Internet
Internet services provided by the three major Internet Service Providers (ISPs) are subject to regulation by the Media Development Authority to block websites containing material that may be a threat to public security, national defense, racial and religious harmony and public morality, and Police are given broad powers to intercept messages online. The Ministry of Education, Singapore blocks access to pornographic and similar objectionable internet sites on its proxy servers, but this practice is common throughout the world's educational establishments.
In September 2005, 3 people were arrested and charged with sedition for posting racist comments on the Internet, of which two have been sentenced to imprisonment. There are growing fears of the chilling effect with the increasing threat of legal action, including a warning by the Teachers' Union to sue students who defame teachers on their blogs.
Drug trafficking
Narcotics laws established by the Misuse of Drugs Act are very strict.
Anyone caught with more than or equal to 15 g (0.5 ounces) of heroin, 28 g (1 ounce) of morphine or 480 g (17 ounces) of cannabis faces mandatory capital punishment, as they are deemed to be trafficking in these substances. The stated quantities are the nett weight of the substances after they have been isolated by laboratory analysis. From 1991-2004, 400 people have been hanged in Singapore, mostly for drug trafficking, the highest per-capita execution rate in the world. See Singapore Government's response to accusations regarding its use of capital punishment.
Public assembly
In Singapore, a police permit is required for holding an assembly in a public place. Any public assembly or procession of five or more persons in any public place without a permit is an offence under the Miscellaneous Offences (Public Order And Nuisance) (Assemblies and Processions) Rules. [3]
The rationale given for this law is that a large group of people who gather for a peaceful purpose can turn violent. In the 1950s and 1960s, there have been several violent riots in Singapore, the last incident being the 1964 Race Riots which killed 36 people. Since then, there have been only a few minor protests. Nonetheless the authority continues to take a tough stance against unlicensed outdoor protests. On 31 December 2000, fifteen members of Falun Gong consisting of thirteen foreigners and two Singaporeans were arrested at MacRitchie Park for holding an illegal assembly. [4]
Sexual offences
Sex deemed by the Government to be "against the order of nature", including anal sex and oral sex (except as a precursor to conventional intercourse), is criminalised by section 377 of the Singapore Penal Code, though the latter has only infrequently been enforced and is set to change. In practice, private acts between consenting adults are not the subject matter of prosecution. Homosexuality in Singapore is not illegal, but homosexual acts are considered "against the order of nature" as well. Nevertheless, large-scale outdoor gay parties had been discreetly approved by the authorities from 2001 to 2004. These parties were advertised throughout Southeast Asia and attracted a large audience until a conservative backlash beginning in 2004, attributed to an increase in HIV infection within the gay community, put a stop to their official sanctioning and led to their banning.
Prostitution is tolerated in designated red-light districts, but soliciting for sex in public is illegal. Sexual intercourse with any girl below the age of sixteen years except by way of marriage is an offence (Section 140, Women's Charter); if the girl is below the age of fourteen, it is a statutory rape even with her consent (Section 375, Penal Code). Punishment for statutory rape shall be imprisonment not less than 8 years and not more than 20 years and also punished with caning not less than 12 strokes (Section 376, Penal Code).
Any man who has carnal knowledge of a woman (grand-daughter, daughter, sister, half-sister or mother) with or without the consent or any woman (of age above 16) with or without consent permits a man (grandfather, father, brother, half-brother or son) is said to commit incest (Section 376A (a) and (b), Penal Code). The punishment for incest for males/females shall be imprisonment of a term up to 5 years and if the woman is found to be under the age of fourteen, the imprisonment maybe up to 14 years (Section 376B, Penal Code).
Recent developments
In recent years, the Singapore government has relaxed some of the stricter laws. For example, bungee jumping is no longer illegal. There are also several signs that the government is considering relaxing a number of laws concerning oral sex.
It is of note that while some archaic laws do remain from British common law, the Public Prosecutor does not ordinarily enforce these laws. However, in 2004, then-Chief Justice Yong Pung How sentenced a 25-year-old former policeman, Annis Abdullah, to jail for 12 months for receiving oral sex from a teenage girl. In his statement he said that despite growing permissiveness in some countries there were "certain offences that are so repulsive in Asian culture".
The case concerning an American teenager, Michael P. Fay, generated intense media interest in the United States after he was caught in 1994 for vandalising cars and stealing street signs in Singapore and was sentenced to caning. A formal request was made by the American government not to carry out the sentence, but it was rejected by the Singapore government although the number of caning strokes was reduced from 6 to 4.
Film censorship has also been relaxed in Singapore recently. In 1991, the R(A) rating was introduced to allow adult type films that contain sex and violence to be shown for the first time, for those aged 18 years and above. The scheme was later replaced by a set of several ratings for different groups of audience, namely G (General audience), PG (Parental guidance), NC16 (not for children under 16), M18 (matured 1, and R21 (restricted 21).
DVDs and VCDs rated up to M18 are allowed. In addition, the country's only cable TV network, StarHub, is allowed to show a number of previously banned programmes that contain restricted content, such as Sex and the City, under the ratings NC16 and M18 after 10 pm, with some scenes removed.
On 18 April 2005, the government relaxed the ban on casinos and allowed the development of two Integrated Resorts with casinos. Both are expected to open by 2009. However, locals who wish to enter the casinos must pay a daily entry fee of S$100 or an annual entry pass of S$2,000. This is to reduce the negative effect of compulsive gambling in the society. The entry fees will be used to educate and counsel Singaporeans that have gambling habits. The government hopes that by having casinos, it will boost the tourism industry, which has been declining in recent years.
In the last few years, the government has taken a much tougher stand on Internet-related matters (including Internet censorship as above-mentioned). Several arrests and seizures have been made on those who breach the Copyright Law, including three home users who have been downloading music online. On November 2006, a 17 year old has been arrested for simply tapping into his neighour's wireless Internet connection and faces up to 3 years' imprisonment and a fine under the Computer Misuse Act.[1]
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*Taken from http://www.answers.com/topic/law-of-singapore.