
Singapore enacts new controls on ‘race-based' groups to promote cohesion
Singapore 's parliament has passed a bill establishing controls on 'race-based' business groups and clan associations that is aimed at safeguarding racial harmony and curbing foreign influence in the financial hub.
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Under
the Maintenance of Racial Harmony Bill passed on Tuesday, designated entities linked to Chinese, Malay and Indian ethnic groups will have to disclose foreign donations, overseas affiliations and ensure Singapore citizens are appointed to leadership positions. Minister of Home Affairs K. Shanmugam will also have the power to issue restraining orders against designated groups to combat foreign influence that may 'present a threat to public peace and public order'.
'You cannot, by law, force people of different races to get along with one another,' the minister told parliament on Tuesday. 'The law can set out a framework as to what you can't do.'
You cannot, by law, force people of different races to get along with one another
K. Shanmugam, Singapore's home affairs minister
The bill is the latest in a string of legislation in recent years to clamp down on foreign influence and what the government views as misinformation. In 2021, it passed
one such bill that prevents foreign entities or individuals from influencing politics in the country, while another targeting 'fake news'
took effect in 2019
Singapore's government has long defended the need for such laws, saying the city state is vulnerable to fake news and hostile information campaigns because it is a financial hub with a multiethnic population and widespread internet access. Ethnic Chinese make up about 75 per cent of the population while ethnic Malays account for 14 per cent and ethnic Indians 9 per cent.
People walk past a display for the Lunar New Year of the Snake at the Marina Bay Sands shopping centre in Singapore. Photo: AFP
The legislation passed in parliament will result in the designation of more than 300 entities in Singapore as being 'race-based', according to a preliminary government estimate. The government has said it will take at least a year to operationalise all the proposals in it.
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In a moment of diplomatic clarity that quickly gained traction across Chinese and international media, Chinese Premier Li Qiang recently remarked: 'China and Japan are neighbors who cannot be moved. Since we cannot move, we should be good neighbors.' This deceptively simple statement carries a deep sense of geopolitical realism. It reflects Beijing's awareness that proximity is not merely a geographical fact—it is a strategic condition that requires sober diplomacy, especially amid rising regional volatility and heated rivalry with the US. Few bilateral relationships in the Indo-Pacific are as fraught and intertwined as those between China and Japan. Rooted in centuries of interaction, marred by the horrors of 20th-century warfare and shaped by decades of economic symbiosis, the China-Japan relationship has historically and recently swung between wary competition and cautious cooperation. 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