Singapore
Singapore’s political environment remains overwhelmingly repressive, with serious restrictions on free expression, association, and peaceful assembly through overly broad criminal laws and regulations. In 2023, the authorities carried out the highest number of executions for drug-related offenses in over a decade, including the first woman put to death in 20 years. The government aggressively enforces a sweeping “online falsehoods” law that permits government ministers to order the “correction” or removal of online content, and uses the Foreign Interference (Counter-Measures) Act (FICA) to restrict interactions with foreigners. There are no legal protections against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.

Videos
Videos-
December 12, 2017
“Kill the Chicken to Scare the Monkeys”
Suppression of Free Expression and Assembly in Singapore
-
-
-
News
-
-
May 22, 2024
Singapore Doubles Down on Executions
Home Minister Targets Anti-Death Penalty Activists
-
-
February 28, 2024
Australia: Spotlight Rights at Summit with ASEAN
Albanese, Southeast Asian Leaders Should Address Myanmar, Other Regional Crises
-
February 28, 2024
Letter to Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese
Re: Human Rights and the ASEAN-Australia Leaders' Summit
-
January 11, 2024
Singapore: Decade-High Surge in Executions
Media Freedom in Decline; Human Rights Defenders Targeted
-
January 12, 2023
Singapore: Execution Spree Raises Rights Concerns
Authorities Harass and Punish Activists
-
August 22, 2022
Singapore to Decriminalize Gay Sex
But Government Pledge Suggests Entrenching Other Inequalities
-
-
May 10, 2022
US-ASEAN: Promote Rights, Democracy at Summit
President Biden Should Raise Key Issues with Regional Leaders