The Borneo Post

Singapore admits police can access contact-tracing data

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SINGAPORE: Singapore has admitted data collected for contact-tracing can be accessed by police despite earlier assurances it would only be used to fight the coronaviru­s, sparking privacy concerns Tuesday about the scheme.

The city-state has a programme called ‘TraceToget­her’ for tracking close contacts of Covid-19 patients, that works via both a phone app and a dongle.

Take-up was initially slow due to privacy worries but rose to almost 80 percent of residents after government assurances and a decision to make its use mandatory for accessing some public places like malls.

However, a senior official admitted in parliament that police could “obtain any data” – including informatio­n gathered through the contact-tracing programme – in the course of a criminal investigat­ion.

Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrisha­n said later that, to his knowledge, police had so far only accessed contact-tracing data on one occasion, during a murder probe.

Human Rights Watch accused the government, which is regularly criticised for curtailing civil liberties, of “underminin­g the right to privacy”.

The admission “exposes how the government has been covertly exploiting the pandemic to deepen its surveillan­ce and control over the population,” Phil Robertson, the group’s Asia deputy director, told AFP.

Singaporea­n freelance journalist and activist Kirsten Han said she was disappoint­ed but not surprised.

“Looking at the government’s record, I felt that it would be quite predictabl­e that if they can do it, they will,” said Han.

“It’s unfair and shows how little protection we have for our privacy against the government.”

Speaking in parliament Tuesday, Balakrisha­n said the government was just being open when it made the admission.

“We want to be completely above board and transparen­t,” he said. — AFP

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