Alcohol ban was introduced to restore law and order after the riot in Little India last month
Singapore
will impose an alcohol ban in the area where the Hindu religious festival Thai Poosam is to be celebrated on Friday,
police said.
The
ban would be in force from 6 pm on Thursday to 6 am local time next Monday in
the Little India precinct, where weekend alcohol ban is imposed during weekends
following the December 8 riot involving some 400 migrant workers from South
Asia.
Thai
Poosam marks the celestial event of Lord Muruga
receiving Vel (spear) from his mother Goddess Parvathi to vanquish an evil
demon.
It
also commemorates Lord Shiva’s dance of the ‘ananda tandava’ that revealed His
form of Nataraja at the hallowed Shiva temple of Chidambaram in Tamil Nadu.
Besides
South India, Thai Poosam is annually celebrated by the Tamil
community in Singapore and Malaysia and has become a tourist calendar event in
both places.
The Thai Poosam procession would begin on Thursday 11
pm local time from Sri Srinivasa Perumal Temple at Serangoon Road in Little
India and end at Sri Thendayuthapani Temple at Tank Road, just off the central
business district.
Individual
group of Hindu worshipers would continue the procession in turn through Friday
11.59 pm local time.
K
Shekaran, chairman of Sri Srinivasa Perumal Temple, said, “We have informed all
devotees through guidelines that consumption of alcohol and smoking is not
permitted within the processions route.
“The
new initiative covers beyond the procession route and that will help further
enhance organisation of the event and maintain the sanctity of the religious
event,” Channel News Asia quoted Shekaran as saying.
Alcohol
ban was introduced to restore law and order after the riot in Little India,
which gets crowded over the weekends and during holidays with migrant workers
from South Asia spending their day off amidst a cluster of Indian-origin
businesses, eateries and pubs.
The
spontaneous riot on December 8 was sparked by an accident in which an Indian
national was killed.
It
was Singapore’s worst street violent in 40 years.
The
rampage left 39 police and civil defence staff injured and 25 vehicles ——
including 16 police cars —— damaged.
Twenty-five
Indian nationals are facing riot charges in court.
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