Local Protest for Myanmar Nationals for Work Permit renewal
To make a stand in expressing ones view is a human right, it cannot and should not be quelled by any social or political agenda; period. It's even more basic than education and access to shelter. What kind of society do we live in, when to express one's malcontent is subjected as a criminal act?
This to me is distressing enough, however when i compare the below situation to the violence some police use to stop peaceful activism, i can't seem to find the words to express my absolute disgust.
What have we come to?
What needs to be done?
When?
Your choice.
For, one i hope this inspires you in someway to speak up for the dis empowered. Below is the Straits Time report on local activist protesting unfair treatment of fallow nationalist
2 arrested for protest
![]() | ![]() | ![]() The two activists stood outside the Ministry of Manpower's building in the city's business district for about an hour before they were handcuffed by police without showing any resistance. -- ST PHOTO: CHEW SENG KIM |
Seelan Palay and Chong Kai Xiong stood outside the Ministry of Manpower's building in the city's business district for about an hour before they were handcuffed by police without showing any resistance.
They wore red T-shirts and held a banner that read 'Stop ill-treatment of Burmese activists'.
The protest was in support of two Myanmar nationals, Moe Kyaw Thu and Win Kyaw, whose work permits have not been renewed by Singapore, effectively forcing them to leave, Palay said.
He said the two men were among 40 Myanmar nationals who took part in a protest against their country's ruling junta during a summit of Southeast Asian leaders hosted by Singapore in November 2007.
'We can't just stand by as Singaporeans, as personal friends, and watch them being expelled one by one,' he said.
Moe Kyaw Thu told AFP that he was required to leave Singapore by January 27. Win Kyaw could not be contacted for comment on Monday.
The Ministry of Home Affairs did not immediately reply to emailed queries from AFP on the case of the Myanmar nationals. A few others who took part in the same protest in 2007 have also had their work permit renewals turned down.
Home Affairs Minister Wong Kan Seng in September defended the government's decision not to renew the visas of some Myanmar nationals working or studying in the city-state, saying they were 'undesirable' people.
Singapore has eased rules governing protests in a designated public park but it remains illegal elsewhere to hold a public gathering of five or more people without a police permit.
Singapore is home to an estimated 30,000 Myanmar nationals, many of them drawn by jobs as labourers that pay far above what they could earn in their poverty-stricken homeland. -- AFP.
This entry was posted on 1/13/2009 06:09:00 PM
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