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Bumbling PAP ministers now use mouthpiece to blame the netizens for racism

LITTLEREDDOT

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
It is not racism, it is a natural reaction against inbound travellers carrying the virus.
If these second wave of infections are from China, Sinkies would also clamour to ban them.
These so-called racist remarks are the symptons.
What is the cause?
The cause is the mismanagement of the covid-19 situation by the PAP ministers.
If they had not opened legs so wide open; if only they had close their legs a little bit and slow the rate of inbound travellers from India.
If only they had been more proactive and banned flights from India when the second wave started.
Instead, the PAP ministers were slow. They banned flights from India AFTER Hong Kong, the UK and the United States.
Now the PAP ministers is using the ChannelNewsAsia mouthpiece to shift the blame to netizens.

Commentary: Worries over rising COVID-19 cases are fuelling racially charged comments
The disconcerting situation in India, coupled with the rise in community cases in Singapore, may be behind words of hate, say Institute of Policy Studies’ Mathew Mathews and Shamil Zainuddin.
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Pedestrians wearing protective face masks along Orchard Road in Singapore on Sep 4, 2020. (File photo: Marcus Mark Ramos)
Mathew Mathews
By Mathew Mathews

Shamil Zainuddin
By Shamil Zainuddin

02 May 2021

SINGAPORE: Throughout the battle with COVID-19, community leaders, intellectuals and government officials have warned of the other invisible plague which must be contained for us to effectively come out of this pandemic healthier and with higher social solidarity.
That other invisible virus is bigotry.

Xenophobic comments most recently have been rife on local social media platforms following reports of community cases in Singapore involving Indian nationals.
While unsavoury comments did not form the majority of comments – which were mainly about getting the authorities to do more to arrest the incidence of infections – the bigoted and hateful posts were too many to simply ignore.
The pattern is clear: With a spike in COVID-19 cases, negative sentiments of the xenophobic and racist variety increase.
Such sentiments were earlier directed at Chinese nationals in January 2020 after the virus spread from Wuhan, China.


Similar sentiments were directed at Muslims in the region, after an outbreak occurred in Malaysia following large-scale religious gatherings there around that period.
South Asian migrant workers living in dorms were also targeted. A forum letter implicated poor hygiene culture among such workers, completely ignoring the fact that the living conditions in migrant worker dormitories did not permit for much infection control.

DISCONCERTING SITUATION IN INDIA

Such xenophobic sentiments have most recently been levelled at Indian immigrants.
Understandably, the record numbers of COVID-19 cases in India and the many deaths there, coupled with mutant virus strains, are disconcerting.
Many are upset authorities in India did not curtail various mass religious and political activities in recent months, likely accounting for the spike.

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FILE PHOTO: A medical worker tends to a patient suffering from the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), inside the ICU ward at Holy Family Hospital in New Delhi, India, April 29, 2021. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui

At the heart of it is this: After a sustained period of low-to-no community cases, Singaporeans fear that progress in controlling the spread of the virus will be undone by new infection cases, possibly from India, coming to Singapore.
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SIGN ME UP
They fear it could lead to another wave and trigger a replay of last year’s painful lockdown or worse, increasing the number of COVID-19 related deaths.
This fear has been accentuated in mere days. While Singapore, along with Hong Kong and United Kingdom, has recently banned visitors from India to control the risk of the spread, some have asked whether authorities should have shut the borders to travellers from India earlier.
They have expressed worry over whether other considerations were prioritised over public safety.
Yet, Singapore’s strategy for dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic has been calibrated to ensure some resumption of travel flows to enable economic activity, mitigated by strict quarantines on arrival. Those returning from high-risk places are subjected to longer quarantine and more testing.

We know this strategy is not fool-proof.
There is a very small chance the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests – effective at 99.5 per cent – do not reveal those with infections and imported cases could spill into the local community, especially if people have let their guard down after months of conscientiously adhering to strict safe-distancing protocols.
In this, citizens voicing their concerns to the government is accepted as part and parcel of a healthy democracy. People can voice their opinion on how situations should be managed based on the values they hold dear – in this case a high prioritisation of health over the economy.
But such discourse becomes a problem when concerns expressed are laced with xenophobia or racism.
The understandable fear of the potential spread of the virus and the demand for the government to effectively control it, should not lead to the condemnation and blaming of the entire Indian immigrant community.

THE OTHER VIRUS REARS ITS HEAD
Singapore residents surely know this. More than 60 per cent of those polled in an Institute of Policy Studies study were concerned over increased suspicion between people of different social backgrounds as a result of COVID-19. This figure is based on 22 waves of online polls.

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Pedestrians wearing face masks crossing a road on Apr 29, 2020. (File photo: Calvin Oh)

The good news is there is some self-awareness. About one in four respondents reported becoming more negative about immigrants, including those from India, because of the pandemic.
The persistence of bigoted behaviour before and during this pandemic suggests such attitudes are deep rooted. Inoculation attempts to reduce xenophobia through public education have not been effective with some segments of the population.
This scapegoating must end. It is counterproductive to efforts to build social cohesion in a society which cannot do without a healthy balance of immigrant workers to sustain economic and caregiving activities.

Immigrants with access to social media feel marginalised when they come across these hateful comments.
Many of them contribute substantially to the progress and development of the country, including by managing essential services. Anti-immigrant rhetoric can reduce their motivation to give their best efforts to a society which does not regard them positively.
While xenophobic comments online may not necessarily translate to bigoted offline engagement, individuals fuelled by such comments online may act in a socially irresponsible manner.

This can include a refusal to sit or stand next to someone who looks like an immigrant, hurling hurtful comments at immigrants, or even acts of physical violence. The consequences of such acts can be disastrous.
Moreover, scapegoating could weaken Singapore’s ability to deal with the pandemic.
When immigrants believe they are targeted as potential vectors of infection, they may be more wary of seeking medical attention promptly at the sign of early symptoms. They fear that a COVID-19 diagnosis will exacerbate the wider community's sentiments towards them.

COMBATING HATE
Singapore must take ownership to tackle anti-immigrant sentiments in our community exacerbated by the pandemic.
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File photo of pedestrians wearing protective face masks while crossing a road in Orchard Rd, Singapore on Sep 4, 2020. (Photo: Marcus Mark Ramos)

While such sentiments may be limited to only a small portion of individuals who descend to such acts of denigration, the rest of us should not be complicit.
We should have the courage to speak out on social media against posts that vilify immigrants in our midst.
When possible, we should counter wrong perceptions, after educating ourselves about the facts from authoritative sources. People should be reminded they might want to distinguish any unhappiness with the COVID-19 situation from immigrant policies and these from the immigrant.
We should also highlight the many contributions immigrants make to our society.

Even if our comments are outnumbered by the number of negative sentiments, the presence of some supportive posts can go a long way in signalling to the discriminated that they have allies and are not alone.
We have worked too hard and far too long to build this city, teeming with diversity, to allow COVID-19 to threaten our multicultural way of life. We might not see eye-to-eye on policies but let us persist to have a dialogue on these issues, without the hate.
Together, we will rid ourselves of COVID-19 and the “other” virus.
Mathew Mathews is Head, Social Lab, and Principal Research Fellow at the Institute of Policy Studies, National University of Singapore. Shamil Zainuddin is a Research Associate at the Institute of Policy Studies.
 

LITTLEREDDOT

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Experts pushing the blame to Sinkies: not co-operating, not getting vaccinated, not seeing a doctor.
Experts do not dare to criticise the PAP leaders for not stopping travellers from India, for being slow to act in banning travellers from India and the Indian sub-continent.

Worst Covid-19 community outbreak in S'pore since last year shows nobody can relax, not even for a moment: Experts
The Tan Tock Seng Hospital cluster is the nation's first hospital cluster and comprises staff and patients.

The Tan Tock Seng Hospital cluster is the nation's first hospital cluster and comprises staff and patients.ST PHOTO: JASON QUAH
clarachong.png

Clara Chong

MAY 2, 2021

SINGAPORE - Singapore is experiencing its worst spate of Covid-19 community infections in close to a year, in a painful reminder of how the virus situation can flare up without warning.
But if contact tracing, testing and quarantine protocols are as effective as before, and people do not let their guard down, the current situation could come under control within the next week or so, experts said.
The Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH) cluster, with 27 people infected, is the nation's first hospital cluster and comprises staff and patients. One patient, an 88-year-old woman, has died.
The recent cases show that nobody can relax, not even for a moment, stressed Professor Teo Yik Ying, dean of the National University of Singapore's Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health.
"We have seen time and again how countries have had to ramp up restrictions or even reimpose another lockdown after they have opened up, and this scenario could become a reality if we become complacent," he warned.
"I certainly hope this is just a blip in our management of Covid-19, and it won't progress on to much further community spread."

The TTSH cluster - the largest of nine open clusters currently - and the cluster which surfaced at Changi Airport Terminal 1, with eight people infected, so far show that the original index cases had gone on to seed secondary and possibly tertiary transmissions, Prof Teo pointed out.
Nonetheless, the clusters could peter out soon if all steps are followed assiduously.
"If our contact tracing, testing and quarantine protocols are as effective as before, we should see the current blip come under control within the next couple of weeks or so," Prof Teo predicted.
Singapore has already moved to contain the spread of the virus, acting swiftly to ring-fence the cases, testing aggressively and even enforcing lockdowns in four TTSH wards, for instance.

Prof Teo said: "What's critical is cooperation from the public: If you are requested to go for a swab test, please go for it. If you are given a leave of absence, please stick to it.
"And everyone must continue with personal safe management measures such as mask wearing and social distancing."
The numbers, while alarming, are not large enough to be called a new wave of community infections, noted Associate Professor Alex Cook, vice-dean of research at the Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health.
The number of community cases now is nowhere near the peak in early April last year, where more than 40 new locally transmitted infections were reported daily, he said.
"Everyone has been quite relaxed with the rules lately and this will be a good reality check for us," Prof Cook said.

"It is also a reminder to those who have been putting off their vaccinations to get vaccinated as we cannot expect the community to remain virus-free forever.
"I wouldn't belittle the clusters we're seeing this week - they are a problem we need to get on top of - but they are not currently anywhere near the problem we faced down in 2020," Prof Cook said, although he also noted that not all infections would be detected.
The extent of the spread will become clearer only in the next few days as cases are detected, Prof Teo added.
But there is a good chance that the authorities will be able to break the chains of transmission, given the country's robust contact tracing, quarantine and testing capabilities, which have been built up over more than a year, he said.
Prof Teo said Singapore is in a better place than it was a year ago, with more than one fifth of the population vaccinated, better capabilities in testing, a high take up rate of the TraceTogether app, and medical facilities reinforced to cope with some degree of surge.
"While I expect there to be more community cases that will emerge that are linked to the active clusters, the protocols that have worked should once again help to stop transmission," he added.
The authorities have taken swift action to ringfence current and potential clusters. For instance, after an Edgefield Secondary School student tested positive for the virus last Friday (April 30), the school will move to home-based learning from Tuesday till Friday (May 4 to 7). Precautionary measures, such as thorough cleaning and disinfecting of the school premises, have also been stepped up.

At TTSH, all 1,100 inpatients and 4,500 staff working in the wards have been tested as part of a mass screening exercise. The four wards involved in the spread are in lockdown.
The new spike in cases is a test for Singapore, to gauge how it is managing the pandemic, said Professor Dale Fisher, an infectious diseases expert at the National University Hospital.
"We need to think less in terms of waves, but more in terms of clusters and if we can manage these clusters," Prof Fisher said.
This is because these local cases are not sweeping through the community, and the approach is about controlling spread from these clusters and breaking transmission chains, Prof Fisher explained.
Singapore will have to see if it can shut down the clusters with minimal impact on the rest of society and without resorting to blunt tools like a nationwide lockdown, he said.
"But if there are too many cases and uncontrolled spread, that is when significantly tighter social restrictions will have to come in."
During the May Day Rally on Saturday, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong highlighted the need to tighten measures to stamp out the clusters and avoid going into another circuit breaker.
"If we have to do another lockdown like last year's circuit breaker, it would be a major setback for our people and for our economic recovery. Let's not make it happen," PM Lee said in his televised address.

While the nation has honed its defences against the virus, the invisible foe is also becoming more wily.
The pandemic has morphed into a different creature compared to last year, with new strains of the virus adding a layer of complexity in Singapore's fight.
These strains could prove to be more transmissible, harder to detect, and better able to evade the body's immune system.
These variants include Britain's B117 strain, the Brazilian P1 variant, South Africa's B1351 and India's "double-mutant" variant, B1617. Cases of reinfections and infections after people have been vaccinated have also surfaced in Singapore and abroad.
Though vaccines have been largely effective against these variants, no vaccine is 100 per cent effective, and breakthrough cases remain. More studies need to be done to determine the risk of infection after vaccination and how long vaccine antibodies remain in the immune system, say scientists.
"We need to understand whether the current community clusters are due to the variants, or if they are due to people becoming complacent when socialising and dining together," Prof Teo pointed out.
"The situation can deteriorate very rapidly if we let our guard down. We need to keep to the spirit of the rules, which have proven to work, to get through this," he said.
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