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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Organisational structure  





3 Ministers  





4 References  





5 External links  














Ministry of Communications and Information






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Coordinates: 1°1726.61N 103°5053.31E / 1.2907250°N 103.8481417°E / 1.2907250; 103.8481417
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts (Singapore))

Ministry of Communications and Information
Agency overview
Formed1 November 2012; 11 years ago (2012-11-01)
Preceding agency
  • Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts (MICA)
JurisdictionGovernment of Singapore
Headquarters140 Hill Street #01-01A, Old Hill Street Police Station, Singapore 179369
MottoKnowledge is Meant to be Shared
Employees2,651 (2018)[1]
Annual budgetS$1.04 billion (2019)[1]
Ministers responsible
  • Josephine Teo,
    Minister & Minister-in-charge of Cybersecurity and Smart Nation
  • Janil Puthucheary,
    Senior Minister of State, Minister-in-charge of GovTech
  • Tan Kiat How,
    Senior Minister of State
  • Rahayu Mahzam,
    Minister of State
  • Agency executives
    • Joseph Leong,
      Permanent Secretary
  • Chng Kai Fong,
    Second Permanent Secretary
  • Janadas Devan,
    Chief of Government Communications
  • Child agencies
  • Infocomm Media Development Authority
  • National Library Board
  • Personal Data Protection Commission
  • REACH
  • Websitemci.gov.sg

    1°17′26.61″N 103°50′53.31″E / 1.2907250°N 103.8481417°E / 1.2907250; 103.8481417 The Ministry of Communications and Information (MCI; Malay: Kementerian Perhubungan dan Penerangan; Chinese: 通讯及新闻部; Tamil: தொடர்பு, தகவல் அமைச்சு) is a ministry of the Government of Singapore responsible for overseeing the development of the infocomm technology, cyber security, media sectors, as well as the government's information and public communication policies. It is also responsible for maintaining the national library, national archives and public libraries.

    History[edit]

    The Old Hill Street Police Station is currently the headquarters of the Ministry of Communications and Information

    On 5 June 1959, the Ministry of Culture came into being with the swearing-in and appointments of ministers of the new Government of Singapore. On 1 February 1980, the Broadcasting Division of the Ministry of Culture became a statutory board, the Singapore Broadcasting Corporation.

    1985 saw the dissolution of the Ministry of Culture. Its Information Division came under the new Ministry of Communications and Information (MCI). Its arts promotion component was assimilated into the Ministry of Community Development (MCD) as the Cultural Affairs Division.

    Five years later, on 28 November 1990, the Information Division of the MCI and the Cultural Affairs Division of MCD, together with other associated departments and statutory boards, reunited to form the Ministry of Information and the Arts (MITA).

    On 1 September 1991, the Festival of Arts Secretariat, Singapore Cultural Foundation, the Arts Division of MITA, and the National Theatre Trust merged to form the National Arts Council (NAC).

    On 1 October 1994, the Singapore Broadcasting Authority (SBA) was formed as a statutory board under MITA to oversee and promote the broadcasting industry in Singapore.[2]

    On 23 November 2001, the information and communications technology (ICT) functions under the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology came under MITA. The expanded Ministry was renamed the Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts, but retained the acronym MITA. In that year, Infocomm Development Authority (IDA) became one of MITA's statutory boards.

    On 1 January 2003, the Singapore Broadcasting Authority, Singapore Films Commission and Films and Publications Department (previously under the MITA headquarters) merged to form the Media Development Authority (MDA). On 13 August 2004, the Ministry's acronym was changed from "MITA" to "MICA".

    On 1 November 2012, MICA was renamed the Ministry of Communications and Information (MCI). The move followed the restructuring of two previous ministries – MICA and the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports (MCYS) – into MCI, the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth (MCCY) and the Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF). REACH (Reaching Everyone for Active Citizenry @ Home) was assimilated into MCI while the resilience, arts and heritage portfolios became part of MCCY. MCI now oversees the development of the information and communications technology, media and design sectors, public libraries, and the Government's information and public communication policies.[3]

    On 18 January 2016, MCI announced that the Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore (IDA) and the Media Development Authority (MDA) will be restructured into two new entities: The Info-communications Media Development Authority (IMDA) and the Government Technology Organisation (GTO) (now Government Technology Agency; GovTech), in the second half of 2016.[4] The new statutory boards were formed on 1 October 2016.

    On 8 July 2024, MCI will be renamed to Ministry of Digital Development and Information (MDDI).[5]

    Organisational structure[edit]

    MCI has two statutory boards, the Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA) and the National Library Board (NLB).

    MCI also manages the Cyber Security Agency, a national agency overseeing cybersecurity strategy, operations, education, outreach, and ecosystem development and the Personal Data Protection Commission, Singapore's primary data protection authority.

    Ministers[edit]

    The Ministry is headed by the Minister for Communications and Information, who is appointed as part of the Cabinet of Singapore. The incumbent minister is MP for Jalan Besar GRC Josephine Teo from the People's Action Party.

    Portrait Name
    (Birth–Death)
    Took office Left office Party Cabinet
    Minister for Culture (1959–1985)
    S. Rajaratnam
    MP for Kampong Glam
    (1915–2006)
    5 June
    1959
    12 August
    1965
    PAP Lee K. I
    Lee K. II
    Othman Wok
    MP for Pasir Panjang
    (1924–2017)
    12 August
    1965
    15 April
    1968
    PAP
    Jek Yeun Thong
    MP for Queenstown
    (1930–2018)
    16 April
    1968
    25 September
    1977
    PAP Lee K. III
    Lee K. IV
    Lee K. V
    Ong Teng Cheong
    MP for Kim Keat
    (1936–2002)
    Interim
    26 September
    1977
    6 January
    1981
    PAP
    S. Dhanabalan
    MP for Kallang
    (born 1937)
    6 January
    1981
    1 January
    1985
    PAP Lee K. VI
    Minister for Social Affairs (1963–1985)
    Othman Wok
    MP for Pasir Panjang
    (1924–2017)
    19 October
    1963
    30 June
    1977
    PAP Lee K. V
    Toh Chin Chye
    MP for Rochore
    (1921–2012)
    Interim
    1 July
    1977
    4 September
    1977
    PAP
    Ahmad Mattar
    MP for Brickworks
    (born 1940)
    Interim until 31 May 1984
    5 September
    1977
    1 January
    1985
    PAP
    Lee K. VI
    Minister for Communications (1968–1985)
    Yong Nyuk Lin
    MP for Geylang West
    (1918–2012)
    16 April
    1968
    31 July
    1975
    PAP Lee K. III
    Lee K. IV
    Lim Kim San
    MP for Cairnhill
    (1916–2006)
    1 August
    1975
    30 June
    1978
    PAP
    Lee K. V
    Ong Teng Cheong
    MP for Kim Keat
    (1936–2002)
    1 July
    1978
    8 May
    1983
    PAP
    Lee K. VI
    Ong Pang Boon
    MP for Telok Ayer
    (born 1929)
    9 May
    1983
    6 September
    1983
    PAP
    Yeo Ning Hong
    MP for Kim Seng
    (born 1943)
    Interim until 31 May 1984
    7 September
    1983
    1 January
    1985
    PAP
    Minister for Communications and Information (1985–1990)
    Yeo Ning Hong
    MP for Kim Seng SMC
    (born 1943)
    2 January
    1985
    27 November
    1990
    PAP Lee K. VII
    Lee K. VIII
    Minister for Information and the Arts (1990–2001)
    George Yeo
    MP for Aljunied GRC
    (born 1954)
    Interim until 30 June 1991
    28 November
    1990
    2 June
    1999
    PAP Goh I
    Goh II
    Goh III
    Lee Yock Suan
    MP for Cheng San GRC
    (born 1946)
    3 June
    1999
    22 November
    2001
    PAP
    Minister for Information, Communications and the Arts (2001–2012)
    David Lim
    MP for Aljunied GRC
    Interim
    23 November
    2001
    11 May
    2003
    PAP Goh IV
    Lee Boon Yang
    MP for Jalan Besar GRC
    (born 1947)
    12 May
    2003
    31 March
    2009
    PAP
    Lee H. I
    Lee H. II
    Lui Tuck Yew
    MP for Tanjong Pagar GRC
    (born 1961)
    Interim until 31 October 2010
    1 April
    2009
    20 May
    2011
    PAP
    Yaacob Ibrahim
    MP for Moulmein–Kallang GRC
    (born 1955)
    21 May
    2011
    31 October
    2012
    PAP Lee H. III
    Minister for Communications and Information (from 2012)
    Yaacob Ibrahim
    MP for Moulmein–Kallang GRC
    (until 2015)
    MP for Jalan Besar GRC
    (from 2015)
    (born 1955)
    1 November
    2012
    30 April
    2018
    PAP Lee H. III
    Lee H. IV
    S. Iswaran
    MP for West Coast GRC
    (born 1962)
    1 May
    2018
    14 May
    2021
    PAP
    Lee H. V
    Josephine Teo
    MP for Jalan Besar GRC
    (born 1968)
    15 May
    2021
    Incumbent PAP

    References[edit]

    1. ^ a b "Singapore Budget" (PDF).
  • ^ https://www.nlb.gov.sg/main/article-detail?cmsuuid=d2f3cb67-73c3-4859-8e30-9645e311d768
  • ^ Imelda Saad; S. Ramesh (31 July 2012), MCYS, MICA to be restructured to form 3 new ministries, Channel NewsAsia
  • ^ "IDA, MDA to be restructured to capitalise on converging media and ICT landscape". Channel NewsAsia. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  • ^ https://thesun.my/world/singapore-s-incoming-pm-lawrence-wong-unveils-cabinet-line-up-LD12448366
  • External links[edit]


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