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拒邀性少数维权份子主讲 圣若瑟副校长:行动主义导致社会分裂

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圣若瑟书院副校长陈顺德(译音)认为,行动主义推动社会变革,会造成社会群体的分裂。

在本月20日,跨大学LGBT网络研究与宣传总监Racheal Yeo,原受邀在圣若瑟书院举行的TEDx青年讲座主讲,却在最后一分钟被腰斩。

此事也引来数家新加坡网媒如本社、“椰子网”和“独立网”报导,引起网民关注国内性少数群体(LGBTQ+)在一些主流场合持续被排挤、歧视的情况。

根据日前他向天主教学校学生一次致词的录音音频,陈顺德解释为何该校最后一刻拒绝邀请性少数维权份子Racheal Yeo

他呼吁学生们认清,将来他们学成踏入社会,言行将对周遭人产生影响,必须谨言慎行。

“可能是五个人、500人甚至5千人,就像成为公共服务署长的圣若瑟校友,旗下统领6万下属,包括我。他的言行将影响6万人,乃至百万新加坡人,对吗?就如副总理张志贤,也是我们的校友,其职务亦举足轻重。“

他劝谕学生在面对眼前时局,应抱持谨慎心态。希望学生们离开圣若瑟时,已准备好面对、成为有能力领导、作出影响力的角色。

陈顺德为校方最后一刻拒绝邀请Racheal Yeo辩解,后者乃LGBTQ性少数群体的社运份子,捍卫性少数群体权益。他希望学生们厘清“行动主义”(activism)的定义,以及它是否适用于新加坡社会情境。

冀学生以“和平方式”推动社会变革

“首先,你们认为什么是行动主义?你们当中谁有参与过示威/集会?你也知道在新加坡,我们没有如法国、欧美国家学生,活跃参与的示威活动,如果你有阅读过柏拉图的著作,你就知道为什么(群众运动不可行)。”

他说,行动主义是“积极推动政治改革、包括体制和政治上的改变。”但他以法国天主教教士圣若翰·喇沙(Saint Jean-Baptiste De La Salle)为例,描绘现今社运模式难以带来政治变革。

他说,圣若翰在法国也看到贫穷问题,看到贫穷小孩没机会受教育,作为天主教教士,他认为每个神的孩子都天赋异禀,神对所有孩子的爱护是平等的。

但是,圣若翰并没有发动反政府的活动,相反他和几名老师,从圣若翰兄弟会,开始为孩子提供教育。

“圣若翰改变现状的方式,是从自身开始,影响周遭的人。我不会特地写信到论坛投诉这、投诉那。” 他强调,圣若翰透过教育平和地推动重构社会,比起激进的“分列式”做法, 更适用于现今的基督教育工作者和学生。

“我呼吁所有天主教徒,如果要改变,很简单,加入适当的岗位,用和平、持续性和有凝聚力的方式,带来变革。”

他说,圣若瑟的准则是成为社会的建设者,反之任何形式的行动主义,都会造成社会对立,使社会群体分裂。

“它与我们根本的立场相违,我们是社会建设者,我们不分裂社会,这是你们在圣若瑟书院学习历程中必须思考的。”

他强调,有必要坚持以基督价值观,来应对性少数权益运动等课题:

“作为天主教学府,我们有个人信仰、基督和福音为主的中心教育观,我们如何宣扬我们的价值观?透过教育

“此外,我们不也应站稳自己的立场吗?作为天主教学府,我们相信天主教会的教诲。”陈顺德宣称,自己追随使徒圣汤姆斯的教诲:服事上帝和国家。

跨大学LGBT网络:失望主讲环节被腰斩

跨大学LGBT网络表示,针对陈顺德的言论保留意见,他们也在同日发表文告,对于圣若瑟在最后一刻抽起Rachel Yeo的主讲环节,表达失望。

该组织称,他们在本月初收到电邮,邀请Rachel Yeo在主题为“蛹(Chrysalis)”的圣若瑟书院TEDx青年讲座主讲。Rachel Yeo将分享作为年轻人对于性少数课题的观点。

但是,在活动前天,却收到主办方电邮通知,基于教育部的规章,无法允许Rachel Yeo在该活动主讲。跨大学LGBT网络为此质疑,哪一项教育部规章禁止讨论性少数课题,也违反联合国人权理事会2016年普遍定期审议的国家报告,性少数群体在学校和工作场所不受歧视。

 “我国高级国会秘书(教育)穆哈默菲沙,才在日前针对近期国家未来教育的国会动议,指出对于来自不同背景和群体的新加坡人,都应一视同仁给与支持,打造真正包容的国度。”对此,该组织失望我国性少数群体,仍被排拒在外。

“滤除性少数课题,对于性少数群体青年的成长带来负面影响,根据2012年的调查,大部分性少数受访者反映,在校内都有遭受老师和同学的霸凌或排挤,甚至造成严重的心灵创伤和心理疾病。”

文告指出,Rachel的分享内容包括教育听众学习聆听,和有建设性的对话,避免对于异议者产生敌对态度。无论如何该组织感谢主办方,已经努力和校方沟通,遗憾的是现有体制仍采取过时政策,使得民众继续对性少数群体抱持恐惧和漠视。

教育部没干预校方自我审查?

性少数LGBT网络在本月22日在脸书专页贴文,指教育部发言人回应《今报》询问,澄清教育部未干涉圣若瑟书院,针对TEDx青年讲座的主讲人选,校方拥有绝对自主权,也没有任何准则适用于教育部规范校园活动。

假设教育部未曾干涉,为何圣若瑟书院校方干预学生办活动的自主权,宣称老师并未审核学生邀请的主讲人名单。然而,发现性少数维权分子受邀,校方就立即启动“自我审查”机制,胁迫学生立即回拒Rachel出席活动,此举有违学术自由原则,更令圣若瑟师生痛失理解、对话性少数群体课题的机会。

再者,陈顺德虽称以“和平”方式推动社会变革,但校方却暴力地滤除掉维权份子Rachel Yeo的发言机会,显然和陈顺德提及的“和平、持续性和有凝聚力”的方式不符,拒绝与社会不同群体对话,才是造成社会分裂的原因。

虽然今年的粉红点派对成功主办,吸引许多民众声援行少数群体权益,再者李光耀孙子李桓武也坦然出柜,声援粉红点活动,但是跨大学LGBT网络仍预见,打造多元包容的新加坡,仍有漫长路要走。

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Reforming Singapore’s defamation laws: Preventing legal weapons against free speech

Opinion: The tragic suicide of Geno Ong, linked to the financial stress from a defamation lawsuit, raises a critical issue: Singapore’s defamation laws need reform. These laws must not be weaponized to silence individuals.

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by Alexandar Chia

This week, we hear the tragic story of the suicide of Geno Ong, with Ong citing the financial stress from the defamation lawsuit against her by Raymond Ng and Iris Koh.

Regardless of who’s right and who’s wrong, this Koh/Ng vs Ong affair raises a wider question at play – the issue of Singapore’s defamation laws and how it needs to be tightened.

Why is this needed? This is because defamation suits cannot be weaponised the way they have been in Singapore law. It cannot be used to threaten people into “shutting up”.

Article 14(2)(a) of the Constitution may permit laws to be passed to restrict free speech in the area of defamation, but it does not remove the fact that Article 14(1)(a) is still law, and it permits freedom of speech.

As such, although Article 14(2)(a) allows restrictions to be placed on freedom of speech with regard to the issue of defamation, it must not be to the extent where Article 14(1)(a)’s rights and liberties are not curtailed completely or heavily infringed on.

Sadly, that is the case with regard to precedence in defamation suits.

Let’s have a look at the defamation suit then-PM Goh Chok Tong filed against Dr Chee Soon Juan after GE 2001 for questions Dr Chee asked publicly about a $17 billion loan made to Suharto.

If we look at point 12 of the above link, in the “lawyer’s letter” sent to Dr Chee, Goh’s case of himself being defamed centred on lines Dr Chee used in his question, such as “you can run but you can’t hide”, and “did he not tell you about the $17 billion loan”?

In the West, such lines of questioning are easily understood at worse as hyperbolically figurative expressions with the gist of the meaning behind such questioning on why the loan to Suharto was made.

Unfortunately, Singapore’s defamation laws saw Dr Chee’s actions of imputing ill motives on Goh, when in the West, it is expected of incumbents to take the kind of questions Dr Chee asked, and such questions asked of incumbent office holders are not uncommon.

And the law permits pretty flimsy reasons such as “withdrawal of allegations” to be used as a deciding factor if a statement is defamatory or not – this is as per points 66-69 of the judgement.

This is not to imply or impute ill intent on Singapore courts. Rather, it shows how defamation laws in Singapore needs to be tightened, to ensure that a possible future scenario where it is weaponised as a “shut-up tool”, occurs.

These are how I suggest it is to be done –

  1. The law has to make mandatory, that for a case to go into a full lawsuit, there has to be a 3-round exchange of talking points and two attempts at legal mediation.
  2. Summary judgment should be banned from defamation suits, unless if one party fails to adduce evidence or a defence.
  3. A statement is to be proven false, hence, defamatory, if there is strictly material along with circumstantial evidence showing that the statement is false. Apologies and related should not be used as main determinants, given how many of these statements are made in the heat of the moment, from the natural feelings of threat and intimidation from a defamation suit.
  4. A question should only be considered defamatory if it has been repeated, after material facts of evidence are produced showing, beyond reasonable doubt, that the message behind the question, is “not so”, and if there is a directly mentioned subject in the question. For example, if an Opposition MP, Mr A, was found to be poisoned with a banned substance, and I ask openly on how Mr A got access to that substance, given that its banned, I can’t be found to have “defamed the government” with the question as 1) the government was not mentioned directly and 2) if the government has not produced material evidence that they indeed had no role in the poisoning affair, if they were directly mentioned.
  5. Damages should be tiered, with these tiers coded into the Defamation Act – the highest quantum of damages (i.e. those of a six-figured nature) is only to be reserved if the subject of defamation lost any form of office, revenue or position, or directly quantifiable public standing, or was subjected to criminal action, because of the act of defamation. If none of such occur, the maximum amount of damages a plaintiff in a defamation can claim is a 4-figure amount capped at $2000. This will prevent rich and powerful figures from using defamation suits and 6-figure damages to intimidate their questioners and detractors.
  6. All defendants of defamation suit should be allowed full access to legal aid schemes.

Again, this piece does not suggest bad-faith malpractice by the courts in Singapore. Rather, it is to suggest how to tighten up defamation laws to avoid it being used as the silencing hatchet.

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Man arrested for alleged housebreaking and theft of mobile phones in Yishun

A 23-year-old man was arrested for allegedly breaking into a Yishun Ring Road rental flat and stealing eight mobile phones worth S$3,400 from five tenants. The Singapore Police responded swiftly on 1 September, identifying and apprehending the suspect on the same day. The man has been charged with housebreaking, which carries a potential 10-year jail term.

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SINGAPORE: A 23-year-old man has been arrested for allegedly breaking into a rental flat along Yishun Ring Road and stealing eight mobile phones from five tenants.

The incident occurred in the early hours on Sunday (1 September), according to a statement from the Singapore Police Force.

The authorities reported that they received a call for assistance at around 5 a.m. on that day.

Officers from the Woodlands Police Division quickly responded and, through ground enquiries and police camera footage, were able to identify and apprehend the suspect on the same day.

The stolen mobile phones, with an estimated total value of approximately S$3,400, were recovered hidden under a nearby bin.

The suspect was charged in court on Monday with housebreaking with the intent to commit theft.

If convicted, he could face a jail term of up to 10 years and a fine.

In light of this incident, the police have advised property owners to take precautions to prevent similar crimes.

They recommend securing all doors, windows, and other openings with good quality grilles and padlocks when leaving premises unattended, even for short periods.

The installation of burglar alarms, motion sensor lights, and CCTV cameras to cover access points is also advised. Additionally, residents are urged to avoid keeping large sums of cash and valuables in their homes.

The investigation is ongoing.

Last month, police disclosed that a recent uptick in housebreaking incidents in private residential estates across Singapore has been traced to foreign syndicates, primarily involving Chinese nationals.

Preliminary investigations indicate that these syndicates operate in small groups, targeting homes by scaling perimeter walls or fences.

The suspects are believed to be transient travelers who enter Singapore on Social Visit Passes, typically just a day or two before committing the crimes.

Before this recent surge in break-ins, housebreaking cases were on the decline, with 59 reported in the first half of this year compared to 70 during the same period last year.

However, between 1 June and 4 August 2024, there were 10 reported housebreaking incidents, predominantly in private estates around the Rail Corridor and Bukit Timah Road.

The SPF has intensified efforts to engage residents near high-risk areas by distributing crime prevention advisories, erecting alert signs, and training them to patrol their neighborhoods, leading to an increase in reports of suspicious activity.

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