Community's vital role in combating religious intolerance

Singapore takes an approach that uses a careful calibration of policy and hard law, with a 'soft' layer of peace-building networks

A "whole of state" approach is required to combat religious intolerance, hatred, enmity and incitement to violence against people based on religion or belief.

This is because this approach is multi-layered and multidimensional - calling for comprehensive action at the political level by the state, at the community level by multi-actor peace-building networks, and at the civil society level by inter-religious networks of faith leaders.

Already a subscriber? 

Read the full story and more at $9.90/month

Get exclusive reports and insights with more than 500 subscriber-only articles every month

Unlock these benefits

  • All subscriber-only content on ST app and straitstimes.com

  • Easy access any time via ST app on 1 mobile device

  • E-paper with 2-week archive so you won't miss out on content that matters to you

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on December 28, 2019, with the headline Community's vital role in combating religious intolerance. Subscribe