue of political culture in Singapore: it is the in-built political self-checking system among the citizenry and foreigners that helps the ruling party less visibly maintain its grip on power.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=25426.1

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Singapore's shame 0: Introduction to Self-censorship

Introduction to Self-censorship: Singapore’s shame

James Gomez

Even though a variety of global incidents such as the 1997 Asian economic crisis, the 2001 September 11 incident, SARS, the global financial meltdown of 2008 have been touted at varies times as catalysts for political change
in the region, the wave of democratization has yet to reach Singapore’s shores.

Singapore remains one of the few countries in Southeast Asia that has not witnessed meaningful political reform that can lead to regime change. This is not from a want of effort over the years by a range of activists from all walks of life.

Apart from being persecuted by the PAP government, these activists have not been able to stir the citizens into mass democratic action, because most people in Singapore self-censor themselves and censor others who are sympathetic to the democratic process.

Many Singaporeans disillusioned with the state of political development in the city-state have increasingly opted to emigrate, but they are being replaced by the PAP government with new citizens and resident workers who buy into this self-censorial, hence ensuring there is a dominant political culture in Singapore that will not facilitate democratization.

Numerous commentators have noted that the structural constraints of Singapore’s political system are responsible for hindered political development in the Republic. Its geographical size as well as the penetration and domination of the ruling Peoples’ Action Party (PAP) in all sectors of society have been cited as reasons. Control is almost complete.

The party has over the years placed many of its political allies both local and foreign in elite positions. It has grown to such proportions as to become an oligarchy. It is not a political party in the traditional sense. It has merged government, state structures and para-political organisations, and has co-opted and sponsored civil society actors.

The new area of co-option is the integration of foreign residents in Singapore as well as foreign governmental representatives to buy into the PAP style of managing Singapore. Such explanations of the PAP’s hegemony have been often supplemented with examples of the party’s encroachment of civil and political rights and its acts of persecution.

It has been noted that opposition politicians and selected members of civil society have suffered detention without trial, defamation suits, the application of tax evasion charges and others less visible methods of pressures that operate in the background such as denial of job opportunities.

Since 2000, the PAP has also opened a new front to respond to the small but increasing acts of online and offline civil disobedience acts. Through the PAP`s persecution, repressive methods and techniques, livelihoods and careers of activists have been broken and destroyed.

The net impact is that many of these activists have become disillusioned and dropped out of the scene. Such actions by the PAP government have also kept away a substantial number people from stepping forward to take on the regime. Collectively, these repressive features are regularly offered by commentators as explanations why the pace of political liberalisation in Singapore has been slow.

As a result, discussions on political development often center on sharing political governance. The PAP is often placed at one while on the other, actors such as opposition parties, civil society or individuals are lined up
as contenders for political and policy influence.

The ruling party’s reluctance to share governance in real political terms has been offered as the main impediment towards reform, in particular in the area of electoral reform. The PAP is the foremost feature on people`s minds when they speak of political development.

There is a failure to see and acknowledge that after nearly five decades of centralised rule, there has developed among the citizenry (and a majority of new citizens and resident workers buy into this), a censorial political culture that acts as an equally important obstruction.

The structural constraints and punitive actions that impact on the people’s behaviour have not been adequately recorded and debated. Neither have the people’s culture perpetuating the very features that support restrictions against alternative political expression and action similarly considered.

This focus on the people and how they contribute to the state of political conservatism in Singapore is an important variable for analysts and activists to ponder alike. This feature of political culture to some extent determines the success or failure of political endeavours by individuals or groups. Thus, an in-depth understanding of the people’s behaviour is vital in formulating any strategy for political action.

The prevalence of this self-censorial culture among the elite and the masses shows how the PAP administrative state has, over the decades, been able to effectively expand its control over the hearts and minds of its citizens. It has been able to foster a self-censorial political culture that can also be similarly seen in countries in the region such as Burma, China, Laos and Vietnam which are either one-party states or military dictatorships.

I thought in my initial analysis in 1999 that this Singaporean political culture was unique not only to the region but also unique globally. In spite of similarities elsewhere I continue to hold this view. For me, in the Singapore case, it is the paradoxical combination of high economic growth, small size, modernity, global outlook, high inflow of foreigners, and a technically non-communist political system that makes it stand out from the authoritarian regimes.

The oil rich Middle-Eastern or Muslim states, dictatorship and military commands in Latin America and Africa, the
remaining communist regimes scattered around the world and the countries listed above in the region where self-censorship also prevails do not have these similar features as Singapore.

The emergence of a dominant one party state and its harsh response to alternative political viewpoints and action has fostered a negative perception towards political expression over the year in Singapore. Even with the arrival of the internet in Singapore since the late 1990s such negative perception also holds true to some extent to online political
expressions especially when they are brought into the offline world.

This situation causes the majority of the people to see individuals and groups engaged in alternative political discourses as illegitimate beings, not to be encouraged but stopped or sidelined. Such an attitude is manifested through the people’s act of self-censorship and/or the censorship of others.

Given this backdrop, in the immediate short to mid-term, broad-based political support from the ground for a progressive politics in Singapore remains weak. While the internet has provided a new platform, and there has
been some growth in political expression and action, the more progressive elements are unable to garner mass public support.

The self-censorial political culture prefers to err on the side of caution and support the more conservative portion of these elements. Support for alternative political action such as civil disobedience remains weak and sporadic. There is some space to articulate a political problem, draw attention to it, and perhaps even make suggestions for change. However this remains at the level of rhetoric, taking place on “sponsored” or “non-partisan” platforms, and is
restricted to calls for a civil society to operate within the boundaries of the current law.

Even within civil society this space is heavily constricted by the laws of the self-censorial political culture that penetrates and operates there very effectively among its various sectional interests. Although discussion,
criticism and activism related to explicit political issues such as human rights, the electoral system, opposition political parties and the constitution (almost non-existent in Singapore along non-political party
lines ten years ago) are now more evident with the arrival of the internet, the pressure is to pursue it along “non-partisan” lines.

Singapore`s civil society is held ransom by a bunch of offline pre-internet activists weaned on the philosophy of non-partisanship who immediately counsel individuals associated with new online initiatives through their tea and advice sessions. When die-hard new and old activists reject such measures, these advocates run the risk of immediate censorship (nowadays done more subtly), rejection, marginalisation and name-calling. Given these dynamics of political culture attitude and behaviour, the political system continues to be upheld in its censorial form.

Under these circumstances, political change in Singapore cannot be expected if any strategy towards this end opts to target citizens. Instead, it would be more effective to focus on needs of a small group of political progressives and construct some kind of platform for this group to articulate its vision. In 1999, this resulted in the founding of the Think Centre. The aim then was to create political awareness.

While the Centre made some gains and set the pace and tone for online-offline activism in the early years, the Think Centre has been unable to hold its own as a multi-partisan political NGO in Singapore. In this regard it has succumbed to the offline pressures of non-partisanship. Due to internal limitations it has gone off tangent to its original purpose and aims (which is off course the prerogative of its caretakers) and has been either unable or unwilling to execute a change of leadership at the helm (since I stepped down).

Singapore`s political civil and political landscape has since changed. To move any new political agenda forward it is now important and necessary to draw support from like-minded sympathisers and partners to explore strategies for political engagement in a change environment.

In 1999 when I broached the idea of setting up a political NGO it seemed a catch like 22 situation - asking people to take risks in a politically punitive environment. At that time I felt such a strategy was nevertheless important in the long-term for the creation of greater political space and the interim, it could provide the means for like-minded people to form their own political community.

Since then the situation has changed. A set of people in the last ten years have come forward, taken a political stand and have acted upon them on a civil society platform. What is needed now is an organisation or network of people with activist experience from a broad spectrum of backgrounds, issues and organisational experience including those who have been active some 20 years ago to led the way forward. Such an entity needs to go beyond local politics and think globally in terms of its network and reach for democratization in Singapore. Such a move is important, as Singapore needs to widen the pool of people who will be politically creative and innovative enough to carry the country into the next century.

The absence of a risk-taking class at the philosophical and political level is a key problem. The PAP government’s call for the people to be active and to take matters into their own hands has not taken off the ground due mainly to the censorial behaviour of the majority and reluctance on the part of the PAP to endorse the legitimate co-existence of
political difference.

Over the years a small group of people have been successful in gaining legitimacy for their alternative philosophical and political expression but they do have to face a conservative majority that constantly tries to censor
difference.

That there is a need for a risk-taking culture to permeate the political and social infrastructure of Singapore is clear and some have taken this risk. But at the same time is important that if we want to succeed that such an organization or network is well managed and run by individuals who are clearly aware that even in politics, professionalism and
commitment to deliverables are important qualities to determine success. This is the important feature for the next phase for Singapore`s political society.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=25034.1