Lee warns foreign media not to meddle in S'pore
Lee warns foreign media not to meddle in S'pore
Agence France-Presse, Singapore
Former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew has brushed aside Singapore's
dismal ranking in a global press freedom survey and renewed a
warning to foreign media against interfering in the city-state's
affairs.
"Do you really believe that we are equal to North Korea?" the
81-year-old Lee said in a forum on late Monday with the Foreign
Correspondents Association of Singapore. "Oh, come on."
Paris-based watchdog Reporters Without Borders has ranked
Singapore, where local media have close links with the government
and shun western-style critical reporting, near the bottom of its
2004 Worldwide Press Freedom Index.
Singapore, one of Asia's wealthiest nations, was ranked 147th
in the index, a notch below the Himalayan kingdom Bhutan and just
above war-torn Iraq.
European nations topped the survey. North Korea was ranked
lowest at 167th.
Lee, who imposed circulation restrictions on foreign
publications which earned his ire while he was prime minister,
reiterated Singapore's tough stance toward publications and
journalists deemed to be meddling in domestic affairs.
He said some foreign publications published articles to sell
more copies and "influence my electorate, which you have no right
to do."
Foreign publications are now widely available on the Internet
but anything sold in Singapore must give the government the right
of reply, he said.
"We are not that daft. We know what is in our interest and we
intend to preserve our interests and what we have is working," he
said.
"You are not going to tell us how to run our country," he
said.
Lee stepped down as prime minister in 1990 in favor of his
deputy Goh Chok Tong, who in turn gave way to the former leader's
son, Lee Hsien Loong, last August. The elder Lee now plays an
advisory role with the special title "minister mentor" while Goh
serves as senior minister.