Singapore Press Holdings Ltd., a private corporation with close ties to the government, controls all general-circulation newspapers. The government-linked Singapore International Media PTE Ltd. has a virtual monopoly on broadcasting. Satellite dishes are banned with few exceptions. The government has successfully prosecuted numerous domestic and foreign journalists in the past, and as a result of previous run-ins with the government, many foreign publications have their circulation strictly controlled by the government. Such is the case with The Asian Wall Street Journal, the Far Eastern Economic Review, and Asia Week, the three leading regional news publications.
The new Internet regulations allow unhindered access for commercial
users while preventing private users from having access to a wide range
of sites. The Singapore Broadcasting Authority (SBA) requires Internet
service providers to block sites the government identifies as taboo because
of their political or sexual content. The SBA also requires political and
religious societies to register their Singapore-based websites. Singapore’s
government has set a goal of becoming a regional center for both on-line
commerce and Internet-control technology. The government considers its
Internet controls to be a success and an example to other nations in the
region, but the tightly regulated environment for the press at all levels
in Singapore is anathema to the promise of unhindered information flow
promised by the Internet.