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The Straits Times, Insight, 26 Nov 04

PEOPLE & POLITICS
Sizing up the Casino Critic
By Sue-Ann Chia

Who are the people who make up the vocal minority in the casino debate and why is their voice so loud?

Insight pieces together a profile

BUSINESSMAN and church elder Yong Teck Meng is a man on a mission, busy spreading the word that a casino will ruin Singapore. He has e-mailed Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, and Dr Vivian Balakrishnan, Senior Minister of State (Trade and Industry). He has penned letters to The Straits Times, at least twice. He believes it is vital for various parties to share their feelings openly. 'Being apathetic is itself a political stance. If people don't care, then the Government may factor that in the casino decision,' says the 42-year-old.

Mr Yong is part of a growing voice of protest against the idea of incorporating a casino into a high-end integrated resort to attract the world's wealthy to Singapore. They are making their positions known at public forums or through letters written to the media, with some engaging the Government directly. Their voices are adding to the choruses of 'nays' which seem to be reverberating far louder these days, almost drowning out the casino proponents.

Who are these casino critics and what drives them to take up the cause? The picture that emerges, drawn from the critics themselves and interviews with academics, shows that most used to belong to the silent majority who were comfortable with the Government's usually conservative and cautious stance on social issues.

Safe platform

BUT faced with recent radical economic reforms that have social consequences, some now feel compelled to voice their views. Furthermore, the Government has welcomed feedback on the casino issue, emboldening Singaporeans who would ordinarily have no inclination for public debate. The casino issue 'provides a safe platform to participate in politics with little danger of crossing some out-of-bounds marker,' says sociologist Tan Ern Ser.

The casino opponents now form what can be called a vocal minority - a label once reserved for liberals who push for more freedom of expression or tolerance of gays. In contrast, the casino critic, who spans all age groups and economic class, prefers to rein in what he fears is the loosening of morals and values.

Dr Tan says: 'The issue provides a platform and test case for expressing more fundamental concern about the feared erosion of moral values. 'It also reflects a concern that social values may be sacrificed at the altar of economic rationality.'

Strong conviction

MOST of these critics are usually people of strong religious conviction. If they are married, they will most likely have children and a firm sense of family values. Like Mr Yong. The long-time activist is chairman of Habitat for Humanity Singapore, a Christian-based non-profit organisation that helps to build homes for the poor. 'My reasons for opposing the casino stems from my values which are shaped by my Christian ethos and education,' says the father of two daughters, aged seven and 13, who hopes they will grow to be upright adults.

At a recent forum organised by the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS), religious groups were strong in attendance. Views came from the National Council of Churches of Singapore (NCCS), representing Anglicans, Methodists and Presbyterians, among others; and the Singapore Islamic Scholars and Religious Teachers Association (Pergas). Both groups had issued media statements in the past and repeated their condemnation of casinos at the forum. They are not stopping there.

Pergas executive director Murat Aris says the group registered its views in a private discussion with the Minister for Muslim Affairs, and intends to write to the Feedback Unit. Anglican Bishop John Chew, who is the NCCS president, says sermons have been preached about the ills of casinos and the council encourages its members to speak up publicly as well. Other churches are said to have done the same.

But this conservatism does not reside only in the faithful church- or mosque-going communities, notes political science lecturer Kenneth Tan. In a paper he presented at the IPS forum, he said that Singaporeans have been socialised through the nation-building process and the Asian values debate, both of which have all added to a desire to protect society's prevailing structures and order.

Activists from non-profit organisations that deal with family issues, for example, oppose the casino because of the potential social cost. Thus, Mr Tan Thuan Seng, president and founding director of Focus On Family Singapore, views it as 'part of his mission' to oppose the proposal. He has sent letters to 20 to 30 ministries and MPs. 'Until it's clear that it's a done deal, why should we stop?' says Mr Tan, whose group is coincidentally Christian-based.

Bad experiences

ACTING on a similar impulse are individuals who have had direct traumatic experiences with gambling, like engineering undergraduate Liena Tan. One friend lost $20,000, part of her university fees, in an Australian casino. And her grandfather gambled away his fortunes and died in a Genting casino. The 20-year-old, who wrote to The Straits Times and intends to share her views on online forums and perhaps with ministers through e-mail, just wants to offer caution. 'I used to think it was okay, but it was a sobering experience when I saw how it affected family and friends,' she says. 'I hope others don't have to face it before realising too late that a casino should never have entered our shores.'

Those who are driven mainly by their religious beliefs also focus their fire on social costs - because they don't want to appear to impose their own moral views on secular society. Dr Lee Soo Ann, a fellow at the Trinity Theological College, who spoke up at the IPS forum, says it is to counter what he describes as the 'vocal minority' which appears to be getting supportive attention due to the casino being tied up with tourism. His argument is simple: The Singapore economy is built on the premises of 'something for something', such as the hard work ethic, or 'something for nothing' like volunteerism. But gambling is 'nothing for something' which is the very antithesis of what Singapore should represent. He knows that Singapore is already a gambling nation. But a casino gives 'gambling a social sanction which is not deserved'. 'It is like having a 'smoke all you can day' or an 'alcohol week',' he says.

While Dr Lee attended the IPS forum as an NCCS representative, individuals such as lawyer Thio Su Mien went on her own accord and, at one point, had paid the $100 fee for the right to speak up.

Defining values

SHE did so several times. She used economic arguments, saying that other cities with casinos faced the 'hollowing out' effects of other sectors. She also raised the social costs argument and also her interest in helping others. 'I invest in the lives of people devastated by broken relationships, particularly that of parents, which have an insidious, adverse multiplier effect,' says the founding partner at TSMP Law Corporation who is also a staunch Christian. 'An expansion of gambling in Singapore with the endorsement of the Government will aggravate the situation very drastically.' The former law faculty dean has also written letters to the media on the issue of homosexuality, and intends to forward her thoughts on the casino to her MPs from Holland-Bukit Panjang GRC.

But how will all this dissonance influence the casino decision?
For one, the growing debate has proven to be a soul-searching exercise to define values, a shift from the usual diet of economic pragmatism that Singaporeans have grown accustomed to. The Government probably realised it as well. Dr Balakrishnan said as much recently when he noted that the debate was not one of morals versus money, but one which seeks to determine what kind of society Singapore should be.

Casino proponents have also been swift to appeal to central values in social life such as tolerance of diversity of lifestyles and activities, and exercising responsibility and control over one's own life.

But how the debate between the 'for' and 'against' casino camps, both seen to be vocal minorities, will play out is not clear. Mr Yong, however, doesn't believe in being confrontational. Nor will he organise any anti-casino demonstrations. 'This is not how it works in Singapore,' he says. But he intends to urge others to speak up. 'I have said enough publicly and done everything I can, it's now time to galvanise others,' he says.

And if the anti-casino lobby doesn't succeed? 'If, at the end of the day, a gleaming casino is built, at least I can tell myself I tried,' he says. 'And if problems begin to surface, at least I can say, 'I told you so'.'





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