Published: 15:07, January 9, 2021 | Updated: 05:42, June 5, 2023
S'pore to legislate on contact-trace data use in crime probes
By Bloomberg

A worker shows the TraceTogether contact-tracing phone app on his smartphone at the Westlite Mandai worker dormitory in Singapore on Aug 31, 2020. (PHOTO / BLOOMBERG)

Singapore’s government plans to create urgent legislation to formalize the use of virus contact-tracing data in investigations of serious crimes.

Legislation will be introduced in the next sitting of parliament in February to limit the use of the data to probes of seven categories of serious crimes, the Smart Nation and Digital Government Office said in a statement Friday. Those will include murder, terrorism, kidnapping and serious sexual offences, it said.

The move comes amid concerns over privacy issues in the city-state’s contact-tracing program designed to help contain the spread of the coronavirus.

We acknowledge our error in not stating that data from TraceTogether is not exempt from the Criminal Procedure Code.

Singapore's Smart Nation and Digital Government Office

“We acknowledge our error in not stating that data from TraceTogether is not exempt from the Criminal Procedure Code,” the Smart Nation and Digital Government Office said in the statement.

ALSO READ: Contact tracing raises privacy concerns

Gerald Giam, a lawmaker for the opposition Workers’ Party, posted this week on Facebook that it’s “ill-advised” that the government hasn’t ruled out the use of TraceTogether data for criminal investigations.

“It is not in the public interest to completely deny the Police access to such data, when the safety of the public or the proper conduct of justice is at stake,” the Smart Nation and Digital Government Office said in the statement.

READ MORE: S'pore to monitor workers at dorms with contact-trace tokens

TraceTogether is being used by 78 percent of Singapore’s population. According to its website, the program does not collect data about individual GPS locations, Wifi or mobile networks being used. But a clause about data being only used to contact trace people exposed to the coronavirus was removed and replaced with a statement noting that police “can obtain any data, including TraceTogether data, for criminal investigations.”