Association of Women for Action and Research
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Founded | 25 November 1985 |
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Type | Non-profit, Non-governmental organisation |
Registration no. | S85SS0089B |
Focus | Gender Equality |
Location |
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Coordinates | 1°18′16″N 103°46′56″E / 1.30432°N 103.78227°E |
Area served | Singapore |
Key people | Corinna Lim, Executive Director |
Website | Official website |
The Association of Women for Action and Research (AWARE) is a not-for-profit organisation that advocates for gender equality and provides critical support services for women in Singapore. It is a registered charity with Institute of Public Character status.[1]
AWARE believes in the rights of women and men to make informed and responsible choices about their lives and to have equal opportunities in education, marriage and employment, and in the right of women to control their own bodies, particularly with regard to sexual and reproductive rights.[1]
Founding years
[edit]AWARE was formed in 1985 following a forum held by the National University of Singapore Society in November 1984. The forum, which was called "Women's Choices, Women's Lives", was organised by Zaibun Siraj, daughter of Mrs Mohamed Sirah, and Dr Vivienne Wee.[2] Women from various professional backgrounds attended the forum. Speakers included orthopaedic surgeon Dr Kanwaljit Soin, director of the National Library Hedwig Anuar and deputy Sunday editor of the Singapore Monitor, Margaret Thomas.[2]
Participants of the forum were unhappy with the government's rhetoric at the time, along with its introduction of controversial family and population policies. They were especially affected by how women were being singled out as being responsible for the falling fertility rate.[2]
Following the forum, it was felt that there was a need for an organisation that would specifically focus on improving women's social and legal status in Singapore. Other women's groups were mostly social or welfare groups which did not engage in advocacy work. According to Siraj, these groups were not particularly seeking to change the status of women in society at the time.[3]
AWARE was launched after a year of discussion, during which the organisation's structure was defined and its constitution written.[2]
Philosophy
[edit]Vision
[edit]AWARE seeks to help create a society where there is true gender equality – where women and men are valued as individuals free to make informed and responsible choices about their lives.[4]
Mission
[edit]AWARE seeks to remove all gender-based barriers so as to allow individuals in Singapore to develop their potential to the fullest and realise their personal visions and hopes.[4]
Values
[edit]- AWARE embraces diversity, and promotes understanding and acceptance of diversity.
- AWARE respects the individual and the choices she makes in life, and supports her when needed.
- AWARE recognises the human rights of all, regardless of gender, so that everyone can realise their aspirations.
AWARE's services
[edit]Women's Care Centre and Sexual Assault Care Centre
[edit]AWARE's Women's Care Centre provides information and support for women who are in distress or at a time of uncertainty in their lives.[5]
The Sexual Assault Care Centre (SACC) provides free services to those who have experienced sexual assault and harassment, helping them deal with their experiences and make decisions about their next steps.[6] The Centre oversees sexual assault and harassment cases, providing counselling, legal information and befriender services to survivors.[7]
Both the Women's Care Centre and Sexual Assault Care Centre offer experienced counsellors to help women resolve a life crisis, deal with a painful past, adjust to changed circumstances or seek out new directions.[8]
In 2014, the SACC launched a crowd-funding campaign which is supported by local artistes such as Zoe Tay and Judee Tan.[7]
Women's Helpline
[edit]AWARE runs Singapore's only specialised hotline catered to women. The organisation's Helpline helps callers with a variety of concerns, and offers empathy, support, information and encouragement.[9] Clients may also make an appointment to speak to a counsellor or lawyer. These calls and cases are kept strictly confidential.
Outreach
[edit]AWARE held an intensive five-month training programme for English-speaking Helpliners to equip them with knowledge on dealing with domestic violence, marital problems, mental health and LGBTQ matters.[4]
From March 2018, the Helpline and Befriender services were made available in English, Malay, Tamil and Mandarin.[9]
The organisation has also expanded its knowledge of Syariah law in order to better support Muslim women.[9]
Counselling
[edit]AWARE provides professional counselling services for women. The organisation's staff is experienced in working with women on issues such as crisis and trauma, family violence, sexual assault and harassment, marital and psychological issues, as well as a wide range of other matters.[1]
AWARE's Sexual Assault Care Centre provides three counselling sessions free of cost for survivors of sexual assault and harassment.
Legal information
[edit]AWARE offers a free legal clinic twice a month, with experienced lawyers providing women with legal information and advice.[1] The organisation conducted 93 legal information sessions in 2016, with 85% of clients responding that the advice given by the lawyer helped them to make an informed decision.[4]
Befriending
[edit]AWARE's Befriender service accompanies women who are victims of violence to the Family Justice Courts of Singapore, police stations, hospitals and other help centres.[4] The Befrienders' presence helps women who are fearful of facing a Respondent face-to-face at mentions or hearings.[4] AWARE conducted 45 befriending trips in 2016, with 93% of clients saying that the befrienders were encouraging and supportive.[4] Befrienders services are arranged by referral through AWARE's Women's Helpline. Support Services staff then respond within three days.
Research and advocacy
[edit]Research
[edit]Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)
[edit]Since 1998, AWARE has had a sub-committee that writes and submits shadow reports to the United Nations (UN) CEDAW, on the status of women and ongoing gender inequalities in Singapore. This shadow report serves as a complement to Singapore's national submission. AWARE has submitted three such shadow reports: one in 2007, one in 2011 and one in 2017.[10]
AWARE was one of the 13 NGOs that submitted a joint report to the UN CEDAW Committee on 2 October 2017.[11] The report was titled ‘Many Voices, One Movement’.[12] This was the first time that the different NGOs collaborated to produce a joint report. The report highlighted various key recommendations, which included the adoption of gender quotas to improve women's representation in public positions (including the Cabinet); the elimination of the "head of household" concept from policy and decision-making; the implementation of a comprehensive anti-discrimination law to better prevent pregnancy discrimination and discrimination against Muslim women on the basis of religious garb; the decision to allow Muslims to choose to distribute estates in accordance with Muslim or civil law; as well as the removal of marital immunity for all sexual violence offences.[12]
The Financial Cost of Caregiving
[edit]In 2018, AWARE started a qualitative research project to investigate the financial costs of caregiving for older persons in Singapore. AWARE interviewed 23 primary caregivers aged 45–65 within a span of two months, investigating how families decide on their care arrangements, including: whether to care at home or at a nursing home, whether to engage professional care services or hire a foreign domestic worker, and which family member should be the primary caregiver responsible for housing the care recipient and coordinating their care. Preliminary analysis of the data has revealed the challenges of balancing work and care for female caregivers, with many women leaving paid employment during their prime working years in order to provide care. AWARE's research looks into how this loss in income and increase in out-of-pocket care-related expenses results in financial insecurity for these women as they worry about having enough for their own future care needs.
Public campaigns
[edit]#asinglelove: Standing Up for Single Parents
[edit]#asinglelove is a campaign initiated by AWARE in collaboration with Kinetic Singapore and Daughters of Tomorrow (DOT), a non-governmental organisation which seeks to improve access to jobs for lower-income women. The campaign was organised to support and empower single parents, promote more supportive and equitable policies for them, and encourage welcoming and inclusive attitudes towards them.
AWARE conducted in-depth interviews with single mothers in 2016. The data from the research was gathered to provide material for AWARE's submissions to policy-makers. A report on single parents found that 95% of interviewees who sought public housing faced problems, from unrealistic income ceilings and long debarment periods to a lack of transparency and clarity in policies.[13] The report also outlined the five biggest challenges that they encounter: housing, employment, childcare, poverty and stigma.[13]
AWARE's petition for equal rights for single parents was also featured in various media outlets, including Cleo, a women's magazine.
Gender Equality is our Culture (GEC) Project
[edit]Gender Equality is our Culture (GEC) was a project running from September 2013 to December 2018, developed in collaboration with Solidaritas Perempuan in Indonesia.[4] It was funded by the UN Women Fund for Gender Equality.
Through community engagement, the development of Muslim women's authentic voices, and collaborations within regional networks, GEC worked to counter the state's narrative that “culture” inhibits a full commitment to gender equality.[14]
Aim For Zero
[edit]In November 2018, AWARE launched a two-year campaign called Aim For Zero, urging Singaporeans to move towards a society with zero sexual violence. This campaign was sparked by the global #MeToo movement that erupted in late 2017, whereby women spoke up about the sexual violence they had suffered in their lives. The rise of #MeToo was accompanied by a 79% spike in cases at AWARE's Sexual Assault Care Centre in October 2017.[15]
Aim For Zero had an official launch event on 26 November 2018, International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women. Guest-of-Honour for the opening event was Singapore's Minister for Law and Home Affairs, K Shanmugam. At the event, AWARE debuted a video featuring 10 Singaporean women talking about their own experiences of sexual violence, many for the first time.[16]
Working with policy-makers
[edit]Single parents
[edit]The Ministry of National Development (MND) had responded to AWARE's in-depth December 2016 study on single parents, saying that it would take the organisation's findings into consideration.[17]
Following the study, AWARE launched a petition on 15 May 2017, in conjunction with the International Day of Families, to lobby the Singapore government to give more help to single parents.[18] The petition launch was accompanied by a video ("Single Parents Talk Housing"), showing six single mothers discussing the challenges they faced when they attempted to obtain housing.[19][20]
Parliamentary push for housing access for single parents also helped to boost AWARE's stance on the issue. On 11 September 2017, Nee Soon Group Representation Constituency (GRC) MP Louis Ng submitted a separate petition to Parliament on behalf of seven single parents.[20] The petition called for amendments to the Housing and Development Act to prevent discrimination based on marital status.[21]
MP Louis Ng hoped that the petition would result in the recognition of unmarried parents and their children as a family nucleus to ensure their eligibility for public housing schemes.[22] In addition, he hoped to remove debarment periods preventing divorced parents from renting from the HDB or owning subsidised flats.[22]
AWARE's study, its petition, the parliamentary push by MP Louis Ng as well as the personal struggles of single parents were covered extensively by the mainstream media.[17][23]
Female caregivers and older women
[edit]In 2017, AWARE cast a spotlight on the needs of female caregivers and older women in its advocacy related to Singapore's national budget.[24] With increasing evidence that the impact of the ageing population falls disproportionately on women, the organisation urged the government to budget for care as a social good, rather than leaving its costs for families to address on their own.[4]
As the government moved to enhance protection of older people from abuse with the Vulnerable Adults Act, AWARE also highlighted the importance of balancing the need to empower interventions by public agencies against the rights to privacy and due process.[25] The organisation also emphasised, in the media conversation, the need to place elder abuse in the context of a wider caregiving infrastructure.[26][4]
AWARE addressed similar concerns in its budget recommendations in 2018 and 2019.[27][28]
Migrant spouses
[edit]AWARE has kept the rights of foreign spouses on Singapore policy-makers' agendas. AWARE worked with members of parliament to highlight the lack of rights and support for migrant spouses, particularly foreign wives of Singaporean citizen men, as a key women's rights matter at the UN Human Rights Council in June 2016.
To mark International Migrants’ Day in 2016, AWARE also released a policy brief calling for key reforms that would particularly help lower-income transnational families.[29]
Strengthening civil society networks
[edit]Power Fund: Women's Fund For Change
AWARE announced the launch of the Power Fund: Women's Fund For Change, a fund to provide emerging women's rights groups with seed funding and other resources, at its annual fundraiser, The Love Ball, in September 2017.[30]
Awards, honours and recognition
[edit]In 2015, AWARE was one of Just Cause Asia's top four recommended charities to donate to, out of 10 different women's-focused organisations.[4] Just Cause Asia's conclusions were based on surveys of staff, volunteers, beneficiaries and partners, together with a review of finances and other key documents of each organisation. AWARE scored particularly highly in these areas: legal, governance and finance, mission and strategy, beneficiary and staff satisfaction and reputation.[4]
A 2015 public value survey on AWARE conducted by Brightpurpose found that respondents valued AWARE's influence on policy and legislation, its visible, vocal role in driving discourse by taking public stands, its "strong hands-on grounding in its Support Services and its longevity and strong organisational ethos".[31][32]
AWARE received gold-standard recognition when Singapore's Charity Council presented Charity Governance and Charity Transparency Awards to the organisation in 2016.[4]
Controversies
[edit]Attempted takeover by conservative Christian group
[edit]In 2009, the organisation made headlines when a group of conservative Christian women took over AWARE by winning 9 out of 12 available seats on the executive committee.[33] Six out of nine of the new members of the exco had attended the same church, the Anglican Church of Our Saviour (COOS) located at Margaret Drive.[34] 80 of the 120 attendees of the meeting were similarly new members from the same church.[35]
At the time, AWARE's Constitution had allowed new members to stand for elections. These new members, under the leadership of Josie Lau and organisation by Thio Su Mien, then nominated and voted in new women to the executive committee. They had alleged that AWARE was harbouring and pushing a “pro-gay agenda”.
Thio told reporters that she had encouraged the women to take over AWARE because she felt that AWARE's original focus on gender equality had shifted, claiming that “Aware seems to be only very interested in lesbianism and the advancement of homosexuality”.[36] She then attacked AWARE's sex education syllabus, which came under the Ministry of Education’s (MOE) Comprehensive Sex Education (CSE) programme. Thio claimed that AWARE’s sex education had encouraged local students to view homosexuality in ‘neutral’ terms instead of ‘negatively’, warning that “this is something which should concern parents in Singapore”.[34]
The new members had changed the locks and the security system at the AWARE Centre in Dover Crescent without the knowledge of the “Old Guard”.[34]
Eventually, after meetings between members of the “Old Guard”, they decided to challenge the new executive committee at an Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) on 2 May 2009.[33] The EGM finally concluded, after over eight hours, with a vote of no confidence in the “New Guard”, and a new executive committee elected with a mix of old and new members of AWARE.
Deputy Prime minister Wong Kan Seng commented that "a group of conservative Christians, all attending the same church, which held strong views on homosexuality, had moved in and taken over AWARE because they disapproved of what AWARE had been doing", and called for tolerance, cautioning that religion and politics must be kept separate.[37]
"We were not concerned who would control Aware because it is just one of so many NGOs in Singapore. On homosexuality policy or sexuality education in schools, there can be strong differences in view but the government’s position was quite clear. It was not at stake. But what worried us was that this was an attempt by a religiously motivated group who shared a strong religious fervour to enter civil space, take over an NGO it disapproved of and impose its agenda. And it was bound to provoke a push back from groups who held the opposite view which happened vociferously and stridently as a fierce battle."
Male Members
[edit]AWARE had received prior criticism for not allowing its male members to take up ordinary memberships at the organisation.
However, male and non-binary members have recently been granted limited voting rights. At an EGM on 26 November 2016, over 60 members voted to give voting rights to Associate Members (men and non-binary persons) subject to a 25% cap on their votes on any resolution.[39] The decision was supported by more than 70% of voting members.[39] Male members currently make up about 7 per cent of AWARE's membership.
There was also a proposal to allow male members to take up roles on the board. However, the proposal was not pushed through as it could get only 58% of the votes.[39] Changes to AWARE's Constitution can only be passed with support from at least two-thirds of the organisation's members.
Purple Light' Lyrics
[edit]In November 2013, AWARE made headlines when it brought to light certain lyrics which condoned sexual and physical violence being sung during National Service route marches. AWARE then wrote in to the Ministry of Defence (MINDEF) and the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF).
The lyrics are as shown below:
“Booking out, see my girlfriend,
Saw her with another man,
Kill the man, rape my girlfriend,
With my rifle and my buddy and me.”
The organisation was alerted to the lyrics when several men at a We Can! Workshop aimed at preventing sexual violence against women and girls told AWARE that they were disturbed by the cavalier attitude expressed toward sexual violence. In their view, such lyrics should not be part of the National Service (NS) experience.[40]
MINDEF and SAF then agreed with AWARE's stance and replied that they would take steps to “immediately halt” the singing of these lyrics.[40]
AWARE's raising of the issue, along with MINDEF and SAF's swift response in banning the lyrics, generated very intense discussions on the Internet about the significance of discontinuing the lyrics.[41] The discourse was split into two camps - those who had supported and applauded AWARE's initiative, and those who strongly disagreed with the move by either problematising AWARE's objectives or faulting its approach to the issue.[42]
Those who had criticised AWARE had done so for various reasons: that the original lyrics had not been offensive and the offensive lyrics were the brainchild of merely a few soldiers, that the song was merely a song and it does not have the capacity to cause soldiers to commit rape and that the singing of the song had to be analysed in context and soldiers were merely bonding over their shared grief of losing girlfriends to less preoccupied men outside of the army.[43] While most netizens agreed that the song lyrics were indeed offensive, they took issue with the idea of a women's organisation attempting to supposed military tradition that women in Singapore were not forced to partake in. They had also argued that AWARE should have taken a more “sensitive” approach to the issue.[43]
Some netizens, including men who had served in the army themselves, believed that the move was justified because rape culture in society should not be tolerated or condoned. They had argued that male bonding was not a reason to justify sexual assault or murder, and that if the lyrics were truly trivial, people would not have an issue with the particular verse being omitted from the song.[44] While the incident was a heated one, it had also encouraged men themselves to speak up about the military culture experienced during NS.
Enhanced Benefits for operationally ready servicemen (NSmen)
[edit]In April 2014, Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen's announced that “more will be done to help (citizen soldiers) balance work and family with military service.” He also added that a “package” of “meaningful” benefits in housing, healthcare and education was being considered for citizen soldiers.[45]
AWARE then posted a status on Facebook in response to the announcement, reiterating its opposition to additional benefits for NSmen. It argued that “every person deserves access to housing, education and healthcare, because these are basic requirements for human sustenance and social participation” and that “military service should not be held up as the single gold standard of citizen belonging”.[46] The organisation also put forth the idea that the proposal might result in “different tiers of people with different social entitlements and worth.”.[46]
The Facebook post also mentioned AWARE's stance against “any link between support for fundamental needs and an individual's status as an NSman, especially when the military may not be suitable for many people, regardless of their gender.”.[46]
The post had garnered some negative feedback from netizens and had also made its way into mainstream news.[47] Some had argued that AWARE was “jumping the gun”, that it lacked an “understanding of the need for NS” and that AWARE was not recognising the 2-year sacrifice of NSmen, being “compelled by law to sacrifice two years of their life to National Service”.[48][46][49]
However, there were other netizens who expressed more measured responses, clarifying that AWARE was not against compensation for NSmen as a whole, but more specifically, the form of compensation that Minister Ng was proposing. One netizen also attempted to address the argument that AWARE should not “interfere” in issues of security, arguing that “women contribute to security in other ways, such as working and contributing to the economy, which supports the military, they take responsibility in other ways that are not easily seen or heard.”[50]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Official Website Archived 23 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine. AWARE. 2018.
- ^ a b c d AWARE (2016). "Women Action's Website". Archived from the original on 22 April 2018.
- ^ Siraj, Khatijun Nissa and Zaibun Siraj. Interview with Kirsten Han, 24 February 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Annual Report" (PDF). AWARE. 2016. Archived (PDF) from the original on 15 October 2017.
- ^ Official Website Archived 23 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine. AWARE. 2018.
- ^ "Sexual Assault Care Centre Website". AWARE. 2018. Archived from the original on 9 December 2018.
- ^ a b "Aware launches crowd-funding campaign for Sexual Assault Care Centre". AsiaOne. 25 August 2014.
- ^ "Sexual Assault Care Centre Website". AWARE. 2018. Archived from the original on 9 December 2018.
- ^ a b c Toh, Wen Li (9 September 2017). "Aware wants to extend its social support". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 9 December 2018.
- ^ "CEDAW Shadow Reports". AWARE.org.sg. Retrieved 20 January 2019.
- ^ "Press Release: Local NGOs come together to submit joint report to the UN about gender inequalities in Singapore". Singapore CEDAW Coalition. 3 October 2017. Archived from the original on 9 December 2018.
- ^ a b "Many Voices, One Movement" (PDF). Singapore CEDAW Coalition. 2 October 2017. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 December 2018.
- ^ a b "A Single Love Website". AWARE. 2018. Archived from the original on 9 December 2018.
- ^ The Singapore government has placed reservations on Article 16 Archived 6 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) to "protect the rights of minorities in the practice of their personal and religious law.", as mentioned on page 37 in its state report Archived 15 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine. It is clear, then, that the state prioritises minority rights over the rights of women as individuals. Additionally, on page 8 of AWARE's CEDAW Shadow Report Archived 15 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine, it is highlighted that the Singapore state has declined to review its treatment of households as hierarchical, with the male predominantly being the "head of the household".
- ^ Wong, Cara (30 November 2018). "Speaking up on sexual abuse". The Straits Times. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
- ^ F., Kathleen (30 November 2018). "AWARE launches Aim for Zero campaign to end sexual violence". The Online Citizen. Archived from the original on 17 January 2019. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
- ^ a b Kok, Xing Hui (16 February 2017). "Accommodate single parents in housing policies, urges Aware". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018.
- ^ Toh, Yong Chuan (14 May 2017). "Petition to ease single parents' housing woes". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018.
- ^ The video can be found here.
- ^ a b "Petition, video on housing for single parents launched on International Day of Families". AWARE. 15 May 2017. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018.
- ^ Kok, Xing Hui (11 September 2017). "Parliament: MP submits petition for inclusive housing for single parents". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018.
- ^ a b Kok, Xing Hui (7 September 2017). "Single parents: MP to file housing petition". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018.
- ^ Kok, Xing Hui (15 February 2017). "Amend housing policies for single parents: Women's group Aware". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 15 December 2018. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
- ^ Yong, Charissa (17 January 2017). "Aware calls for more help for seniors and caregivers". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018.
- ^ Tai, Janice (15 January 2015). "Vulnerable Adults Act to include protection for self-neglect cases". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 15 December 2018.
- ^ Cheok, Jacquelyn (2 February 2015). "Singapore's Aware calls for better caregiving infrastructure". The Business Times. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018.
- ^ "AWARE calls for a budget for gender equality". 12 January 2018. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
- ^ "Budget 2019: AWARE calls for a '4G' budget for all generations". AWARE. 11 January 2019. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
- ^ "International Migrants Day: AWARE urges equality and inclusion for foreign wives". AWARE. 14 December 2016. Archived from the original on 19 October 2018.
- ^ Toh, Wen Li (8 September 2017). "Aware announces support services in 5 languages and seed fund for emerging women's rights groups". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018.
- ^ Brightpurpose conducted in-depth interviews with 24 stakeholders who have experience with AWARE's work, including policy-makers, public agencies, foundations, NGOs, higher education institutes and the media.
- ^ "AWARE lauded for its excellent standards of governance". AWARE. 29 September 2016. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018.
- ^ a b "Women's Action Timeline". AWARE. 2018. Archived from the original on 21 February 2018.
- ^ a b c Chong, Terence (2011). The AWARE Saga: Civil Society and Public Morality. Singapore: National University of Singapore Press.
- ^ Kalinga Seneviratne (30 April 2009), SINGAPORE: Evangelical Christians Take on Civil Society, archived from the original on 20 January 2015, retrieved 19 January 2015
- ^ "Unpublished Letter by Jean Lau". AWARE (Previous website). 21 April 2009.
- ^ "Comments by DPM and Minister for Home Affairs Wong Kan Seng in response to media queries related to AWARE". Archived from the original on 17 May 2009.
- ^ Alvin_Chong (22 August 2019). "PMO | National Day Rally 2009". Prime Minister's Office Singapore. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
- ^ a b c Seow, Bei Yi (29 November 2016). "Aware gives men voting rights". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 23 August 2018.
- ^ a b "The perplexing case of Purple Light". AWARE. 18 November 2013. Archived from the original on 20 July 2018.
- ^ Chow, Jermyn (16 November 2013). "Offensive verse of popular army marching song banned". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 11 March 2018.
- ^ Lui, John (27 November 2013). "Purple Light: Good riddance to bad ditties". The Straits Times.
- ^ a b "AWARE Facebook Post". Facebook. 15 November 2013. Archived from the original on 14 February 2015.
- ^ "Wrapping up the Purple Light fiasco". Sgpolitics.net. 21 November 2013. Archived from the original on 16 March 2017. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
- ^ "NSmen to get more perks in health care, housing, education". The Straits Times. 25 April 2014.
- ^ a b c d "AWARE Facebook post". Facebook. 24 April 2014.
- ^ Neo, Chai Chin (26 April 2014). "AWARE's pushback on more benefits for NSmen ignites debate". TodayONLINE. Archived from the original on 1 January 2017.
- ^ "7 things AWARE is unaware of, as shown by this gaffe". New Worlds. 25 April 2014. Archived from the original on 18 March 2017.
- ^ "AWARE clarifies its position after receiving criticism". Sgpolitics.net. 26 April 2014. Archived from the original on 9 August 2016. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
- ^ Chia, Aloysius (26 April 2014). "Why men need to consider the concerns of women regarding NS". The Online Citizen. Archived from the original on 17 December 2018. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
External links
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