+   *    +     +     
About Us 
The Issues 
Our Research Products 
Order Publications 
Multimedia 
Press Room 
Resources for Monitor Researchers 
ARCHIVES HOME PAGE 
    >
Email Notification Receive notifications when this Country Profile is updated.

Sections



Send us your feedback on this profile

Send the Monitor your feedback by filling out this form. Responses will be channeled to editors, but will not be available online. Click if you would like to send an attachment. If you are using webmail, send attachments to .

Singapore

Last Updated: 30 July 2012

Cluster Munition Ban Policy

The Republic of Singapore has not acceded to the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

In a March 2012 letter, a Ministry of Foreign Affairs official said that there was no update to the policy information provided in a letter to the Monitor in May 2010 and stated that the “indefinite moratorium on the export of cluster munitions has not changed.”[1] The official did not elaborate on Singapore’s position towards joining the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

In the May 2010 letter, the same official said, “Singapore believes that humanitarian concerns pertaining to anti-personnel mines and cluster munitions should be balanced against the legitimate right of States to use such munitions judiciously for self-defence…. We will continue to support international efforts to resolve the humanitarian concerns over anti-personnel mines and cluster munitions, and to work with members of the international community towards a durable and truly global solution.”[2]

Singapore has expressed concern at the way in which the Convention on Cluster Munitions was “negotiated outside of the United Nations framework into the United Nations system.”[3] Singapore participated as an observer in one meeting of the Oslo Process that created the convention.[4]

Singapore participated as an observer in the convention’s First Meeting of States Parties in Vientiane, Lao PDR in November 2010, but did not attend the Second Meeting of States Parties in Beirut, Lebanon in September 2011. Singapore participated in the first intersessional meetings of the convention in Geneva in June 2011, but did not attend intersessional meetings in April 2012.

Singapore is not a party to the Mine Ban Treaty.

Singapore is not a party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons, but attended the CCW’s Fourth Review Conference in November 2011 as an observer. Singapore did not make any statements to express its views on draft text of the proposed CCW protocol on cluster munitions. The Review Conference ended without reaching agreement on the draft protocol and with no proposals for continuing the negotiations in 2012, thus concluding the CCW’s work on cluster munitions.

Use, production, transfer, and stockpiling

Singapore is not known to have used cluster munitions, but it produces and stockpiles the weapon.

According to Jane’s Information Group, Advanced Material Engineering Pte Ltd., a subsidiary of Singapore Technologies Engineering, produces 155mm dual purpose improved conventional munition (DPICM) artillery projectiles, each containing 64 bomblets and equipped with electro-mechanical self-destruct fuzes.[5] The company also produces a 120mm mortar bomb that delivers 25 DPICM grenades.[6] 

Singapore received 350 CBU-71 air-delivered cluster bombs from the United States (US) at some point between 1970 and 1995.[7]

Details on the size of Singapore’s stockpile remain unknown, as the government has not chosen to disclose such information. It is not known if Singapore possesses other types of cluster munitions in addition to its domestically produced 155mm projectiles and 120mm mortar bombs, and the US-supplied cluster bombs.

In November 2008, Singapore announced that, while it did not plan to sign the Convention on Cluster Munitions, it would impose an indefinite moratorium on the export of cluster munitions with immediate effect.[8] In May 2010, a Ministry of Foreign Affairs official told the Monitor that the indefinite export moratorium was undertaken “to ensure that these munitions will not be transferred to other parties who might use them indiscriminately and irresponsibly.”[9]

When asked by the Monitor if it was producing cluster munitions, Singapore Technologies Engineering stated in May 2010 that, “ST Engineering does not produce cluster munitions for export, nor are we a sub-contractor to anyone who does. We are committed to work with the Singapore government and abide by the moratorium imposed by the Singapore government on the export of cluster munitions.”[10] 

In the past, companies in Singapore publicly advertised cluster munitions for sale. However, it is not known if exports actually occurred.

According to the report “Worldwide Investments in Cluster Munitions: a shared responsibility,” at least four Singaporean financial entities are involved in investments in manufacturers of cluster munitions. Singapore Technologies Engineering receives investments from at least seven US financial entities, four United Kingdom (UK) financial entities, and one each in France, Germany, Liechtenstein, Singapore and Switzerland.[11]

 

 



[1] Letter from Seah Seow Chen, First Secretary, Permanent Mission of Singapore to the UN in Geneva, 13 March 2012.

[2] Ibid., 4 May 2010.

[3] Ministry of Foreign Affairs, “Singapore’s Explanation of Position on Resolution L16 on the ‘Convention on Cluster Munitions’ at the First Committee, 64th UNGA, on 28 October 2009,” www.app.mfa.gov.sg.

[4] Singapore did not participate in any of the preparatory meetings of the Oslo Process but sent an observer to the Dublin negotiations in May 2008. For details on Singapore’s cluster munition policy and practice through early 2009, see Human Rights Watch and Landmine Action, Banning Cluster Munitions: Government Policy and Practice (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, May 2009), pp. 238–239.

[5] Leland S. Ness and Anthony G. Williams, eds., Jane’s Ammunition Handbook 2007–2008 (Surrey, UK: Jane’s Information Group Limited, 2007), pp. 657–658. The bomblets have an advertised dud rate of less than 3%.

[6] Singapore Technologies Engineering, “Product: 155m Cargo Round,” www.stengg.com.

[7] US Defense Security Assistance Agency, Department of Defense, “Cluster Bomb Exports under FMS, FY1970–FY1995,” 15 November 1995, obtained by Human Rights Watch in a Freedom of Information Act request.

[8] “Joint Press Statement By Ministry Of Foreign Affairs And Ministry Of Defence: Singapore Imposes A Moratorium On The Export Of Cluster Munitions,” 26 November 2008, www.app.mfa.gov.sg.

[9] Letter from Chen, Permanent Mission of Singapore to the UN in Geneva, 4 May 2010.

[10] Email from Sharolyn Choy, Senior Vice President, Corporate Communications, Singapore Technologies Engineering, 3 May 2010. 

[11] IKV-Pax Christi and FAIRFIN, “Worldwide Investments in Cluster Munitions: a shared responsibility,” June 2012, pp.18−22, http://bit.ly/KDRw8Q.