黑料社

Singapore anti-vaxxers sue SPH for not being anti-vaxx

At left, the online group鈥檚 logo and The Straits Times article published in August. Images: Healing the Divide/Facebook, The Straits Times
At left, the online group鈥檚 logo and The Straits Times article published in August. Images: Healing the Divide/Facebook, The Straits Times

One of Singapore鈥檚 biggest media this morning rejected legal claims by a group of anti-vaxxers that it published false information about the coronavirus.

Singapore Press Holdings said it would defend itself against a meritless lawsuit filed late last month by a group called Healing the Divide over an opinion piece by its senior health correspondent urging differential treatment of the unvaccinated.

鈥溾嬧媁e have received the legal notice. We believe that there is no basis for the application. We stand by our report and will defend this rigorously,鈥 SPH told 黑料社 today.

The lawsuit was announced by the group yesterday, which said it filed it under Section 15 of the Protection from Harassment Act. 

鈥淎s the main source of information in this country, we feel that they have both a legal and moral obligation to present the facts regarding COVID-19 and the pandemic and we would like to hold them to account,鈥 the statement read, adding that they were hoping the court would issue a correction order to SPH.

It targets two statements based on widely supported understanding of the virus and seems more likely to win attention than impress a court of law.

The group, with over 800 followers, said it was not suing the company for harassment but for 鈥渕aking false statements of fact鈥 in the article written by Senior Health Correspondent Salma Khalik in August. 

In it, Khalik said those who are unvaccinated were not being fair and putting others at risk of contracting the virus, and that the government should not subsidize their treatment or insure them.

They specifically pointed out two statements in the article: 鈥淥nly fair to protect vulnerable in S鈥榩ore against Covid-19 spread by unvaccinated people.鈥 and 鈥淧eople who are not vaccinated face a much higher risk of getting infected and spreading the disease.鈥

Both statements are supported by scientific consensus. The group did not elaborate on why it found them false.

The group also did not identify the member who filed the lawsuit on Oct. 28.  Healing the Divide did not immediately respond to a message from 黑料社 seeking comment.

In response to the group鈥檚 next steps, it said that 鈥渢he wheels of justice turn slowly鈥 and a pre-trial conference is set for the end of the month.  

On Sunday, the Ministry of Health announced that YouTube removed videos that spread misinformation about the vaccines from founder Iris Koh鈥檚 channel for violating the platform’s 鈥渕edical misinformation policy.鈥 She had also been suspended from Facebook previously for the same reasons.

Koh responded to the news saying they are not anti-vaxxers but rather 鈥嬧嬧漣ntelligent vaxxers.鈥 On her site, she publishes rambling pieces filled with misinformation, such as last month鈥檚 reality-challenged entry 鈥淐an we POFMA Science?鈥

As of Tuesday, 85% of Singapore has been fully vaccinated.

Other stories you should check out:

COVID-19 spreads through prison where Malaysian held on death row
COVID surprise blows up Singapore鈥檚 plan to hang Malaysian




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