Serious PAP Jo Teo Issues POFMA Against SDP For Spreading Lies About Sinkie PMETs! SDP, Please Stop Telling Lies!

hold on..

how many are true blue stinkyporeans?

how many are ceca new citizens?


coz this one is also a new citizen, and officially a stinkyporean.


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and this one also a true blue stinkyporean giving a piece of his mind to ceca virus ah neh





He wrote, “It’s about a certain Ramesh Erramalli who is making his living in my country, but thought it was ok to not only verbally abuse a poor old local uncle who was just doing his job as a security guard, but also had the pompousness to disparage 80% of my people who lived in HDB flats”.

He also wrote, “I do not understand why he behaved the way he did. Maybe it’s just poor upbringing, maybe he does feel a sense of entitlement, or maybe because Singaporeans are just too nice and letting him getting (sic) his way most of the time by being louder”.


Tay concluded his post by saying, “Yes Ramesh Erramalli, I know you bought “your f**king property for S$1.5 million…”. But really, So What?”

SDP is doing the right thing by grabbing the bull by the horns and challenging The Pap. The more pap use such antics the more desperate they look and more attention will be generated
 
Singapore Government says Washington Post article on online falsehoods law is ‘perpetuating false allegations’
Screengrab of The Washington Post article the Singapore Government was responding to.
17 Dec 2019 12:38AM
(Updated: 17 Dec 2019 12:40AM)
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SINGAPORE: The Singapore Government said on Monday (Dec 16) that US publication The Washington Post's refusal to publish its response in full means it is “perpetuating false allegations” in an article about Singapore's online falsehoods law.
The Washington Post article on Dec 2 discussed Singapore’s use of directives under the Protection from Online Falsehoods and Manipulation Act (POFMA). It said Facebook had “for the first time complied with a controversial local law aimed at curbing misinformation” on a States Times Review article.
The article added that critics were worried that the law could have “a chilling effect on online free expression”, quoting Mr Phil Robertson, Human Rights Watch's (HRW) deputy Asia director.
Five days after the article was published, Singapore's Ambassador to the US Ashok Kumar Mirpuri wrote a letter to the news outlet explaining Singapore's position. That letter was not published in full.
On Monday, the director of the information policy division at the Ministry of Communications and Information (MCI) wrote to the publisher of the Washington Post Fred Ryan and Mr Robertson.
In his letter to Mr Ryan, MCI's Mr Bernard Toh said that only a brief quote from Mr Mirpuri was included in the article, but it "ignored the crux of our response".
The letters to the Washington Post was released to the public "in the interest of transparency", Mr Toh said.
READ: Facebook issues correction notice on States Times Review's post
SINGAPORE AMBASSADOR'S LETTER
The Washington Post article quoted only part of Mr Mirpuri’s letter on Dec 7 to say that POFMA helps protect Singapore from the risks of fake news.
In his letter to the Letters and Local Opinion editor at the Washington Post, Mr Mirpuri wrote: "Censorship entails banning or suppressing offending material. But the Government has not banned or suppressed anything. It has only required Facebook to append to the offending post a link to a factual correction.
"The original post remains intact. Readers can read it together with the Government’s response, and decide for themselves which tells the truth.
"This can no more have 'a chilling effect on online free expression' than your publishing this letter can stun The Washington Post into silence."
The only part of his letter that was used by the Washington Post read: "Singapore – an English speaking, multi-racial, multi-religious society open to the world – is more vulnerable to this threat than most.
"POFMA seeks to restore balance to the debate, by requiring tech companies to carry clarifications to reach the same target audience as the false statements."
In Mr Toh’s letter to Mr Ryan on Monday, he wrote that the news outlet had declined to publish the response on grounds it only ran letters on articles that appeared in its print edition, not just online.
After being directed to the article's author Cat Zakrzewski, she also declined to carry Mr Mirpuri's response in full.
"She included a brief quote from our letter in her article, but ignored the crux of our response: That contrary to allegations that the Singapore Government had censored a Facebook post that it deemed to be false, the original post remained intact and accessible," Mr Toh said.
"It is ironic that the (Washington) Post should have responded thus, given that your article had accused us of censorship. By refusing to carry our letter or report it more adequately, the (Washington) Post is perpetuating false allegations."
 
There we go again. Using "locals" instead of citizens. How many "locals" are voters here? :rolleyes:
 
There we go again. Using "locals" instead of citizens. How many "locals" are voters here? :rolleyes:

All locals have cpf accounts and contribute to cpf. Many locals, including PRs, serve NS.
 
All locals have cpf accounts and contribute to cpf. Many locals, including PRs, serve NS.
Mad khaw is a shitizen n never served ns n neither did janil. There should be written in the constitution n enforced that citizens who do not serve ns are not allowed civil serpent jobs n denied public office. Service guarantees citizenship. Lagi even betterer.

 
PM Lee will take witness stand in October defamation trial against blogger Leong Sze Hian
PM Lee had filed the suit over a post shared by Mr Leong Sze Hian (above) on his Facebook page.
PM Lee had filed the suit over a post shared by Mr Leong Sze Hian (above) on his Facebook page.PHOTO: LIANHE WANBAO
Published
Aug 31, 2020, 4:46 pm SGT
Updated
Aug 31, 2020, 5:59 pm
SINGAPORE - Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong will take the stand when his defamation trial against financial advisor Leong Sze Hian opens in the High Court in October.

The hearing, which is set to take place from Oct 6 to 9, was confirmed at a pre-trial conference with Justice Aedit Abdullah on Monday (Aug 31).

Responding to queries from the Straits Times, a spokesman for Mr Lee said the Prime Minister will enter the witness box to give evidence and be cross-examined.

In a Facebook post following the conference, Mr Leong's lawyer Mr Lim Tean wrote: "The expert witness who is to be called by PM Lee, Dr Tuan Quang Phan, will give evidence via video link from Hong Kong."

Dr Phan is an associate professor of marketing as well as innovation and information management at Hong Kong University Business School.

Mr Lee will be represented by Senior Counsel Davinder Singh from Davinder Singh Chambers.

PM Lee had filed the suit over a post shared by Mr Leong on his Facebook page on Nov 7, 2018, which contained a link to an article by Malaysian news site The Coverage.

The article alleged that former Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak had signed "secret deals" with PM Lee in exchange for Singapore banks' help in laundering money from 1Malaysia Development Berhad or 1MDB.

PM Lee's lawyers had said earlier the article's allegations were "false and baseless", and it was clear Mr Leong had published the post "maliciously and to damage our client".

He sought aggravated damages and an injunction that Mr Leong be prevented from publishing or disseminating the defamatory allegations, or other allegations of complicity in matters relating to the embattled sovereign wealth fund.

He said in court papers that he took down his Facebook post on Nov 10 after being told to do so by the Infocomm Media Development Authority.

He also argued that the article, on how Singapore and PM Lee had become targets of the investigation into 1MDB, was "a matter of public interest... whether or not it was correct".

Mr Leong also filed a counterclaim against PM Lee, claiming that the defamation suit against him was an abuse of the process of the court.

The court said the abuse of court process is not recognised in Singapore law as a basis for one party to bring legal action against another.

The decision was upheld in September last year by the Court of Appeal, which noted that recognising abuse of court process as a cause of action would "encourage unnecessary satellite litigation".
 
the new chee soon Juan will make sure Jo Teo next time think twice before fucking around with SDP!

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