Singapore bans popular gay party
Health minister blames annual event for rise in gay HIV infections
SINGAPORE (AP) | Jun 8, 7:19 PM

Singapore has banned one of Asia's largest annual gay-themed outdoor parties because it is "contrary to public interest,'' police said on Wednesday.

The decision came a few months after a senior official in this tightly controlled Southeast Asian island nation blamed such parties for the rise in HIV infections among gays.

Hong Kong-based Fridae.com, an Internet-based network of Asian gays, applied through its Singapore subsidiary, Jungle Media, for a permit to hold its annual Nation beach party here in August.

But the application has been turned down because the "police assessment is that the event is likely to be organized as a gay party, which is contrary to public interest in general," a police statement said, without elaborating.

The past four Nation parties were held in Singapore. At least 8,000 revelers attended the last one, generating an estimated $6 million in tourist revenue, organizers say.

On Fridae.com's Web site, organizers said they would hold this year's three-day Nation '05 on Thailand's resort island of Phuket instead.
     
Singapore official Balaji Sadasivan said international gay parties 'allowed gays from high-prevalence societies to fraternise with local gay men.'

In March, Singapore's Junior Health Minister Balaji Sadasivan suggested that a rise in HIV infections among gays in Singapore was linked to gatherings like the Nation parties which, he said, "allowed gays from high-prevalence societies to fraternise with local gay men, seeding the infection in the local community.''

Fridae.com chief Stuart Koe said on the Web site that he was disappointed by Singapore's rejection of the license application.

"This is a direct contradiction to previous calls for embracing of diversity,'' he said.

Singapore, a a city-state of 4 million people, has taken some steps to loosen its notorious social controls. But it bans gay sex, defining it as "an act of gross indecency'' punishable by a maximum of two years in jail. There have been few prosecutions, however.

The number of new, officially reported AIDS cases in Singapore reached 311 in 2004, nearly 30 percent more than in the previous year.