Amos Yee at the State Court on 17 August 2016 (Photo – Terry Xu)

Teenage blogger, Amos Yee, 17, turned up in court today to stand trial against 8 charges filed upon him by the State Prosecutors over alleged offences dealing with deliberate intent to wound religious feelings under Section 298 of the Penal Code and failure to turn up for police interviews under Section 174 of the Penal Code

Section 298 refers to the deliberate intention of wounding the religious or racial feelings of any person, utters any word or makes any sound in the hearing of that person, or makes any gesture in the sight of that person, or places any object in the sight of that person, or causes any matter however represented to be seen or heard by that person.

While Section 174 refers to the act of intentionally omitting to attend at the place or time, or departs from the place where he is bound to attend before the time at which it is lawful for him to depart, under orders from a public servant.

Indicating that he will not plead guilty to the 8 charges, Yee declares that he would be representing himself in court to defend the charges against him.

Yee was given the prosecution’s affidavits on the morning itself to look through, which consisted of statements, blog posts, photos, screengrabs and chat logs captured from electronic devices seized from him and his family.

At the start of the hearing, the State Prosecutor asked for the 8 charges to be heard together in the same trial on the argument that the timing of the offences were interlocking and also related to the other as it is an continuity of the action.

District Judge Lim Tse Haw noted that the charges under Section 298 are under the same issue, and asked if the charges under Section 174 will detract from ascertaining the offence by the accused of wounding the feelings of Christians and Muslims. He said that these two are totally separate issues.

The Prosecutor pointed to the Criminal Procedure Code (CPC) and raised reference to section 134(d) of the code, saying that the illustration mentioned gives an example of how two separate offences can claim trial together.

Yee raised objection to the Prosecutor’s proposal. He said it is a detraction from the nature of the offences and feels that he will be subjected to an unfair trial should the jointed trial be approved and that there is not enough strong correlation between the two offences for a jointed trial to take place.

The District Judge subsequently decided that it is appropriate to have a joint trial based on illustration C in Section 134 of the CPC after a short period of stand down.

Prosecutor then asked to have the conditional statements of the 7 witnesses from Prosecution to be submitted to the court instead of having the witnesses to take the stand in court. However, that proposal was rejected by Yee, meaning that the 7 witnesses will be cross examined by both parties in court.

The 7 witnesses are; 2 Investigation Officers in charge of Yee’s case, 3 officers from Tech Forensic who examined devices from Yee or saved the videos and blog posts, and 2 officers who were involved in the arrest of Yee.

Before the trial could proceed any further, Yee requested to go for the Criminal Case Resolution (CCR) process. Yee said that he had got to know of CCR by the stroke of luck while doing his own research for his legal defence after the District Judge noted that such a request should have been made during the Pre-Trial Conference.

After a short discussion in Chambers, Yee was granted the permission to go for CCR.

CCR which was implemented in 2011,  provides a neutral forum, facilitated by a judge, for parties to discuss and explore the possibility of early resolution of criminal cases. This reduces wastage of valuable resources due to “cracked‟ trials where the accused person pleads guilty on the day of the trial or after the trial has commenced. For cases where a trial is necessary, CCR process will assist parties to identify the material triable issues and thereby utilise allocated trial dates in a more focused and efficient manner.

The eight charges faced by Yee are; six charges under section 298, and two charges under section 174 of the Penal Code.

SN Date of Offence Article or Video/Act in Offence Penal Code
1 28 Nov 15 “If you are a muslim, you are retarded” Section 298
2 17 Dec 15 “The banned anti-Islam Facebook post by Amos Yee” Section 298
3 14 April 16 “Responding to the common bullshit of Christians” Section 298
4 17 April 16 “Research has begun” Section 298
5 8 May 16 “Amos Yee arrested for wounding religion again” Section 298
6 19 May 16 “Refuting Islam with their own Quran” Section 298
7 14 Dec 15 Omit to attend interview at Jurong Police Divison Section 174
8 10 May 16 Omit to attend interview at Jurong Police Divison Section 174

 

If found guilty of section 298, the penalty is imprisonment for a term of up to 3 years, or with fine, or with both. If found guilty of section 174 of the penal code, the penalty is imprisonment of up to one month, or with fine of $1,500, or with both.

Yee will go for the CCR at 9.30 am and will then stand trial again at the State Courts.

Yee was found guilty of the two charges brought against him on 12 May 2015. One charge is obscenity for having uploaded a picture of the late Singapore prime minister, Lee Kuan Yew in a sexual depiction with the former British prime minister, the late Margaret Thatcher and the second, wounding the feelings of Christians for remarks he made in a video of Mr Lee and the Christian religious icon, Jesus Christ, which he had uploaded onto Youtube.

Yee was given a jail sentence of four weeks on 12 June 2015 for the two charges but was released on the spot in court as he had already spent a total of 55 days detained on remand.

Yesterday, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on freedom of opinion and expression, David Kaye, warned that Yee’s trial is deeply worrying and a sign of the increased criminalization of expression in Singapore,

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

iPrice Group raises US$10m in investment and launches new office expansion to fortify its footing as SEA’s best online shopping companion platform

E-commerce aggregator platform iPrice Group has raised US$10 million (S$13.9 million) in…

挡道脚踏车司机引冲突 罗厘司机被控鲁莽驾驶

你挡我的道,我推你一下,双双面对警方对付。 说的是日前在网上疯传的罗里司机和脚踏车骑士因为道路受阻而引起的冲突,警方已经介入调查,并且于今日逮捕罗里司机,依据鲁莽驾驶罪名对他做出提控。 视屏开始时是一驾罗厘车在倒退,后方有一名脚踏车骑士手提脚踏车站在路旁。该罗厘司机倒退险些撞到骑士,令骑士不满,趋前拍打罗厘车的车窗。罗厘司机随后将车辆驶入路旁,再次险些撞及骑士。罗厘司机随后下车,气冲冲地向骑士走去。欲离开现场的骑士见状即刻放下手上的脚踏车,举起双手将罗厘司机推倒在地上。骑士随后扬长而去。 视频在网路上疯传,共有超过1万1000人点阅,多人留言,也要求警方介入调查。 挡道事件是在2月24日上午10时20分,在友诺士路发生。 警方发文告指出,罗厘司机(55岁)的鲁莽驾驶危及其他道路使用者,所以被提空。一旦罪成,可被判坐牢长达6个月,最高罚款达2500新元或两者兼施。 32岁的脚踏车骑士也因为出手伤人,正在协助警方进行调查。警方表示,若蓄意伤人罪名成立,脚踏车骑士也可能被判坐牢2年,获罚款高达5000新元或两者兼施。 环境影响人们心理健康 网民的留言中,有对设施和在路旁设立脚踏车道的不满。虽然随后又网友反击说并不是设施的错,而是缺乏同情心和耐心导致以上的冲突。 但是随即就有网民反驳说,以上冲突无关同情心或耐心,而是事实是,1平方公里挤着9000人,就会对人类心理健康造成影响。 也有网民表示,新加坡的生活环境充满压力,不适合孩子的成长。 网民争论谁对谁错…

明年起 马国国小落实”爪夷文字书法艺术”趣味课程

自明年起,马来西亚将落实”爪夷文字书法艺术”(Seni Khat,简称爪夷文书法)课程,在华小与淡小四年级的马来文课中教导,但教育部授权老师决定课堂上的教导方式。 综合马国媒体报道,马国教育部长马智礼说,内阁决定加入”爪夷文字书法艺术”单元的内容,但从原有的6页减至3页,而目前小四的马来文课本共有164页。 马智力续指,内阁也同意将不会对”爪夷文字书法艺术”进行任何考试或测验。 他强调,”爪夷文字书法艺术”(Khat)只是在华、淡小教导,并不包括国小(马来小学),因为国小已经有相关课程“,并再次强调爪夷文书法是一门科目和一种语文。 马智礼强调,教导爪夷文字书法艺术旨在让学生更了解马国的文化传承, 马国历史自古以来都与爪夷文字书法艺术脱离不了干系,因此内阁经参考所有建议后,一致决定加入。 但他也表示,随着内阁作出这项决定,教育部希望任何有关介绍”爪夷文字书法艺术”的课题不会再错误地被挑起,以致引起民众的混淆。 爪夷文一度引起民间反弹,内阁执意“照跑” 国民小学纳入爪夷文字书法艺术一度引起马来西亚华教团体、政治人物及民间强烈反弹,日前教育部8月2日公布,将于小学四年级的马来文课本纳入爪夷文字书法艺术,不少网民认为学习该书法即不会带来实际效益,也会加重学子的学习负担。其中部分网民担心尽管爪夷书法以趣味语文学习为目的说法,但未来仍有可能加入考试会的可能。 马来西亚董教总与其他12个华社与淡米尔教育组织联合发表声明表示,教育部仍有许多细节待理清,要求教育部公布具体情况,在这之前,应先搁置,另作讨论。  …