Blogger tests Singapore's fake news law by rebuffing correction order
Blogger tests Singapore's
fake news law by rebuffing correction order
by
Reuters Thursday, 28 November 2019 09:24 GMT
SINGAPORE, Nov 28 (Reuters) - A blogger said on Thursday he
would not comply with a Singapore government order to correct a Facebook post
in the first test of the city-state's new 'fake news' law.
Singapore's home ministry
said the post on the Facebook page of a blog called the States Times Review,
which contained allegations of election rigging, was "false" and
"scurrilous".
It marks the second case in
days under the Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act (POFMA),
which also allows government ministers to instruct internet firms like Facebook
to correct or block access to content they deem false.
Rights groups have raised
concerns the fake news law could be used to stifle free speech and chill
dissent in the city state, charges government officials have denied.
"States Times Review
and it's editor, who is now a citizen of Australia, will not comply with any
order from a foreign government like North Korea or Singapore," States
Times Review posted on Thursday in comments attributed to editor Alex Tan.
Earlier on Thursday, the
newly-created POFMA office said Tan, a 32-year-old Singaporean, had been
instructed to carry a notice on his Nov. 23 post with a link to a government
statement that contained "corrections and clarifications" about the
post.
If Tan fails to comply he
could be fined of up to S$20,000, or face 12 months jail, or both, according to
the law which applies to persons both in and outside the country who make false
statements of fact communicated in Singapore.
The POFMA office did not
immediately respond to Reuters questions on how long Tan had to comply and
whether the government would instruct Facebook to take action if he didn't.
Facebook declined to comment.
In the only other case under
the law which came into effect in early October, political figure Brad Bowyer
swiftly complied with the correction request on a post which questioned the
independence of state investment firms.
Singapore, which has been
ruled by the People's Action Party since independence since 1965, is gearing up
for an election expected to take place within months.
(Reporting by John Geddie; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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