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12 U. Pa. Asian L. Rev. 186 (2016-2017)
Amos Yee, Free Speech, and Maintaining Religious Harmony in Singapore

handle is hein.journals/etalr12 and id is 194 raw text is: 








       AMOS YEE, FREE SPEECH, AND MAINTAINING
            RELIGIOUS HARMONY IN SINGAPORE

            George Baylon Radics* & Yee Suan Poon**

        This Article examines the tension between freedom of speech
and laws restricting the defamation of religion, using the case study
of Singapore and the Amos Yee case. In 2015, four days after the
death of revered former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, Amos Yee, a
sixteen-year-old blogger, posted a video called Lee Kuan Yew is
finally dead! and, one day later, an image on his blog entitled
Lee Kuan Yew buttfucking Margaret Thatcher. As part of Yee's
eight-minute-long video, Yee spent forty seconds criticizing Lee by
drawing an unfavorable analogy between Lee and Jesus. As a
result, Yee was charged under section 298 of the Penal Code, the
law prohibiting the uttering of words with the deliberate intent to
wound the religious or racial feelings.  While international news
highlighted Yee's prosecution as a blatant attempt to silence
criticism of the former Prime Minister, the courts held steadfast in
their belief that Yee's words were hurtful towards Christians, and
that offending the religious sentiments of any community would not
be tolerated in Singapore. This Article will review the facts of the
case, the history of the law, and its application. It will also attempt
to situate the law in the larger Defamation of Religions resolution
debate in the United Nations from 1999 2010 and review legal
restrictions on free speech in the United States and Europe.

I.   IN TRO D U CTION   ....................................................................... 187
II. INTERNATIONAL DEBATES ON THE DEFAMATION OF
     R EL IG IO N   ............................................................................... 19 1


     * Dr Radics is a Lecturer in the Department of Sociology at the National University
of Singapore. J.D., University of Washington School of Law; B.A., University of
California, Los Angeles; Ph.D., National University of Singapore.
     ** Yee Suan Poon graduated with a B.Soc.Sci (Hons) degree in Sociology from the
National University of Singapore in 2016.
     This Article was presented at the Law and Society Association Annual Meeting in
New Orleans, Louisiana (U.S.) from June 2 to 5, 2016. The authors would like to thank
Leong Wai-Teng, Michael Barr, David Engel, Muhammad Arafat Bin Mohammad, Leon
Moosavi, Justine Guichard, Anisur Rahman, and Jingdi Zhou for their comments on earlier
drafts.

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