Chinese Embassy rebuts report on influence operations in Singapore

The Chinese Embassy in Singapore yesterday rebutted a report by a United States-based scholar, saying that its assertions of Beijing conducting influence operations here are “groundless” and “distorted from truth”.

On Tuesday, the Jamestown Foundation had published an analysis by Global Taiwan Institute executive director Russell Hsiao, who wrote that China is using cultural organisations, clan associations, business associations and youth programmes to exert influence on Chinese Singaporeans.

Mr Hsiao said the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) fundamental purpose is to impose a Chinese identity on multiracial Singapore so that it will align more closely with China’s expanding interests.

The Straits Times, Chinese daily Lianhe Zaobao and online news outlet Today ran stories on the report.

Responding in a post on its Facebook page yesterday, the Chinese Embassy said the exchanges and cooperation between China and Singapore in various fields – including the economy, trade and people-to-people ties – reflect the amicable relations between the two countries.

This has come about because of joint efforts by the two governments and all sectors of society, said a spokesman for the Chinese Embassy. “The unique connections in history and culture between China and Singapore, a natural advantage in promoting bilateral cooperation, are unfortunately taken by someone as an excuse for attack, thus hurting not only China, but also Singapore,” he said. “Lies are lies. The more they are repeated, the more nonsense they are.”

The spokesman described the report as “absurd”, and said that it had a clear purpose – “to alienate the friendship of our two peoples and hinder normal exchanges between the two countries”.

Singapore is a friendly neighbour of China, he added, saying that China is “pleased to see Singapore’s achievements of exchanges and cooperation with all countries”.

“We respect Singapore as a multi-cultural and multi-religious state and will remain committed to developing friendly relations with Singapore on the basis of mutual respect, equality and mutual benefit,” he said. “This serves the fundamental and long-term interests of the two countries and their peoples.”

He highlighted Chinese clan associations in Singapore as important links through which China conducts outreach via cultural exchanges to revolutionary history sites, concerts for singing communist songs and visits to ancestral homes in China.

Mr Hsiao also asserted that “business associations in Singapore act as the most powerful lobby for Chinese interests”. China, he added, exerts leverage over Singapore businessmen by making it harder for them to get contracts, licences, permits and loans in China.

In response to the report, Lianhe Zaobao editor Goh Sin Teck said in an article yesterday that the mainland China market is important to Zaobao and makes up the bulk of the news outlet’s overseas readers.

“But what to report, and how to report it – our editorial department bases that on professional news judgment,” he said. “In fact, accurate, objective and neutral reports and discussion are how Zaobao provides value.”

Lianhe Zaobao quoted Singapore Federation of Chinese Clan Associations president Tan Aik Hock, who said the group will continue to strengthen consciousness of being Singaporean and ensure that it is not influenced by messages from China.

It also quoted Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry president Roland Ng San Tiong, who responded to Mr Hsiao’s report and questioned its accuracy.

Mr Ng said the local Chinese business associations would not have gotten involved during the periods when ties between Singapore and China were frayed.

“The Chamber of Commerce has always been focused on business. We do not influence the government administration and our activities are not related to politics.”

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