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Singapore says new policing law in Little India will not affect Indians

Singapore has assured Indian workers they will not be affected by a new bill that gives special powers to police in Little India, the scene of the country’s worst riots in over 40 years.

Law and Foreign Minister K Shanmugam said the bill was among ‘temporary measures to try and nip things in the bud’ at Little India, a precinct of Indian-owned businesses, eateries and pubs where South Asians working in Singapore spend their day off.

He said the bill was confined to Little India as it was the government’s duty to do what it can to prevent another incident.

The public has little to worry about it, he said, adding that the bill was not discriminatory.
‘If you are coming in, taking in the air, going into the restaurants, enjoying the open air, walking about - none of these powers would impact on you,’ Shanmugam told over 400 workers in Tamil at the foreign workers’ dormitory last night.

‘We are trying to restrict it, to keep it contained. The incident (riot) took place there. There is where you get a large concentration of foreign workers coming on weekends. We haven’t yet seen a similar situation in other places,’ the Minister was quoted as saying by The Straits Times.

Singapore on Monday introduced a new bill in Parliament that will give police special powers to maintain public order in Little India. The proposed law would allow police and other state agencies to enforce the alcohol restrictions and regulate movement of persons. Shanmugam also noted that the mood of the workers was ‘much more positive’.

‘They were (then) concerned about themselves, as to... whether they would be sent back,’ he said, recalling his previous visit.
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