LESSONS FOR SINGAPORE
It’s been plenty of years since Singapore final noticed vital social unrest, and whereas the UK is sort of removed from us each by way of distance and political and social traits, the dramatic scenes that began in Southport and unfold to Manchester, Plymouth, London and Belfast amongst different cities, are stern reminders to not take relative social peace and stability as a right.
There are three key causes for this.
For starters, Singapore is just like the UK by way of being a melting pot of cultures, races and religions, and a rustic that has all the time welcomed expatriates and migrants. Managing the pursuits, considerations and foibles of those totally different teams to create a peaceable and functioning society has and all the time shall be a troublesome balancing act for the authorities.
Singapore can also be a particularly open and wired nation, with widespread adoption of newest applied sciences within the digital and social spheres. Whereas this permits Singapore to maintain up with the remainder of the world by way of innovation and growth, it additionally means it’s vulnerable to the threats of misinformation and disinformation, and international interference operations that are more and more being waged on-line and within the social media sphere.
Thirdly, in an period of accelerating political contestation all over the world, Singapore is seeing increasingly political actors leveraging nationalist and nativist rhetoric to have interaction and activate their supporter base, no matter what this implies for nationwide and social unity.
That is compounded by the rising menace of international affect operations and hostile data campaigns deployed by state and non-state actors that actively search to focus on this very unity with the intention to weaken their adversaries and opponents.
For a small nation like Singapore, these elements imply {that a} situation just like what the UK skilled in the previous couple of weeks might have disastrous penalties. The danger to social and financial stability, and extra importantly to concord between folks, shouldn’t be price taking.
Nicholas Fang is director for safety and world affairs at impartial assume tank, the Singapore Institute of Worldwide Affairs. He’s a former nominated member of parliament and is founding father of Black Dot Analysis, a market and social analysis consultancy that runs an impartial fact-checking platform.
For extra evaluation on the UK riots and their relevance to Singapore, watch CNA’s three-part particular on Asia First from Aug 28 to 30.