Bungee jumping to enter Singapore

Nation loosens laws on bars, theater -- but not jaywalking

? Singapore will now permit bungee jumping. Also, people can dance on the bar in saloons allowed to stay open 24 hours. And theater performances can use explicit language.

“In fact, so changed is our mind-set that we will even allow reverse bungee,” Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong said Saturday, in launching a “Remake Singapore” program designed to shake up the dull image of this famously uptight city-state.

Or at least try.

While being catapulted into the sky at the end of a giant rubber band is now allowed, jaywalking at bus stations is forbidden, under tougher rules also announced Saturday.

So Singapore’s government remains in strict control, even in its efforts to loosen up and market itself as a media and arts center.

Among the committee’s more than 100 proposals to remodel society is an “Audience Development Fund” to “educate” citizens about art and encourage flea markets with no government permit.

Earlier, the prime minister also said his administration would begin employing openly gay people, a surprising development in Singapore, where homosexuality is thought to violate conservative Asian social norms.

“Not every room needs to be furnished to the same taste,” Goh said. “Some may like their room to have cool colors, while others may prefer to decorate it with pinups.”