STATEMENT BY AMBASSADOR KAREN TAN, PERMANENT REPRESENTATIVE OF SINGAPORE TO THE UNITED NATIONS, AT THE INFORMAL INTERACTIVE DIALOGUE OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY ON THE RESPONSIBILITY TO PROTECT ON 11 SEPTEMBER 2013

11 Sep 2013

Mr President,

 

1            Thank you for convening this meeting.  The State has a moral imperative to protect its people.  All countries made this pledge in the World Summit Outcome adopted in 2005, which recognised that “each individual State has the responsibility to protect its populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity”.  This is also Pillar I of R2P.  Under Pillar I, R2P is first and foremost a domestic policy imperative rather than a foreign policy objective as the sovereign right to govern your people is also a responsibility to protect them. 

 

2                 We thank the Secretary-General for his latest report on R2P.  The report, which focusses on state responsibility and prevention, is a stepping stone in moving forward the discussion on the operationalisation of R2P.  We need to ask hard questions about how resilient our societies are from atrocity.  Whatever its national circumstances, no government can afford to be complacent and assume that the possibility of atrocities occurring in their societies is unimaginable.  Singapore’s position remains that R2P should be applied according to universally agreed and applicable principles.  The primacy of the UN system should also always be maintained in the application of R2P, either through the UN Security Council or the UN General Assembly. 

 

Mr President

 

3                 Singapore is a multi-racial and multi-religious society with three main races and five main religions.  Against this backdrop, good governance based on the rule of law is a cornerstone of our policies.  Our Constitution enshrines protections against discrimination on the ground of religion, race, descent or place of birth and upholds the freedom of religion.  However, Constitutional safeguards alone are necessary but not sufficient to ensure continued racial and religious harmony.  We also strive to ensure that economic opportunities are available to all, starting from our education system to job search and retraining policies, and by supplementing the income of low-wage earners so that no one is left behind.  In this regard, the principle of meritocracy is crucial as it precludes discrimination on basis of race and religion.  Hence it is widely implemented and accepted by Singaporeans.  There are also grassroots initiatives to promote inter-faith and inter-cultural dialogue. 

 

4                 But Singapore has not been spared from religious and ethnic conflict.  In 1964, two racial and religious riots led to over 30 deaths and hundreds injured, sparked off by seemingly harmless and innocuous events.  The arrests of Singaporean members of the Jemaah Islamiyah in 2001 who were planning terrorist attacks in Singapore were a wake-up call for the government and our people.

 

5                 The Secretary-General’s report rightly points out that “there is no one-size-fits-all approach to atrocity prevention”.  Every country’s national circumstances differ.  Singapore’s history has informed our approach that the government should play an active role in promoting social cohesion.  Let us not deceive ourselves; it is natural for people to desire belonging in the same community as people who share their religion, ethnicity, race and/or social class.  When these differences are accentuated, faultlines between the communities can deepen, in turn perpetuating fear and hatred and increasing the risk of communal violence.    

 

6                 It is the government’s responsibility to actively intervene to minimise the impact of social tensions.  Legislative safeguards alone are insufficient.  The government should assist minority groups which have fallen behind.  The electoral system should also bear in mind minority representation, and race-based politics should be avoided.  Each government must also determine the appropriate limits to set on freedom of opinion and expression.  Unfettered free speech could inflame underlying communal tensions and lead to violence.     

 

Mr President

 

7            The Chinese philosopher Confucius was quoted to have said: “To know what is right and not do it is the worst cowardice.”  If we are to live up to the commitments under Pillar 1 of R2P, we must be willing to do what is unpopular rather than what is politically expedient.  It is our duty to the people we serve. Thank you.    

 

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