Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Classification for film on political exiles, To Singapore, With Love, means it ...

SINGAPORE - A documentary film on Singapore political exiles who fled the country has been given a 'Not Allowed for All Ratings' classification because its contents 'undermine national security', the Media Development Authority said in a statement on Wednesday.


This means the documentary, To Singapore, With Love, by award-winning filmmaker Tan Pin Pin, cannot be exhibited or distributed here.


Ms Tan's documentary explores the lives of Singaporeans living in exile - some for as long as 50 years - in places like London, Thailand and Malaysia. It was submitted for classification in May by the National University of Singapore Museum.



'The individuals in the film have given distorted and untruthful accounts of how they came to leave Singapore and remain outside Singapore,' said the MDA.


It noted that some of the people featured had tried to 'white-wash their security histories', with two interviewees omitting criminal offences they were liable for, such as tampering with their Singapore passports or absconding from National Service.


Some of the 'self-professed' exiles were members or supporters of the Communist Party of Malaya (CPM), which sought to overthrow the elected governments of Singapore and Malaysia through armed struggle and subversion, the MDA added.


'The individuals featured in the film gave the impression that they are being unfairly denied their right to return to Singapore,' it continued.


'They were not forced to leave Singapore, nor are they being prevented from returning.'


Minister for Communications and Information Yaacob Ibrahim said he agrees and supports the MDA's assessment.


'It is not surprising that ex-CPM members and sympathisers wish now to give their own accounts of historical episodes that they were involved in,' he said in a statement.


'But individuals who have chosen to leave and remain outside Singapore, and refused to account for their past actions, should not enjoy a public platform to purvey distorted and untruthful accounts to mislead the public, absolve themselves or deny their past actions.'


One of the people featured in the film is Mr Ho Juan Thai, an unsuccessful Workers' Party candidate in the 1976 general elections. While campaigning, he criticised the government's promotion of the use of English over Chinese, and was accused of making racially-inflammatory speeches.


He fled to the UK in 1977, before the police could detain him under the Internal Security Act as a national threat.


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