There are several notable cases where the Singaporean government has flagged OB markers.
Catherine Lim In 1994, author
Catherine Lim published an essay
The PAP and the people - A Great Affective Divide suggesting that the
People's Action Party is not representative of the people. Then-Prime Minister
Goh Chok Tong warned her to join a political party if she wanted to air political views in public, and stated that "demolishing the respect for and standing of the Prime Minister and his government by systematic contempt and denigration in the media" was out of bounds.
2005 White Elephant incidents where, in 2005, the "White Elephant" incident took place The lack of clear definition of OB marker resulted in mixed responses by the police and the government during the
"White Elephant" incidents at
Buangkok MRT station in 2005. An undisclosed person posted a series of cut-outs of elephants to criticise the delayed opening of the mass transit station. This led to a police investigation. Although the person was later let off with a stern warning, Deputy Prime Minister
Wong Kan Seng commented that "we cannot apply the law to some and turn a blind eye to others. If we do, then the law becomes the real white elephant." Later, a group of students from
Raffles Girls' School were preparing to sell T-shirts bearing the phrase "Save the White Elephants" to raise fund for a charity. This prompted a warning from the police, but later Wong admitted that the police had over-reacted.
mrbrown In 2006, blogger
mrbrown wrote the article "S'poreans are fed, up with progress!", for his weekly opinion column in
Today concerning the rising costs of living in Singapore. The
Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts labelled him a "partisan player" whose views "distort the truth", and his column was suspended by the paper. ==Criticism==