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Singapore charges 24 Indian workers for rioting

The 24 Indian workers face jail terms of up to seven years plus caning for taking part in the city-state’s first riot in more than 40 years

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A group of Indian nationals, who allegedly took part in Singapore's first riot for over 40 years, arrive in a police van at the Subordinate courts to be charged. Photo: AFP

Singapore on Tuesday filed charges against 24 Indian nationals who allegedly took part in its first riot for over 40 years, as officials and activists warned against inciting racial hatred over the incident.

The men face up to seven years in jail plus caning for the hour-long fracas on Sunday night, triggered when an Indian construction worker was struck and killed by a private bus in a district known as Little India.

They were among an estimated 400 South Asian migrant workers involved in the rampage that left 39 police and civil defence staff injured and 25 vehicles – including 16 police cars – damaged or burnt.

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The charge sheet said the men threw pieces of concrete and were “members of an unlawful assembly whose common object was to overawe, by a show of criminal force, police officers in the exercise of their lawful power to maintain law and order at the scene”.

The suspects, aged between 22 to 40, looked sombre as the charges were read in Tamil in court by an interpreter.

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They were remanded at a police complex for one week for further investigations.

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