Oman Daily Observer

Singapore invites rights group to fake news hearing

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SINGAPORE: Singapore on Wednesday invited Human Rights Watch to give evidence at a parliament­ary hearing on “fake news” as a dispute grew between the New York-based group and the city state.

A parliament­ary committee in Singapore is reviewing possible measures to prevent “deliberate online falsehoods”, mirroring efforts in various countries to tackle false informatio­n amid growing questions about the influence of Internet companies.

Activists worry that laws aimed at “fake news” could be used to stifle free speech.

“We can hear you on any date in May, or after May, after Parliament reopens,” the committee said in a press release, addressing Human Rights Watch (HRW).

Vikram Nair, a member of the ruling People’s Action Party, said this week Human Rights Watch had in a recent report used “clearly false” examples to further its agenda and undermine public discourse.

In its report, the rights group called on Singapore to amend or repeal laws that it said were too broadly worded and were used to “arrest, harass, and prosecute critical voices”, including a Sedition Act and Public Order Act.

The group cited several examples including a defamation case against a blogger, a case against an activist opposed to the death penalty and a case against a free-speech campaigner.

ACTIVISTS WORRY THAT LAWS AIMED AT “FAKE NEWS” COULD BE USED TO STIFLE FREE SPEECH

“From the examples it relies on, HRW seems to advocate the use of false and fabricated allegation­s in political discourse,” Nair said in a written argument submitted to the committee.

Nair was among 79 people asked to speak in parliament over the eight days set for the hearing.

The committee said it had earlier invited a HRW official to speak at a hearing in late March, which the group first accepted but later declined.

Human Rights Watch Asia director Brad Adams said it had sought the Singapore government’s view ahead of the publicatio­n of its report but had received none.

The group’s earlier offer to send an official to testify before the Singapore committee also went unanswered, he said. Last week, representa­tives of global tech giants including Facebook and Twitter spoke at the hearing to express concern about new laws to tackle falsehoods, saying sufficient rules were already in place.

Neighbouri­ng Malaysia is debating legislatio­n aimed at jailing “fake news” offenders for up to 10 years.

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