An official rebuke to popular blogger
Mr Brown
over a newspaper article seen as critical of Singapore's government has sparked
online and offline protests.
Some comments were deemed acceptable when published in blogs, but not when
they spilled over into the mainstream media, according to a government minister
who had earlier praised the blogger's work.
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'Mr Brown', whose real name is Lee Kin Mun, claims that he was suspended from
his position as a part-time columnist for a local newspaper after the government
complained about one of his articles.
The 36 year-old writer and humorist publishes a popular blog and ongoing
series of satirical podcasts. The popularity of his work had secured him a
newspaper column.
Lee complained about the rising cost of living in Singapore and hinted that
bad news about higher prices might have been held back until after recent
elections.
He also poked fun at plans for a high-tech cashless society, and told readers
how new means-testing rules had increased the cost of education for his autistic
daughter.
The official letter accused Lee of "distorting the truth" and stated that it
was "wrong" for the humorist to "make light" of government technology plans.
"Instead of a diatribe Mr Brown should offer constructive criticism and
alternatives. And he should come out from behind his pseudonym to defend his
views openly," said the government statement.
Critics of the Ministry's letter pointed out that, despite the pseudonym, the
true identity of 'Mr Brown' was in fact widely known, and had been
published
previously in the same newspaper.
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