Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) states that the Singapore government’s general position has always been that foreign entities should not interfere in its domestic issues, especially political issues or controversial social issues with political overtones and that it will take steps to make it clear that foreign entities should not fund, support or influence events such as Pink Dot SG held at the Speakers’ Corner.
This statement was made in response to media queries filed to the ministry as to whether foreign companies can provide sponsorships for the Pink Dot event which is held annually at the Speakers’ Corner.

This year, three new sponsors joined to Pink Dot’s list of corporate supporters, local entertainment giant Cathay Organisation, popular social media platform Twitter, as well as global business and financial information and news leader Bloomberg.  Returning sponsors for Pink Dot includes Google,Barclays, J. P. Morgan, Goldman Sachs, BP, and The Gunnery. This marks a new record in the number of corporate brands for the event.

The organisers of the Pink Dot have held the event at the Speakers’ Corner for several years now. The lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community expresses its views, on issues of concern to it, during this event.

MHA noted that the Government’s general position has always been that foreign entities should not interfere in its domestic issues, especially political issues or controversial social issues with political overtones. These are political, social or moral choices for Singaporeans to decide for ourselves.

MHA states that it will take steps to make it clear that foreign entities should not fund, support or influence such events held at the Speakers’ Corner. In the context of LGBT issues, this will apply both to events that advocate the LGBT cause such as the Pink Dot, as well as events whose purpose is to oppose the LGBT cause.

On Wednesday morning, Pink Dot SG published a Facebook post in response to MHA’s statement

Pink Dot SG started off first and foremost as a platform on which values of inclusion and diversity are celebrated, and over the years this has only strengthened with the growing support of Singaporeans from all walks of life, including a significant portion of its corporate citizens. For all the LGBT Singaporeans and their allies that this movement has striven to help give a voice to and done its part to push the envelope in helping to create greater visibility of Singapore’s LGBT community, we have done all we can to ensure Pink Dot SG stays within the law.

Our Corporate Sponsors that have supported us over the years are all registered and incorporated in Singapore. We are fortunate to count among them admired household names, employers of choice for a sizeable portion of our workforce, inextricably linked with and fully a part of this beautiful fabric we call home.

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

Transformative Justice Collective urges gov’t to remove expansion of police powers in Road Traffic Act amendments

Local NGO, Transformative Justice Collective (TJC), which advocates for the human rights…

Here’s why allowing police access to TraceTogether data goes beyond matters of intrusion of privacy, according to Amnesty International

Many countries around the world have adopted mass surveillance to keep track…

Malaysian rubber tapper borrows RM120 to attend daughter’s straight-A celebration ceremony

Despite earning a scant salary as a rubber tapper, Jaliusih Madakol borrowed money to attend his daughter’s educational achievement ceremony. His daughter Arnie, the first from her school to achieve a perfect score in her STPM exams, aspires to lift her family out of poverty.

Netizens describe S’pore as “toxic rat race environment”, only the change of citizens’ mindset and the Govt’ policies can help to tackle low fertility rate

In an opinion piece published by TODAY online last Thursday (22 October),…