口頭答覆 · 2020-02-03 · 屆國會 13
政府公開投訴個人資料規範
質詢政府在公眾投訴中披露個人資料的考慮和保障措施,政府回應稱為糾正錯誤資訊維護公眾信任,披露限於必要範圍且保護隱私,同時強調多渠道服務保障公眾訴求。核心爭議在於如何平衡資訊公開與個人隱私保護。
關鍵要點
- • 糾正錯誤資訊
- • 披露限於必要
- • 保障公眾訴求
為維護公眾信任,必要時披露個人資料
關注個人隱私保護與公開透明平衡
加強個人資料披露規範
“Government agencies sometimes need to disclose personal data in the public interest, to counter inaccuracies about the Government’s processes or policies.”
參與人員 (5)
完整譯文(中文)
Hansard 原始記錄 · 2026-05-02
11 何世禮副教授詢問總理,當個人公開投訴或向政府機構遞交請願書且其中可能包含不準確內容時,(a) 政府機構在是否公開披露這些個人的身份資訊和個人詳情時考慮的因素有哪些;(b) 有哪些保障措施確保只披露最低限度的個人資訊以查明案件事實;以及 (c) 如何確保有真實訴求或未被滿足需求的個人不會因此而不敢公開尋求幫助。
通訊及資訊部和交通部高階國務部長(簡尼爾·普圖切裡博士)(代表總理) :議長先生,政府機構有時需要出於公共利益披露個人資料,以反駁公開投訴或請願書中關於政府程式或政策的不實之處,尤其是在投訴人本人將案件公之於眾的情況下。政府機構必須這樣做,以糾正不實資訊,提供準確的事實情況,從而維護公眾信任並有效服務所有公民。否則,如果公民被誤導政府的程式或政策,他們可能會不必要地焦慮,或基於錯誤資訊做出對自己不利的決定,例如決定不尋求醫療治療。
政府機構披露個人資料的範圍有限。首先,只有在機構的澄清若不披露個人資料將存在爭議或不夠清晰時,才會披露個人資料。其次,披露的個人資料必須具體到足以全面說明問題,使相關個人能夠根據提供的事實挑戰政府對案件的陳述(如有需要)。第三,注意不披露與案件無關的個人資料。這些考慮旨在保護個人資料免遭不必要的公開披露。
然而,有時即使公開的投訴本身已匿名處理,也有必要披露涉案人員的身份。這是為了消除政府事實陳述中的任何歧義,並在公眾心中最終消除對該事項的疑慮。
政府致力於將公民置於所有工作的核心。公民有多種渠道向政府尋求幫助和反饋意見,包括實體服務中心,以及如OneService應用程式和質量服務經理電子郵件等線上渠道。政府認真對待所有反饋,無論是公開表達還是通過上述渠道傳達。我們將採取必要行動解決問題,並與公眾成員完成反饋閉環。
何世禮副教授(提名議員):謝謝您,議長先生。感謝高階國務部長的答覆。我有一個補充問題。我很擔心我們會因此阻礙那些尋求幫助的人,因為這些案件可能因投訴人無法控制的原因被公開。有人可能在私人Facebook釋出帖子,結果被分享,而他們不知道為何被分享。政府是否會考慮制定一項協議,要求機構先嚐試獲得當事人同意機構釋出的澄清宣告?只有在無法獲得同意時,機構才作為最後手段在未獲同意的情況下澄清事實?
簡尼爾·普圖切裡博士:議長先生,感謝議員的提問。問題的關鍵是,這類公開宣告,無論是否匿名,都是不尋常的情況。案件、投訴人或互動中存在某些不符合標準操作程式或無法通過協議解決的特殊情況,否則我們不會處於這種局面。
其次,因此限制機構對不準確或完全錯誤的公開宣告的回應是不合適的。第三,正如議員所指出,這種做法可能被操縱,導致後續產生模糊、錯誤資訊,無論是無意還是故意。
因此,我在回答中已闡明公共部門機構應遵循的原則,以及公民對政府處理此類事項的合理期待。底線是,如果此類投訴在公開場合出現,伴隨錯誤資訊且影響政府服務公民的程式和政策被誤傳,我們應期待機構公開回應並披露資訊,以澄清事實,確保新加坡及新加坡人獲得準確資訊。
黃慧婷女士(提名議員):我可以問高階國務部長,政府是否設有渠道和措施,供認為政府不公平公開披露其個人資訊的公民尋求救濟?畢竟政府不受《個人資料保護法》(PDPA)約束。
簡尼爾·普圖切裡博士:當然,正如我之前回答中所述,有許多渠道和反饋途徑。公民可以聯絡其國會議員,或任何人,也可以使用任何這些方式,包括公開討論,若他們希望繼續追究此事。無論PDPA如何,我的回答也不影響,也不旨在阻止公民就投訴尋求救濟。只是如果投訴發生在公共空間,且因此導致公眾被誤導,出現不實陳述,則必須以明確無歧義的方式在公眾中澄清這些不實之處,並向所有人充分說明事實。
英文原文
SPRS Hansard · Fetched: 2026-05-02
11 Assoc Prof Walter Theseira asked the Prime Minister when individuals publicise complaints or petitions to Government agencies which may contain inaccuracies (a) what are the considerations behind whether Government agencies may publicly disclose identifying information and personal details of these individuals; (b) what safeguards exist to ensure that only the minimum personal information is disclosed to establish the facts of the case; and (c) what can be done to ensure that individuals with genuine grievances or unmet needs are not deterred from seeking help publicly
The Senior Minister of State for Communications and Information and Transport (Dr Janil Puthucheary) (for the Prime Minister) : Mr Speaker, Government agencies sometimes need to disclose personal data in the public interest, to counter inaccuracies about the Government’s processes or policies contained in publicised complaints or petitions, in particular, where it is the complainant who has called public attention to the case. Government agencies have to do so to correct inaccuracies and provide an accurate picture of what occurred so as to maintain public trust and to serve all citizens effectively. Otherwise, if citizens are misled about the Government’s processes or policies, they may become unnecessarily anxious or may make decisions that are detrimental to themselves based on the incorrect information, for example deciding not to seek medical treatment.
Such disclosure of personal data by Government agencies is limited in scope. First, personal data is disclosed only if the agency's clarifications would be disputable or insufficiently clear, without the disclosure of such personal data. Secondly, the personal data to be disclosed is specific enough to provide a full picture of the issue, to enable the relevant individual to challenge the Government’s account of the case, based on the facts provided, if need be. Third, care is taken not to disclose personal data that is irrelevant to the case. These considerations serve to safeguard personal data from unnecessary public disclosure.
However, on occasion it will be necessary to disclose the identity of the person involved in the case, even when the publicised complaint itself has been anonymised. This is to remove any ambiguity in the Government’s statement of the facts and settle any doubts over the matter conclusively in the minds of the public.
The Government is committed to putting citizens at the heart of all we do. Citizens have many channels to request for help from the Government and to give feedback. These include physical touchpoints such as service centres, and online channels such as the OneService app and emails of Quality Service Managers. The Government treats all feedback seriously, whether that feedback is conveyed publicly or via one of these channels. We will take the necessary action to address the issue and close the loop with the member of the public.
Assoc Prof Walter Theseira (Nominated Member) : Thank you, Mr Speaker. I thank the Senior Minister of State for the reply. Just one supplementary question. I am quite concerned we will discourage persons who are trying to get help because these cases can be publicised for reasons beyond the complainant's control. Someone may put up a private Facebook post and finds that it gets shared, and they do not know why it got shared. Will the Government consider a protocol where agencies first try to get the person concerned to agree to a statement put out by the agency that clarifies matters? And only if that does not happen, then as a last resort, the agency could clarify matters without that person's consent.
Dr Janil Puthucheary : Mr Speaker, I thank the Member for his question. The issue at hand is, of course, that these types of public declarations, whether anonymised or not, are going to be unusual in nature. There is something about the case or the complainant or the interaction, which does not quite fall into Standard Operating Procedure, nor lend itself to a protocol; otherwise, we would not be in this situation.
The second thing is that, as a result of this, it would be inappropriate for us to constrain the agencies' response to an inaccurate or outright false public statement. Thirdly, in a way, which as the Member had pointed out, may open itself to manipulation and further downstream ambiguity, disinformation, whether inadvertently or deliberately.
So, I think I have articulated in my answer the principles under which public sector agencies are expected to operate; the principles which citizens can expect of Government in dealing with this matter. The bottom line is that should a complaint of this nature occur in public, associated with disinformation and which impacts the way in which Government processes Government policies that serve citizens are being misrepresented, we should expect agencies to reply in public and disclose information so that we can set the record straight; and make sure that Singapore and Singaporeans are well informed.
Ms Anthea Ong (Nominated Member) : Can I ask the Senior Minister of State if the Government has channels and measures for citizens who want to seek redress against Government for what they deem as unfair public disclosure since the Government is not bound by the Personal Data Protection Act (PDPA).
Dr Janil Puthucheary : Certainly, there are many numbers of channels and feedback routes, which I have described in my previous answer. Citizens can approach their Member of Parliament, they can approach anybody and they can use any of these means, including a public discourse, should they wish to pursue the matter. PDPA notwithstanding and my answer notwithstanding, none of this prevents or is meant to discourage a citizen from seeking redress from a complaint. It is merely that, should a complaint occur in the public space and as a result of that complaint, the public has been misinformed, inaccuracies have been stated, then those inaccuracies need to be stated in the public in a way that is unambiguous and the facts robustly explained to everybody.