Monday, December 23, 2013

Singapore acts after 'Little India' riot

Firemen douse a charred ambulance in the early hours of December 9, 2013, after a fatal traffic accident sparked a riot in Singapore's Little India district.Firemen douse a charred ambulance in the early hours of December 9, 2013, after a fatal traffic accident sparked a riot in Singapore's Little India district.Singapore will repatriate South Asian workers involved in a riot in the Little India districtAnother 28 people who attacked emergency crews and vehicles have been charged, police sayAuthorities are investigating the traffic accident that sparked the riot

(CNN) -- Singapore plans to deport dozens of foreign workers who were involved in the country's first major riot in more than 40 years, authorities said Tuesday.

Some 52 Indian citizens and a Bangladeshi national will be sent home soon for their role in an attack on emergency services crews and their vehicles after a fatal traffic accident in Singapore's Little India district earlier this month, according to the police commissioner, Ng Joo Hee.

Most of the 53 individuals, who were being held in prison on Tuesday, have been in Singapore for less than five years, Ng said in a statement. About half are construction workers.

"They have been served with stern police warnings and immigration removal orders, and will be repatriated to their home countries shortly," Ng said.

Another 28 people, who were directly involved in the violence, have been charged and could face up to seven years in prison and caning.

"They were violent, they had attacked uniformed personnel and vehicles, damaged property, and had incited others to do so," said the police commissioner.

Charges against seven more people will be dropped, he added.

The riot broke out among a crowd of hundreds of people on December 8, shortly after a bus ran over a 33-year-old Indian man.

According to Singaporean authorities, the mob set fire to vehicles, hurled objects and attacked rescue crews as they attempt to recover the man's body.

Around 200 foreign workers who were at the scene of the attack but did not directly participate will be issued an advisory, and will be allowed to stay in Singapore, "on condition of continued good behavior," Ng said Tuesday.

Police do not expect to make many more arrests, charges or repatriations over the incident, he added.

An investigation into the accident that sparked the riot is ongoing.

/* push in config for this share instance */cnn_shareconfig.push({"id" : "cnn_sharebar2","url" : "http://www.cnn.com/2013/12/18/world/asia/singapore-deports-rioters/index.html","title" : "Singapore to deport foreign workers over \'Little India\' riot"});ADVERTISEMENTDecember 23, 2013 -- Updated 1653 GMT (0053 HKT) What do artificial whiskers and coffee-filled balloons have in common? December 23, 2013 -- Updated 0831 GMT (1631 HKT) Members of the Lebanese Red Cross carry the coffin of Abbas Khan, a British doctor who died in a Syrian jail, as it arrives in Beirut on December 21, 2013. Death has become so normal in Syria that most people fail to notice it, writes a former foreign ministry official.December 23, 2013 -- Updated 2132 GMT (0532 HKT) Flamboyant former NBA star Dennis Rodman has left North Korea without meeting the country's leader Kim Jong Un.December 22, 2013 -- Updated 1458 GMT (2258 HKT) Russian dissident Mikhail Khodorkovsky is telling the world about the 10 years he spent behind bars as a critic of the Kremlin. December 23, 2013 -- Updated 1435 GMT (2235 HKT) Setre Chapel, Japan This dramatic chapel, designed by Ryyuich Ashizawa, accepts all faiths and is free from iconography. It was hoped the huge window facing over the sea would imbue the space with a sense of the sacred. It's a question that's plagued mankind for centuries -- how do you create an earthly structure worthy of the divine?December 23, 2013 -- Updated 0115 GMT (0915 HKT) After 30 years of reporting in China, CNN's Jaime FlorCruz takes a look at the challenges Western journalists face in the country.December 23, 2013 -- Updated 1331 GMT (2131 HKT) A Santa Claus holds up a letter. The answer may surprise you. Many mail and postal services have special programs to ensure Santa receives and responds to children's letters.kimg jong un After their leader Kim Jong Un had his own uncle executed, how do ordinary North Koreans feel?December 24, 2013 -- Updated 0232 GMT (1032 HKT) You're more likely to die at Christmas than at any other time.December 19, 2013 -- Updated 1026 GMT (1826 HKT) Which has been the craziest year in travel history? It just could be 2013.December 23, 2013 -- Updated 1258 GMT (2058 HKT) Browse through images you don't always see in news reports, taken by CNN teams all around the world.December 23, 2013 -- Updated 1524 GMT (2324 HKT) Each day, CNN brings you an image capturing a moment to remember. Look back at the photographs that chronicled 2013.Today's five most popular storiesMoreADVERTISEMENT

View the original article here

No comments:

Post a Comment