Singapore
Island in the stream
Expat-resident in Jakarta compares life between the two
republics. By Simon Pitchforth. Jakarta Post
May 21, 2006
Singapore
has been in the news this week, what with its recent general
election, and so I thought that a bit of a piece on Indonesia's
oft-visited near neighbour might be in order.
The
island calls itself the Republic of Singapore although,
in comparison with its expansive neighbor Indonesia, it's
really little more than a sandbar.
Despite
its diminutive size though, Jakartans and Indonesians are
constantly (if they've got any money to speak of) hopping
back and forth to the island-state in order to shop, visit
world-class hospitals and clinics and generally to enjoy
a bit of first world standard infrastructure and law and
order before heading back to the chaos of this fair city.
After
a stint in Jakarta, Singapore can indeed be appealing, for
a few days at least, and people fly there in droves from
Jakarta to worship at the altar of Southeast Asia's economic
miracle.
As an
expatriate in Indonesia, my experiences in the city-state
come when I have to renew my work visa at the Indonesian
Embassy there.
The
usual saga involves disembarking at Singapore's monumentally
huge and high-tech Changi airport and taking a ride into
the city on a local bus. After about an hour, I am thoroughly
seduced by the clockwork order, efficiency and cleanliness
of the place.
Traffic
runs fluently, pavements are smooth and level, litter is
unheard of and the whole city actually seems to have been
laid out according to some kind of logical plan.
Then
I arrive at the Indonesian Embassy and am immediately plunged
back into the pell-mell chaos of the motherland as I try
to fill out a visa application in the cramped building and
then join the free-for-all queues in order to pay the embassy
staff the requisite "extra" money needed to facilitate
a speedy processing of my papers.
After
all that's over, there's a chance to bowl up and down Orchard
Road, shopping and eating some great food.
Yes,
Singapore certainly has been a huge economic success over
the past 50 years or so, and partly for reasons that this
country could do well to emulate.
It opened
up free trade zones and allowed foreign companies to set
up shop completely tax-free. The strategy worked and contrasts
strongly with the tortuous minefields of bureaucracy, bribery
and sleaze that foreign investors usually encounter over
here.
However,
Singapore is also a place I don't think that I could ever
live in for any period of time and this is for a number
of reasons.
On my
first visit there, I was casually extinguishing a cigarette
on the pavement when I was accosted by a policewoman with
such fervor that I could have been molesting a child.
"You
don't do this in Singapore!" she screamed with a nationalistic
vehemence that put me at a loss for words.
This
is the other side of Singapore, the Big Brother breathing
down its citizens' necks, the autocratic nanny state that
inflicts corporal punishment (caning) and imposes lists
of rules and regulations in their thousands.
It's
this regimented social hegemony and mind-set that disturbs
Westerners and Indonesians alike.
'False
democracy'
The
various Mr. Lees that have run the country through the People's
Action Party (PAP) have turned Singapore into a democracy
as false as Indonesia's was under Soeharto.
Take
the recent election for example. The PAP won 82 out of 84
seats, 37 of which were uncontested by any opposition at
all.
The
reason for this is that opposition politicians are perpetually
hounded, victimised and sued into poverty for supposed defamation
by the bellicose politicians who run things.
Orwellian
thought control is pervasive and Internet bloggers have
become the latest victim of Southeast Asia's Big Brother.
Political
discourse is discouraged and when the republic decided to
set up a Speaker's Corner in one of its parks (inspired
by the one in London's Hyde Park, in which people stand
and speak whatever is on their minds), they decided to build
it next to a police station.
Indonesia
now seems like a democratic utopia in comparison (albeit
one that barely seems to function).
This
Big Brother/thought crime mind-set that exists in Singapore
produces not only the lovely policewoman who pulled me up
short, but also a lack of great thinkers or artists.
Certainly
none are springing to mind as I write this and I guess that
there is little room for artists to manoeuver in the strict
political and social hygiene of Singapore.
Singapore
also, despite the huge economic wealth generated there,
has no welfare system to help out its poorest citizens.
No economy
exists in isolation, especially these days, and perhaps
Singapore's wealth is partly propped up, if not on the poverty
of its own citizens, then on the poverty of surrounding
countries such as Indonesia.
One
example of this are the many Indonesians involved in corruption
who have fled to the island because it won't extradite Indonesian
criminals back home.
So I'm
afraid it's Jakarta for me every time in all its dirty,
stinking, rioting, impoverished, chaotic, grid locked, overcrowded
glory. Viva le Republic.
Jakarta Post