Indian-origin minister in Singapore receives extortion letter with 'obscene' photos

Singapore's Foreign Minister Balakrishnan and MPs received extortion letters with fake obscene photos, prompting police reports and legal action. Letters contain victims' faces superimposed on compromising images, demanding money to prevent leaks.
Indian-origin minister in Singapore receives extortion letter with 'obscene' photos
Vivian Balakrishnan (AFP file photo)
SINGAPORE: Singapore's Indian-origin foreign minister Vivian Balakrishnan and several parliamentarians received extortion letters containing fake photos of themselves in obscene situations.
The foreign minister said, he along with several other MPs, received letter containing a "fake distasteful image accompanied by a threat".
"This conduct is deplorable and totally contrary to the values and good practices that we are trying to inculcate in our society.
We have filed police reports and will take appropriate legal action," he said.
The police said late Friday night that the letters, which were sent by post to the victims' workplaces, contained pictures of the victims' faces superimposed onto obscene photographs of a man and a woman purportedly in an "intimate and compromising position".
There have been over 70 police reports since March about such extortion letters, according to a Channel News Asia report on Saturday.
The letters warned of "threatening consequences" unless they contacted the email address provided.
If the victims contacted the email address, they would be asked to transfer money to prevent "compromising photographs and videos" of themselves from being leaked and exposed on social media, the police said.

"In this age of deep fakes and scams, we must take a strong collective stand against such conduct," Balakrishnan said.
"Inside was a distasteful photo where my face was digitally manipulated onto one of the figures, accompanied by an extortion demand," he wrote on Facebook on Saturday.
He said that while it is not rare for public figures to face extortion scams, the increase of 'deepfakes' makes it 'harder to discern reality from fiction'.
"With readily available tools, anyone can create deepfake content within minutes," he added.
"This can pose a significant threat to our social fabric. Unchecked, this can affect our public standing and those we love. We must unite as a community to combat these fraudulent acts," he wrote.
The cops urged the public to ignore and report any requests for contact or transfers. Secure the letter and hand it to the police. Meanwhile, the probe in under way.
(With PTI inputs)
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