Singapore’s normally ordered society has been
shaken by the rioting last weekend
Sakthivel Kumaravelu was killed last Sunday after being run
over by a bus ferrying migrant workers from Little India – a messy, diverse and
vibrant part of Singapore with a large number of South Asian shops and
restaurants – back to their dormitories. The details of the accident are still
murky, but the death of the 33-year-old man triggered the first riot seen in
Singapore in more than four decades.
Police cars and ambulances were attacked, some even torched.
Eighteen people, including police officers and other emergency service
personnel, were injured. Although quelled in an hour, the episode has shocked
Singapore and produced another blemish on this prosperous island nation’s shiny
track record.
The government has been eager to spin this as a one-off
drunken mob. Two Cabinet ministers were quoted saying that alcohol could have
been a “contributory factor,” and a temporary alcohol ban is being imposed. Police
have been given the powers to take action against anyone seen
consuming alcohol in the area. The local mainstream media has also focused on the angle of alcohol abuse among South
Asian migrant workers.
Yet this narrative does not obscure the fact that in recent
years many events that might not be considered “the Singapore way” have begun
to occur. In November 2012, more than a hundred bus drivers for public
transport company SMRT went on strike – the first in 26 years. In February 2013, a
protest against the Population White Paper drew over 3,000 people, and organizers dubbed it
the largest political protest in Singapore’s independent history. A follow-up protest in May again drew a significant
crowd. The riot in Little India is simply the latest in a series of surprises.
These occurrences all had different triggers and involved
different groups within the population. They might not be directly connected to
one another, but they all draw attention to the possibility that there’s more
behind the city-state’s carefully manicured image of wealth and order.
While other countries in the world have been rocked with
economic uncertainty, Singapore has been doing well. The 2012 World Wealth Report put the country at the
top of the list in terms of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita.
In many ways, this prosperity has not trickled down to the
island’s residents: Singapore has one of the highest inequality levels in the
developed world. The country’s eager dependence on importing cheap foreign
labor has kept wages low especially for blue-collar workers, and there is no
minimum wage. Although there is no official poverty line, the country also has
a significant number of people considered as the “working poor,” struggling to make ends meet
despite holding down jobs. Segments of society – both citizen and non-citizen –
are beginning to feel disenfranchised, underserved and neglected, while the ultra-rich party on.
Migrant workers, who provide the manual labor which props up
this shaky system, face huge struggles. Housed apart from the main population,
these imported workers are expected to clean the streets and work on
Singapore’s many construction sites, while remaining largely separate from
mainstream society.
Charan Bal, a university lecturer who has researched migrant
labor issues in Singapore, has noticed this segregation. Speaking with The
Diplomat, he notes, “There is very limited everyday interaction between
contract migrant workers and Singaporeans. Most of these workers are silently
or overtly excluded from many of our urban spaces during their leisure time.
They often live in dorms in industrial areas which are far removed from where
Singaporeans live. When a dorm springs up near places where Singaporeans live,
existing residents complain.”
Even those who do interact with the workers – ferrying them
to and from work or patrolling the areas where they congregate – face plenty of
frustration. In the course of his research Bal has observed that the bus
drivers and auxiliary police officers themselves receive low pay and work long
hours. It is little surprise that there is often friction between them and the
migrant workers.
In this context, Police Commissioner Ng Joo Hee’s promise
that the police will “pay extra attention, not just to Little India, but also
to foreign worker dormitories, and known places of congregation” might not be
the best move. Warns Bal, “Intensifying the policing of migrant workers is not
a long-term solution. Serious reconsideration must be given to the way
auxiliary police are being deployed to police their movements on weekends.
Increasing security and regulating their movements even more will keep them
quiet, for sure. But it will only create more friction between enforcement
agents and workers.”
A Committee of Inquiry will be soon put together to
investigate all aspects of the case. However, there has so far been little
indication that the government will see this riot as a sign to rethink
policies. Law and Foreign Affairs Minister K Shanmugam has said there is no evidence the workers were unhappy with either
their employers or the government.
But not everyone is convinced. Blogs and social media
networks have been buzzing with commentaries demanding more introspection and
reflection. Even if the everyday alienation of migrant workers was not a direct
cause of the riot, the possibility of it being an underlying cause has not gone
unnoticed.
The streets have been cleared and it looks like business as
usual in Little India. But the effects of Sunday night’s uproar linger on.
Regardless of the official narrative we have once again caught a glimpse of the
complexities lying beneath Singapore’s achievements. The problem of
marginalized communities run far deeper than alcohol, and cannot be ignored for
very much longer. By Kirsten Han for ‘The Diplomat’
Instead of foreign workers, can't they automate these jobs? Broad Group in China is developing self-assembly buildings and there is considerable effort going into automating service industries around the world. Singapore is city-state on an island. Of course they cannot continue to take in new people all of the time. They need a different solution.
ReplyDeleteAutomation is the solution to lower-level jobs and SENS (and stem cell regeneration) is the solution to the aging process. These are the appropriate solutions I would propose for Singapore if I live there (or was a consultant for them).