The following was sent to TOC by Seelan Palay

The Singapore government, through its government-linked company, Singapore Technologies Kinetics Ltd (ST Kinetics), manufactures, stockpiles and publicly advertises two types of cluster ammunitions for sale (Cluster Munition Coalition 2008) .

They are the ‘155mm DPICM artillery projectiles (containing 63 or 49 grenades) equipped with electro- mechanical self-destruct fuzes with an advertised dud rate of 3 percent’ and ‘a 120mm mortar bomb which delivers 25 DPICM grenades’ (Singapore Technologies Engineering n.d., cited in Cluster Munition Coalition, 2008 ).

As world governmental representatives converged in Dublin on the 19th May to seek an agreement on banning cluster bombs, the absence of major producers such as United States, China and Russia have seriously undermined these efforts (Gergely 2008) . The U.N. Development Programme claimed that ‘cluster munitions have caused more than 13,000 confirmed injuries and deaths around the world, the vast majority of them in Laos, Vietnam and Afghanistan‘ (Gergely 2008).

In a brief online scan of Singapore‘s two major newspapers, TODAY and Straits Times, dating 16 to 20 May, both well-read newspapers in the country have remained silent over this issue. The online blogosophere has also been muted on Singapore‘s role in possessing such bombs.

Singapore has also not attended the international conferences held in Oslo, Lima, Vienna, and Wellington which seek to prohibit the use of cluster bombs. As of April 2008, Singapore remains not having subscribed to the Wellington Declaration which affirms the countries’ “objective of concluding the negotiation of such an instrument prohibiting cluster munitions that cause unacceptable harm to civilians’. The declaration is a prerequisite to full participation in the conference in Dublin (Cluster Coalition Munition, 2008).

Cluster munitions can cause excessive harm to civilians even when the conflict has been over for it ‘can remain a threat for decades’. It is primarily a weapon which contains ‘multiple explosive submunitions’ which are ‘dropped from aircrafts or fired from the ground and designed to break open in mid-air, releasing the submunitions and saturating an area that can be the size of several football fields. Anybody within that area, be they military or civilian, is very likely to be killed or seriously injured’.

Those that are not exploded, and most of them don’t, ‘are left on the ground and, like landmines, remain a fatal threat’. As such, people are prevented from using ‘their land and to access schools and hospitals’. Cluster munitions have been used since the Second World War and most recently in Lebanon in 2006 (Cluster Munition Coalition Ireland 2008). Given that the world-wide trend is towards banning cluster bombs; and that the Singapore government has remained steadfastly committed to manufacturing and selling such munitions, Singaporeans should be duly concerned about these weapons being used against innocent civilians.

What then, can Singaporeans do, given that the media has not reported on this issue?

They can:

1. Act as citizen journalists by highlighting this issue in their website or blog.

2. Sign and forward the petition which is to campaign on the ban at Dublin .

3. Execute a nation-wide campaign to pressurise the government into entering into negotiations with the aim to ban cluster bombs.

4. Write to their MPs and urge them to field questions about this issue during Question Time in Parliament; or to the Opposition, appealing to them to take up this cause.

5. Tell everyone you know about Singapore‘s involvement as a producer of cluster munitions and its detrimental effects.

——————

Visit Human Rights Watch’s Documents on Cluster Bombs.

Read also:

Dublin conference targets cluster bomb ban by AFP.

Cluster bomb victims overwhelmingly civilian by Reuters.

Victims urge cluster-bomb ban by The New York Times.

Victims call for complete ban of cluster bombs as conference opens in Austria by The International Herald Tribune

Civilians main cluster bomb victims by The Guardian

Pictures of child victims of cluster bombs here. (Explicit)

Read about cluster bombs here and here.

——————

Videos:

Global move to ban cluster bombs – 19 May 2008

Nations push to ban cluster bombs (Conference in Dublin)

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

Netizens pleased that Muslim nurses allowed to wear tudung with uniform; say this shouldn’t have been a big issue to begin with

While delivering his National Day Rally speech on Sunday (29 Aug), Prime…

本地新型冠状病毒确诊病例增至18起

卫生部发文告称,截至今天(1日)下午2时,我国再出现两起新型冠状病毒确诊病例,皆是从外地而来的病例,惟当局仍强调目前未有在社区扩散迹象。 这意味着,本地确诊病例已增至18起。 第17起确诊病例,是一名47岁的新加坡籍女子。 她是1月30日,乘酷航从武汉返回我国的旅客之一。乘机时未出现症状。但抵达樟宜机场接受体检,发现她发烧,便被送往国家传染病中心(NCID)。她在昨晚11时确诊。 第18起确诊病例,则是一名曾到过武汉的31岁中国籍女子。 她于上月22日,从武汉飞抵新加坡,她是在今天下午2时确诊。目前上述二人都在国家传染病中心接受隔离。 卫生部称此前确诊的16起病例都在隔离,目前情况稳定,大多好转。

锁20客工在房内 业者接“严厉警告”、暂不准增聘客工

早前,本地组织“客工亦重”揭发,接到Joylicious宿舍客工求助。因其中一名室友被确诊感染冠状病毒19,结果其余20名客工就被锁在房间内。 对此,人力部表示有关业者已接到严厉警告,且在警方调查期间,业者也被禁止聘请新客工。 人力部称,业者被告知,把客工强行困在房间内,是不可接受的。 “客工亦重”是在本周一(21日)接到上述宿舍客工的求助电话。不过,《今日报》联络了该宿舍经理Thng了解详情,后者则解释他们还要顾及其余800客工的安危。 在周一下午5时,被锁客工已搬迁到较大且有配置厕所的房间,但是仍然被反锁着,甚至附上了显示门锁被上锁的房门照片。但随后警方介入,人力部也派稽查员到场,这些客工已被转移到一个附有厕所时仓库。 有关确诊客工是中国籍男子,因出现发烧症状,在本月18日晚间8时被送往医院。

Dr Gomez on SFD’s Dissolution

By Kumaran Pillai – Kumaran Pillai, the Chief Editor of The Online…