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Singapore Seen Flagging Concern To India Over Game Ban

Singapore has raised concerns with India about its ban on gaming app ‘Free Fire’, owned by tech group Sea Ltd, which saw the market value of the US-listed firm drop by $16 billion in a single day


A person stands in the office of Southeast Asian e-commerce and gaming group Sea Ltd, in Singapore, March 5, 2021. Photo: Edgar Su, Reuters.

 

Singapore has raised concerns with India about its ban of popular gaming app ‘Free Fire’, owned by technology group Sea Ltd, in the first sign of diplomatic intervention after the move spooked investors, sources have said.

After the ban, the market value of the New York-listed Southeast Asian firm dropped by $16 billion in a single day, and investors worry India could extend it to Sea’s e-commerce app, Shopee, which recently launched in the country.

The sources, who include two Indian government officials, said Singapore had asked Indian authorities why the app had been targeted in a widening crackdown on Chinese apps, even though Sea has its headquarters in the wealthy city state.

Singapore had queried if the app “was banned unintentionally,” said one of the Indian officials aware of the diplomatic initiative.

The concerns, raised with India’s external affairs ministry, were routed to the information technology (IT) department which ordered the ban, the two Indian sources said.

The sources, who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the discussions, said they did not know how, and if, the Indian government planned to reply to Singapore’s concerns.

Spokespersons for the Singapore government and Sea did not immediately respond to emailed requests for comment. India’s IT department, its external affairs ministry and the office of the main government spokesperson also did not respond.

India blocked ‘Free Fire’ this month among a group of 54 apps it believes were sending user data to servers in China, government sources said.

The Free Fire game, made by Sea subsidiary Garena, was one of dozens of apps banned by New Delhi because of data security concerns. Garena image.

China responded by expressing serious concern and saying it hoped India would treat all foreign investors in a non-discriminatory manner.

In its response to the ban, Sea said at the time: “We do not transfer to, or store any data of our Indian users in, China,” adding that it was a Singapore company that complied with Indian law.

India’s initial ban of 59 Chinese apps, including TikTok, came after a border clash with China in 2020, and was widened this month to a total of 321, with Free Fire among them.

 

KEY MARKET

India is the top market for both Free Fire and one of its more premium versions, Free Fire MAX, going by number of downloads, data from analytics firm SensorTower shows. But India made up just 2.6% of Sea’s mobile-game net sales in 2021.

Sea was caught off guard by India’s ban, sources have said.

Google told Sea and other companies about India’s ban, prompting the Singapore firm to ask the US search giant why its app had been removed from the Play Store in India, said a source with direct knowledge of the matter.

In response, Google told Sea it was following the orders of the Indian government and could not disclose more, the person added. Google did not respond to a request for comment.

Sea has also sent a letter to India’s technology ministry seeking clarification. Two people briefed on the letter said it described the company as a “Singaporean” firm that did not park data in China.

Sea was founded in Singapore in 2009 as gaming publisher Garena and its founders are Chinese-born Singapore citizens.

The premium version of the game, Free Fire MAX, is now the most downloaded mobile game in India, and is still available on Google’s India Play Store.

 

• Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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Sea Set To Claim $6.3 Billion in Southeast Asia’s Biggest Fundraiser

Singapore’s Shopee Changes The Game in Brazil’s E-Commerce Sector

 

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.