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Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong ordered an inquiry into Singapore's first riot in more than four decades as tensions rise over the influx of foreign workers in the city state.
'There is no excuse for such violent and criminal behavior,' Lee said in a statement yesterday. A Committee of Inquiry will look into the reasons for the riot and how it was handled, and review how the government manages areas where foreign workers congregate, he said.
The riot involving about 400 people broke out on the night of Sunday, Dec. 8, in the Little India district after a traffic accident, the Singapore police said in a statement on its Facebook page yesterday. Little India, about 3 kilometers (2 miles) from city state's central business district, attracts thousands of foreign workers on their Sunday days off.
Discontent in Singapore over foreign workers has risen after years of open immigration spurred complaints on social media about congestion and infrastructure strains at a time of widening income inequality. A four-year government campaign to encourage companies to employ fewer overseas workers has in turn led to a labor shortage, prompting some companies to seek cheaper locations.
The riot was 'a new thing, that's definitely a watershed of a kind,' Bilveer Singh, an associate professor at National University of Singapore's department of political science, said by phone. 'I don't think we have seen this for decades now.'
Driver Arrested
The violence began after a bus ran over and killed a 33-year-old Indian national, Deputy Commissioner of Police T. Raja Kumar said in a briefing hours after the incident. The bus driver, a 55-year-old Singaporean, was arrested for causing death by negligent act and is assisting with investigations, the police said in a statement on Facebook yesterday.
Vehicles damaged during the riot, including 16 police, were removed, the police said. The situation was brought under control within an hour and officers did not fire any weapons during the incident, it said.
The police arrested 25 Indian nationals, two Bangladeshi nationals and a Singaporean permanent resident, it said. All 25 Indian nationals and the Singapore permanent resident, all of whom are men, will be charged with rioting today in court appearances, the police said late yesterday on Facebook. The two Bangladeshis weren't involved in the incident, the police said.
About 300 officers responded to the riot with 22 police officers and five auxiliary officers hurt, the police said, adding that all the officers were later released from hospital.
Liquor Licenses
Singapore will boost the police presence in Little India, Tanglin Police Division Commander Lu Yeow Lim said in an interview broadcast on Channel NewsAsia yesterday. Transport Minister Lui Tuck Yew, a member of parliament for the district, said in a post on his Facebook page that he will look into limiting liquor licenses within the Little India area.
'In perspective, this is a spontaneous act. It is not something politically motivated,' NUS's Singh said. The government would need to act sternly against those who rioted, he said. 'The future insecurities of Singapore are one, internal, two, important. Singaporeans won't tolerate this because Singaporeans are becoming very nationalistic.'
Large-scale demonstrations have been almost unknown in Singapore since race riots in 1964 killed 36 people and contributed to the island's ouster from a federation with Malaysia. Singapore and Malaysia were united from 1963 to 1965. Clashes between the Chinese and Malay communities culminated in race riots in 1969 in Malaysia, which spilled briefly into Singapore. After the violence of the 1960s the Singapore government imposed curbs on public assembly.
Income Inequality
Singapore's benchmark Straits Times Index and the Singapore dollar were little changed yesterday.
The city's income inequality as measured by the Gini co-efficient widened last year, according to the Statistics Department. The central bank forecasts inflation will probably be 2.5 percent to 3 percent this year and the island is the world's third-most expensive Asian city to live in, according to an Economist Intelligence Unit ranking.
'We shouldn't assume that the kind of issues that the local population faces, like the cost of living, would not affect the foreign worker population,' said Leong Chan-Hoong, a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Policy Studies in Singapore. 'Most of them will get a very decent wage but a very small minority may not, and maybe this is the minority group that happened to be there at the wrong place at the wrong time.'
Worker Influx
The number of people in Singapore has jumped by more than 1.1 million to about 5.3 million since mid-2004 as the government used immigration to make up for a low birth rate. Foreign workers make up about a third of the total workforce.
As part of its effort to reduce imported labor, the government said in February that companies must pay higher levies for lower-skilled foreign employees over the next two years and cut the proportion of overseas workers in some industries. In 2012, the National Wages Council recommended raising the pay of low-wage Singaporean workers as their income growth had lagged the rest of the workforce for the past decade.
In November last year, Singapore authorities charged four Chinese nationals over their involvement in an illegal strike that led to a disruption in some bus services, an unusual public display of labor discord.
The government 'will not tolerate' such acts, deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean said at a briefing hours after the riot. Those involved will be dealt with 'firmly, fairly, strictly, according to the law,' said Teo.
To contact the reporters on this story: Sharon Chen in Singapore at schen462@bloomberg.net; Weiyi Lim in Singapore at wlim26@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Rosalind Mathieson at rmathieson3@bloomberg.net
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