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Singapore Halts Activities of Gay Rights Groups
The
Advocate, April 16, 2004
Singapore isn’t ready to accept gay rights groups, an
official tasked with overhauling the country’s conservative image said
Thursday. “The vast majority of Singaporeans are not ready and will not
accept the formation of groups who may...be seen to promote gay or alternative
lifestyles,” said Vivian Balakrishnan, a government minister of state for
national development. Balakrishnan heads the “Remaking Singapore
Committee,” appointed by the government to help the Southeast Asian island
nation shed its authoritarian reputation and market itself as a media and arts
center. “To stridently go out and campaign [for] the registration of groups
like this will actually be counterproductive to these groups at this point in
time,” Balakrishnan said. He was referring to People Like Us, a gay support
group that was denied permission last week to officially register as a
society.
The government’s Registrar of Societies has also
ordered People Like Us to halt its activities, saying it was “likely to be
used for unlawful purposes or for purposes prejudicial to public peace,
welfare, or good order.” Singapore law bans gay sex, putting it in the
category of an “act of gross indecency,” but there have been few
prosecutions of gay men or lesbians. Critics say there’s not enough room for
expression and dissent in Singapore and that liberalization has been glacially
slow. People Like Us—which claims a membership of more than 1,000—has been
using the Internet to push for gay rights in the tightly controlled country.
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