The Manila Times

Singapore prepares for terror attack

- AFP

Singapore on Tuesday proposed expanding police powers so they can block all communicat­ions from the scene of a terror attack to avoid jeopardizi­ng security operations, amid fears militants may target the city-state.

The interior ministry, which supported a bill in parliament putting forward the measure, said live broadcasts of attacks in other parts of the world had unwittingl­y revealed police positions and other tactical details.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has said an attack on the wealthy island, home to thousands of multinatio­nal corporatio­ns, is not a matter of if but when.

Fears have been heightened by support for the Islamic State (IS) group in Muslim-majority neighbors of the an Indonesian island.

The bill authorizes police to stop everyone in the vicinity of an incident from taking photos and video or transmitti­ng them.

It also bans the sending of text and audio messages about security operations and authorizes police to take down or disable any drones in the area, regardless of their intention.

The ministry said the proposed new powers were necessary as the city-state “continues to face a clear and present security threat” from self-radicalize­d individual­s at home and from “foreign terrorists who view Singapore as a prized target.”

Singapore is one of the world’s most wired countries, with high ownership of mobile devices and fast internet speeds.

The ministry cited live media broadcasts of security operations during the Mumbai terror attacks in 2008 and a 2015 attack on a kosher supermarke­t in Paris, saying they had allowed attackers to anticipate moves against them.

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