The Singaporean government has issued formal directives to three global social media platforms—YouTube, Meta’s Facebook, and X—to restrict local access to 14 online posts originating from China that target Singapore’s Indian minority.
The emergency orders, issued on June 6 under the Online Criminal Harms Act (OCHA), aim to protect the city-state’s multicultural fabric from malicious external narratives designed to incite domestic racial friction.
Breaking: Singapore asks social media content that is targeting Indian community of the country to be blocked.
Singapore home ministry statement says, "content likely originated from a China-based platform and was subsequently carried on other platforms and websites" pic.twitter.com/q5nsRqYHuK
— Sidhant Sibal (@sidhant) June 6, 2026
Speaking at a community event, Edwin Tong, Second Minister for Home Affairs, confirmed that the problematic material appeared to originate entirely outside Singapore’s borders. Law enforcement investigations successfully traced the primary source of the content back to a digital platform based in China, from which it was systematically disseminated across other global social media networks.
Singapore’s demographic landscape relies heavily on ethnic stability. According to official data, approximately 75 per cent of the population is of Chinese descent, 15 per cent are Malays, and between 7 per cent to 9 per cent identify as Indian, with the remainder comprising various other ethnic backgrounds. The strict mandates require the platforms to take all reasonable measures to ensure Singapore-based IP addresses cannot access the offending material.
Narrative Designed to Exploit Racial Fault Lines
According to the Ministry of Home Affairs, the restricted posts contained insidious narratives sharply critical of Singapore’s multiracial setup, explicitly attempting to exacerbate divisions along ethnic lines.
Minister Tong emphasized that these external portrayals do not reflect Singapore’s core values, reiterating that every community is equally respected.
“The government maintains a zero-tolerance policy toward narratives that jeopardize racial harmony, particularly those propagated by external entities,” Tong stated. The MHA firmly condemned all forms of “nativism and xenophobia,” labeling foreign-origin psychological attacks as intolerable.
Severe Legal Penalties under the Penal Code
The MHA noted that the malicious content directly violates Section 298A of Singapore’s Penal Code, which criminalizes acts that deliberately incite feelings of enmity, hostility, or ill-will between different racial or religious groups. Individuals found guilty of violating this statute face severe legal repercussions, including maximum prison sentences of up to three years, heavy fines, or both.
The swift implementation of OCHA highlights the serious stance the government takes against digital threats to domestic stability.
Moving forward, Singaporean authorities intend to maintain vigilant surveillance of the domestic online landscape. Minister Tong assured the public that further blocking orders would be executed progressively if more malicious content surfaces. He urged citizens to exercise strict discernment, verify the source intent behind viral videos, and refrain from sharing unverified content that could inadvertently threaten the country’s social harmony.


















