Reopening the city-state has stoked a surge in new cases and panic among anxious residents
Protesters
 from the US to Australia and across Europe have railed against 
government interference and repressive Covid restrictions. But in 
Singapore, a sizeable chunk of the population is asking for even greater
 state control.
A petition is circulating in the city-state to 
bring back mandatory quarantine for all overseas travellers, despite the
 Delta variant already circulating widely, while a quarter of 
Singaporeans are in favour of a return to lockdown restrictions.
Singapore’s
 government announced with great optimism in June that it would change 
its “zero-Covid” approach and instead learn to live with the virus.
Its
 strategy was held up as a model for other countries looking for a safe 
way out of the pandemic. But as cases inevitably rose in August and 
September, panic set in.
Authorities responded this week by 
rolling back freedoms for residents despite outpacing most advanced 
economies in fully vaccinating 82 per cent of its population.
Tightly
 controlled Singapore, whose quasi-authoritarian government largely bars
 any protest, had come the furthest among Asian cities in opening up.
The decision has led to a rare occurrence in the city-state: rising public dissent over the government’s strategy.
“I
 have never in 20 years seen the academic or medical professional 
industry so vocal in their disagreement with the government as it is 
over the treatment of asymptomatic cases,” said Jeremy Lim, of the Saw 
Swee Hock School of Public Health at the National University of 
Singapore.
Nearly a quarter of people in Singapore felt the 
latest restrictions were too lax, while more than half felt they were 
“just right”, according to market research firm Milieu Insight this 
week. One quarter felt they were too strict.
“What surprised me 
is how divided people were. There were a lot of people upset by the 
measures but an equal amount were supportive of more restrictions,” said
 Stephen Tracy, managing director of Milieu. “There is a sense, however,
 that the latest rules are not in line with the strategy the government 
laid out.”
A petition calling for all returning travellers to 
quarantine for two weeks in designated hotels or government facilities 
garnered nearly 3,000 signatures by Thursday. 
“There is a lower 
tolerance for the sheer number of deaths and cases seen in other 
countries because of the way we avoided that for most of the pandemic,” 
said Dale Fisher, a senior infectious diseases consultant at Singapore’s
 National University Hospital. 
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