Andrew Teo, a student at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, had applied for a permit to hold an outdoor protest about the situation in Burma. (Reported here by TOC earlier.)

His application has been rejected by the Singapore police.

The following is an extract from a TODAY newspaper report on why the police rejected his application:

“Many Singaporeans probably care, but “some things are seen to be taboo”, said Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy student Andrew Teo, one of two people whose applications to stage outdoor protests were rejected by the police.

He said the police explained to him that he could be in trouble if someone threw a stone at the riot police or burned a flag at a rally. And if the protest was held in front of the Myanmar embassy and someone threw objects at it, then the embassy could demand that police take action against him.”

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

Teens left 8 suicide notes – and jumped

Mernel mentioned in a letter to her mother she would rather die…

ACJC ragging incident: Has freedom of speech finally shot itself in the foot?

Netizens should be objective when commenting on ACJC incident, says Thng Yiren

Align success factors with true spirit of YOG

Howard Lee – Let me state up front that I fully support…

Radio Australia speaks to James Gomez on Shadrake

From Radio Australia: [Listen to the podcast on the website] A British…