Singapore Democratic Party calls on MDDI to release circular linked to NRIC debacle
The Singapore Democratic Party has urged the Ministry of Digital Development and Information to release the circular tied to the Bizfile NRIC controversy. The incident, sparked by public access to unmasked NRIC numbers, has led to calls for accountability amid heightened concerns over data privacy and misuse.

The Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) has called for the Ministry of Digital Development and Information (MDDI) to release the circular that allegedly led to the recent unmasking of full NRIC numbers on ACRA’s Bizfile portal. In a statement released on 21 December 2024, the SDP underscored the serious legal and security implications of the incident, which it described as a significant lapse in government accountability. The controversy erupted on 9 December, when the updated Bizfile portal allowed public searches that revealed full NRIC numbers associated with business entities. The issue came to public attention on 12 December, after former Straits Times editor Bertha Henson highlighted it in a Facebook post. While MDDI and the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (ACRA) have blamed a misunderstanding of a July 2024 circular, the SDP insists that the matter must not remain an internal review between the two agencies. “This incident has serious security and legal implications,” SDP stated. “It is wholly inadequate and unacceptable for Ministers Teo and Indranee to issue an apology and make vague promises to do better in the future.” The party pointed to the Personal Data Protection Commission’s (PDPC) guidance, which highlights that NRIC numbers are permanent identifiers and their improper use poses significant risks. Past cases have seen organisations penalised for mishandling such data, yet the unmasking of NRIC numbers in this instance has been attributed only to poor inter-agency communication. ACRA Chief Executive Chia-Tern Huey Min acknowledged the misstep but clarified that ACRA had sought clarification from MDDI about the circular's scope and timeline. “Communications between the two agencies were not sufficiently clear,” she said during a 19 December press conference. Minister for Digital Development and Information Josephine Teo admitted to the public's anxiety caused by the incident, issuing an apology but maintaining that NRICs, as unique identifiers, cannot be treated as confidential.











