Short title.
1.
This
Act may be cited as the Sedition Act.
Interpretation.
2.
In
this Act —"publication"
includes all written or printed matter
and everything whether of a nature similar to written or printed
matter or not containing any visible representation or by its form,
shape or in any other manner capable of suggesting words or ideas,
and every copy and reproduction or substantial reproduction of any
publication;
"seditious"
when applied to or used in respect
of any act, speech, words, publication or other thing qualifies
such act, speech, words, publication or other thing as one having
a seditious tendency;
"words"
includes any phrase, sentence or
other consecutive number or combination of words, oral or written.
Seditious tendency.
3.
—(1)
A
seditious tendency is a tendency —(a)
to bring into hatred or contempt or
to excite disaffection against the Government;
(b)
to excite the citizens of Singapore
or the residents in Singapore to attempt to procure in Singapore,
the alteration, otherwise than by lawful means, of any matter as
by law established;
(c)
to bring into hatred or contempt or
to excite disaffection against the administration of justice in
Singapore;
(d)
to raise discontent or disaffection
amongst the citizens of Singapore or the residents in Singapore;
(e)
to promote feelings of ill-will and
hostility between different races or classes of the population of
Singapore.
(2)
Notwithstanding subsection (1), any
act, speech, words, publication or other thing shall not be deemed
to be seditious by reason only that it has a tendency —(a)
to show that the Government has been
misled or mistaken in any of its measures;
(b)
to point out errors or defects in the
Government or the Constitution as by law established or in legislation
or in the administration of justice with a view to the remedying
of such errors or defects;
(c)
to persuade the citizens of Singapore
or the residents in Singapore to attempt to procure by lawful means
the alteration of any matter in Singapore; or
(d)
to point out, with a view to their
removal, any matters producing or having a tendency to produce feelings
of ill-will and enmity between different races or classes of the
population of Singapore,
if such act, speech, words, publication
or other thing has not otherwise in fact a seditious tendency.
(3)
For the purpose of proving the commission
of any offence under this Act, the intention of the person charged
at the time he did or attempted to do or made any preparation to
do or conspired with any person to do any act or uttered any seditious words
or printed, published, sold, offered for sale, distributed, reproduced
or imported any publication or did any other thing shall be deemed
to be irrelevant if in fact such act had, or would, if done, have
had, or such words, publication or thing had a seditious tendency.
Offences.
4.
—(1)
Any
person who —(a)
does or attempts to do, or makes any
preparation to do, or conspires with any person to do, any act which
has or which would, if done, have a seditious tendency;
(b)
utters any seditious words;
(c)
prints, publishes, sells, offers for
sale, distributes or reproduces any seditious publication; or
(d)
imports any seditious publication,
shall be guilty of an offence and shall
be liable on conviction for a first offence to a fine not exceeding $5,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 3 years or to both,
and, for a subsequent offence, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding
5 years; and any seditious publication found in the possession of
that person or used in evidence at his trial shall be forfeited
and may be destroyed or otherwise disposed of as the court directs.
(2)
Any person who without lawful excuse
has in his possession any seditious publication shall be guilty
of an offence and shall be liable on conviction for a first offence
to a fine not exceeding $2,000 or to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding 18 months or to both, and, for a subsequent offence,
to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 3 years, and such publication
shall be forfeited and may be destroyed or otherwise disposed of
as the court directs.
Legal proceedings.
5.
—(1)
No
prosecution for an offence under section 4 shall be begun except
within 6 months after the offence is committed:
Provided that for the purposes of this
subsection a prosecution shall be deemed to be begun against any
person when a warrant or summons has been issued in respect of any
charge made against that person and based on the facts or incident
in respect of which the prosecution afterwards proceeds.
(2)
No person shall be prosecuted for an
offence under section 4 without the written consent of the Public
Prosecutor. In such written consent the Public Prosecutor may designate
any court to be the court of trial.
Evidence.
6.
—(1)
Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in the Evidence Act, no person shall be
convicted of an offence under section 4 on the uncorroborated testimony
of one witness.
Cap. 97.
(2)
No person shall be convicted of any
offence referred to in section 4 (1) (c) or (d) if such person proves that the publication
in respect of which he is charged was printed, published, sold,
offered for sale, distributed, reproduced or imported (as the case
may be) without his authority, consent and knowledge and without
any want of due care or caution on his part or that he did not know
and had no reason to believe that the publication had a seditious
tendency.
Innocent receiver of seditious publication.
7.
Any
person to whom any seditious publication is sent without his knowledge
or privity shall forthwith as soon as the nature of its contents
has become known to him deliver the publication to the officer in
charge of a police division and any person who complies with this
section shall not be liable to be convicted for having in his possession
that publication:
Provided that in any proceedings against
such person the court shall presume until the contrary is shown
that that person knew the contents of the publication at the time
it first came into his possession.
Issue of search warrant.
8.
—(1)
A
Magistrate may issue a warrant empowering any police officer, not
below the rank of sergeant, to enter upon any premises where any
seditious publication is known or is reasonably suspected to be
and to search therein for any seditious publication.
21/73.
(2)
Whenever it appears to any police officer,
not below the rank of sergeant, that there is reasonable cause to
believe that in any premises there is concealed or deposited any
seditious publication, and he has reasonable grounds for believing
that, by reason of the delay which would be entailed by obtaining
a search warrant, the object of the search is likely to be frustrated,
he may enter and search the premises as if he were empowered to
do so by a warrant issued under subsection (1).
21/73.
Suspension of newspaper containing
seditious matter.
9.
—(1)
Whenever
any person is convicted of publishing in any newspaper matter having
a seditious tendency, the court may, if it thinks fit, either in
lieu of or in addition to any other punishment, make orders as to
all or any of the following matters:(a)
prohibiting, either absolutely or except
on conditions to be specified in the order, for any period not exceeding
one year from the date of the order, the future publication of that
newspaper;
(b)
prohibiting, either absolutely or except
on conditions to be specified in the order, for the period aforesaid,
the publisher, proprietor or editor of that newspaper from publishing,
editing or writing for any newspaper or from assisting, whether
with money or money’s worth, material, personal service
or otherwise in the publication, editing or production of any newspaper;
(c)
that for the period aforesaid any printing
press used in the production of the newspaper be used only on conditions
to be specified in the order or that it be seized by the police
and detained by them for the period aforesaid.
(2)
Any person who contravenes an order
made under this section shall be guilty of an offence and shall
be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $5,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 3 years or to both.
(3)
Nothing in this Act shall affect the
power of the court to punish any person contravening an order made
under this section for contempt of court:
Provided that no person shall be punished
twice for the same offence.
Power of Court to prohibit circulation
of seditious publications.
10.
—(1)
Whenever
on the application of the Public Prosecutor it is shown to the satisfaction
of the Court that the issue or circulation of a seditious publication
is or if commenced or continued would be likely to lead to unlawful
violence or appears to have the object of promoting feelings of
hostility between different classes or races of the community, the
Court shall make an order (referred to in this section as a prohibition
order) prohibiting the issuing and circulation of that publication
(referred to in this section as a prohibited publication) and requiring
every person having any copy of the prohibited publication in his
possession, power or control forthwith to deliver every such copy
into the custody of the police.
(2)
An order under this section may be
made ex parte on the application of the Public Prosecutor in chambers.
(3)
It shall be sufficient if the order
so describes the prohibited publication that it can be identified
by a reasonable person who compares the prohibited publication with
the description in the prohibition order.
(4)
Every person on whom a copy of a prohibition
order is served by any police officer shall forthwith deliver to
that police officer every prohibited publication in his possession,
power or control, and, if he fails to do so, he shall be guilty
of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $1,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding one year or to both.
(5)
Every person to whose knowledge it
comes that a prohibited publication is in his possession, power
or control shall forthwith deliver every such publication into the
custody of the police, and, if he fails to do so, he shall be guilty
of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $1,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding one year or to both.
(6)
The Court may, if it thinks fit, either
before or after or without service of the prohibition order on any
person, issue a warrant authorising any police officer not below
the rank of sergeant to enter and search any premises specified
in the order, and to seize and carry away every prohibited publication
there found, and to use such force as may be necessary for the purpose.
A copy of the prohibition order and of the search warrant shall
be left in a conspicuous position at every building or place so
entered.
21/73.
(7)
The owner of any prohibited publication delivered
or seized under this section may, at any time within 14 days after
the delivery or seizure, apply to the Court by originating summons
for the discharge of the prohibition order, and if the Court, on the
hearing of the application, decides that the prohibition order ought
not to have been made, it shall discharge the order and shall order
the prohibited publication delivered by or seized from the applicant
to be returned to him.
(8)
Every
prohibited publication delivered or seized under this section with
respect to which an
application under subsection (7) is not filed within the time aforesaid
or which is not ordered to be returned to the owner shall be deemed
to be forfeited to the Government.
(9)
For the purposes of this section, “Court” means
the High Court.
21/73.
Arrest without warrant.
11.
Any
police officer may arrest without warrant any person found committing
or reasonably suspected of committing or of having committed or
of attempting to commit or of procuring or abetting any person to
commit any offence under this Act or reasonably suspected of the
unlawful possession of any thing liable to forfeiture thereunder.
21/73.