The outgoing US envoy to Singapore criticised the city state's limits on political expression, saying governments will pay an increasing price for failing to give citizens freedom of choice and expression.
US Ambassador Franklin Lavin said it was surprising to find what he called constraints on discussions given Singapore's strong international links.
"In this era of weblogs and webcams, how much sense does it make to limit political expression?" Mr Lavin told an audience at his farewell dinner on Tuesday. The speech was made available on the US embassy's website.
In August, police ordered a 36-year-old filmmaker to surrender equipment used to make a documentary on opposition figure Chee Soon Juan. A student on a state scholarship shut down his personal website in May after a government agency threatened a libel suit for his online comments.
Then, last Friday, Singapore jailed two men for posting racist comments aimed at the country's Malay community, who are mainly Muslim, on the internet.
"Remaking [Singapore's] economy is, in a sense, the easy decision. Shaping a political system to reflect the needs and aspirations of its citizens is more difficult and more sensitive."
Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong last week ruled out adopting a western liberal democracy with a multiparty system in the next 20 years, saying it was unsuitable for the country.
Mr Lavin, whose four-year tenure saw the conclusion of a US-Singapore free-trade agreement and a strengthening of security ties, takes up a new post in Washington as undersecretary for international trade at the US Department of Commerce.
A parliamentary republic with elections held at regular, constitutionally mandated intervals, Singapore has been dominated by the People's Action Party (PAP) since independence in 1965.
Opposition politicians, who hold only two of the 84 seats in Parliament, have long complained that frequent defamation suits by PAP officials have stifled dissent -- a view echoed by a 2004 US State Department report on Singapore.
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