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Singapore
21 (S21), a government launched initiative, has
called on Its citizens to practice active citizenship
and shape the Singapore that they want to live
in.
Primarily
motivated by economics, the PAP government went
on a mammoth consultation exercise with 6000 people.
Its purpose, to keep the republic relevant for
the knowledge-based economy. The findings in the
report have been published last year as what Singaporeans
want for the future of their country.
This
added with a recent spate of liberalisation in
the Republic's financial and telecommunication
sectors has created an expectation that state-society
relations are loosening up in Singapore.
In
such an environment Singapore's civil society
must be prepared to change its mindset and seize
the opportunity for a vertical take-off. The model
of incremental change is no longer helpful in
this fast changing environment. The citizens have
to adopt a new model of alteration for the millennium
and be ready to make a quantum change.
The
Politics 21 initiative by the Think Centre (an
independent research centre) and Socratic Circle
(a policy discussion group) has done precisely
this. Taking at face value the government's call
for its citizens to practice active citizenship
and shape the Singapore that they want to live
in, the Politics21 (P21) series was launched to
raise political awareness and fill the political
gap in the government's S21 process in October
99.
After
organisng three forums and receiving a warning
from the local police for organising the first
forum without a licence, the group has weathered
the storm and has developed a programme for the
year. Among the many projects that this group
has initiated in response to police demands for
licences to organise public talks is a review
of the Republic's muzzle - the Public Entertainments
Act. In doing so, this new group has secured a
crucial bridge head for civil society development
in Singapore.
Presently
the two existing political discussion groups the
Roundtable and Socratic circle are contemplating
proposing changes to their constitution that will
have a bearing on their ability to organise activities
for the public. The government's earlier conditions
were that these groups could only register if
they restrict their activities to members.
But
if their attempts to change their constitutions
to organise public events are successful, there
will be further changes to the civil society landscape.
Public debate over issues of national concern
will increase and their coverage in the media
will also increase. Thereby creating a greater
awareness.
Nevertheless,
there is a challenge in positioning civil society
for a vertical take-off. In a country where self-censorship
continues to be the biggest hindrance to innovation,
there will be segments that will hold themselves
back willingly or hang on to the words of politicians
in government as when is the right time for change
and the best method of effecting change.
Bureaucrats
will waver in their position as gatekeepers. Civil
servants will have to learn to go easy on administrative
and policy guidelines that affect the effective
operations of the civil society.
In
this climate, civil society in Singapore will
not take-off as a single bloc and one should not
expect it to do so either. But rather to accept
that they will operate as disparate groups organised
along an immediate set of interests and willingness
as to how far each group or individual will want
to contribute in active citizenship, and how engaged
they want to be in policy development.
Thus,
when thinking of a quantum change, civil society
groups and individuals will not en masse do the
vertical take-off, each will take-off at different
times and different speeds. It will also see a
situation where different groups will form different
alliances for different causes. Such alliances
will shift from issue to issue and moment to moment.
And in an increasingly globalised word it would
involve forming alliances within and without.
Regional
and international networking would an important
component in this alliance. The attempt to keep
regional and international networking possibilities
away from the few independent NGOs will no longer
be an easy task for the Singaporean government
and neither is it desirable if the Republic's
civil society is to take its rightful place in
the global arena. The continued presence of government
officials or representatives from quasi-government
bodies in the regional and international civil
society circuit has to be replaced by real civil
society actors from the ground.
The
civil society vertical take-off will impact politics
in Singapore. The ruling party will have realise
that the opposition will make ground. The opposition
parties also see a window of opportunity. In this
context each political party will be involved
in its own attempt to ensure that their advantage
is not compromised. Civil society will be caught
right in the middle of this competition.
Look
out too for commentators, observers and those
who will only stand on the sidelines and say that
civil society and some of the actors are engaging
in politics and masquerading as politicians. The
line between civil society and political society
so artificially drawn by the state and kept in
by rhetoric by no less than some civil society
actors themselves will be very telling.
However,
the civil society vertical take-off impact will
be greatest on the role of political parties.
The PAP and otherwise. What will replace them
will a system of networks - the political party
will only act as a legal conduit and a symbol
of mobilisation for electioneering. A system that
has suppressed political expression for so long
can no longer prevent 4 to 6 people from a variety
of fields to come together for that vertical take-off
even in general elections if they were serious
about politics.
Singapore
is at a crossroad. Its institutions need reinventing
and liberalising and presently civil society holds
the key. Politics 21, one the many new initiatives
in the Republic holds an important key in contributing
to this development.
There
are some eyes that are watching this development
with special interest. We in civil society are
watching them too. The time for incremental change
is over, Singapore needs to make a quantum change.
The Republic's civil society is gearing itself
for its very important vertical take-off.
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