Short title and commencement.
1.
This
Act may be cited as the Republic of Singapore Independence Act 1965
and shall be deemed to have come into operation on the 9th day of
August 1965 (hereinafter in this Act referred to as “Singapore
Day”).
Interpretation.
2.
In
this Act, unless it is otherwise provided or the context otherwise
requires —"Head
of State"
means the President
of Singapore;
"Legislature” or “Legislature
of Singapore"
means the President
and the Parliament of Singapore;
"Singapore"
means the Republic of Singapore.
Transfer of sovereignty and jurisdiction.
3.
The
Yang di-Pertuan Agong of Malaysia shall with effect from Singapore
Day cease to be the Supreme Head of Singapore and his sovereignty
and jurisdiction and power and authority, executive or otherwise,
in respect of Singapore shall be relinquished and shall vest in
the Head of State.
Exercise of executive powers.
4.
The
executive authority of Singapore shall, on and after Singapore Day,
be vested in the Head of State and shall be exercisable by him or
by the Cabinet or by any Minister authorised by the Cabinet.
Transfer of legislative powers.
5.
The
legislative powers of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong and of the Parliament
of Malaysia shall on Singapore Day cease to extend to Singapore
and shall be transferred so as to vest in the Head of State and
in the Legislature of Singapore respectively.
Continuance in force of provisions
of the Constitution of Malaysia and exercise of powers thereunder.
6.
—(1)
The
provisions of the Constitution of Malaysia, other than those set
out in subsection (3), shall continue in force in Singapore subject
to such modifications, adaptations and qualifications and exceptions
as may be necessary to bring them into conformity with the independent
status of Singapore upon separation from Malaysia.
(2)
The provisions of the Constitution
of Malaysia referred to in subsection (1) may in their application
to Singapore be amended by the Legislature.
(3)
The following provisions of the Constitution
of Malaysia shall cease to have effect in Singapore:
Part I; Article 13; Articles 14 to 18;
Article 19A; Article 22; Articles 28 and 28A; Articles 30, 30A and
30B; Part IV; Part V; Part VI; Part VII; Part VIII; Articles 133 and
134; Article 139; Articles 141 to 143; Articles 146A to 148; Part
XII; Part XIII; Part XIV; The Third, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, Eighth,
Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh and Thirteenth Schedules.
(4)
Without prejudice to the generality
of the provisions of sections 3, 4 and 5, the powers conferred by
the provisions of the Constitution of Malaysia continued in force
under the provisions of subsection (1) shall be exercised on and
after Singapore Day as follows:(a)
the powers of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong
shall be exercised by the President;
(b)
the powers of the Federal Government
shall be exercised by the Government of Singapore;
(c)
the powers of the Federal Legislature
shall be exercised by the Legislature of Singapore;
(d)
the powers of the Prime Minister of
Malaysia shall be exercised by the Prime Minister of Singapore;
(e)
the powers of a Minister of Malaysia
shall be exercised by the corresponding Minister in Singapore or
by such Minister as may be designated by the Prime Minister of Singapore;
(f)
the powers of the Judicial and Legal
Service Commission shall be exercised by a Legal Service Commission
which shall consist of the following persons:(i)
the Chief Justice, as President;
(ii)
the Attorney-General;
(iii)
the Chairman of the Public Service
Commission;
(iv)
a Judge of the High Court nominated
generally or specially by the Chief Justice; and
(v)
not more than two members of the Public
Service Commission nominated generally or specially by the Chairman
of the Public Service Commission.
(g)
the powers of the Police Force Commission
shall be exercised by the Public Service Commission;
(h)
the powers of the Lord President of
the Federal Court shall be exercised by the Chief Justice of Singapore;
and
(i)
the powers of the Attorney-General
of Malaysia shall be exercised by the Attorney-General of Singapore.
(5)
In this section, “amendment” includes
addition and repeal.
Official languages and national language.
7.
—(1)
Malay,
Mandarin, Tamil and English shall be the 4 official languages in Singapore.
(2)
The national language shall be the
Malay language and shall be in the Roman script:
Provided that —(a)
no person shall be prohibited or prevented
from using or from teaching or learning any other language; and
(b)
nothing in this section shall prejudice
the right of the Government to preserve and sustain the use and
study of the language of any other community in Singapore.
Grant of pardon.
8.
—(1)
The
President, as occasion shall arise, may, on the advice of the Cabinet —(a)
grant a pardon to any accomplice in
any offence who gives information which leads to the conviction
of the principal offender or any one of the principal offenders,
if more than one;
(b)
grant to any offender convicted of
any offence in any court in Singapore, a pardon, free or subject
to lawful conditions, or any reprieve or respite, either indefinite
or for such period as the President may think fit, of the execution
of any sentence pronounced on such offender; or
(c)
remit the whole or any part of such
sentence or of any penalty or forfeiture imposed by law.
(2)
Where any offender has been condemned
to death by the sentence of any court and in the event of an appeal
such sentence has been confirmed by the appellate court, the President
shall cause the reports which are made to him by the Judge who tried
the case and the Chief Justice or other presiding Judge of the appellate
court to be forwarded to the Attorney-General with instructions
that, after the Attorney-General has given his opinion thereon,
the reports shall be sent, together with the Attorney-General’s
opinion, to the Cabinet so that the Cabinet may advise the President on
the exercise of the power conferred on him by subsection (1).
(3)
In subsection
(1), “court” includes a court-martial constituted
by any law applicable to the armed forces of Singapore.
Transfer of property and succession
to rights, liabilities and obligations.
9.
All
property, movable and immovable, and rights, liabilities and obligations which
before 16th September 1963 belonged to or were the responsibility
of the Government of Singapore and which on that day or after became
the property of or the responsibility of the Government of Malaysia
shall, on Singapore Day, revert to, and vest in, or devolve upon,
and become once again the property of or the responsibility of the
Government of Singapore.
Transfer of Singapore officers.
10.
—(1)
All
persons, including members of the Armed Forces, the Police Force, the
Courts, the Legal Service and the Judiciary and all others who immediately
before 16th September 1963 were officers employed by the Government
of Singapore and who on that day or after became officers employed
by the Government of Malaysia shall on Singapore Day become once
again officers employed by the Government of Singapore.
(2)
All persons who between 16th September
1963 and Singapore Day were engaged by the Government of Malaysia
and were employed in those departments which were departments of
the Government of Singapore before 16th September 1963 shall on
Singapore Day become persons temporarily employed by the Government
of Singapore.
(3)
The President may within 24 months
of Singapore Day confirm or terminate the employment of any person
or class of persons who are temporarily employed by the Government
under the provisions of subsection (2).
Temporary provision as to jurisdiction
and procedure of Singapore Courts.
11.
Until
other provision
is made by the Legislature, the jurisdiction,
original or appellate, and the practice and procedure of the High
Court and the subordinate courts of Singapore shall be the same
as that exercised and followed immediately before Singapore Day,
and appeals from the High Court shall continue to lie to the
Federal Court of Malaysia and to the
Privy Council.
Appointment to statutory boards, etc.
12.
Any
provision in any written law in force in Singapore which enables
a member of any statutory board or other body constituted by law
to be appointed from Malaysia or as representing any authority or
person or body of persons in Malaysia shall, unless the President
by notification in the Gazette otherwise orders,
cease to have effect and such statutory board or body shall be deemed
to be properly constituted notwithstanding that no such member has
been or is appointed.
Existing laws.
13.
—(1)
Subject
to the provisions of this section, all existing laws shall continue in
force on and after Singapore Day, but all such laws shall be construed
as from Singapore Day with such modifications, adaptations, qualifications
and exceptions as may be necessary to bring them into conformity
with this Act and with the independent status of Singapore upon
separation from Malaysia.
(2)
Without prejudice to the generality
of subsection (1), in any existing law which continues in force
after Singapore Day, unless the context otherwise requires —(a)
any reference to the Colony or to the
State of Singapore shall be construed as a reference to the Republic
of Singapore;
(b)
any reference to the Yang di-Pertuan
Agong shall be construed as a reference to the President;
(c)
any reference to the Yang di-Pertuan
Negara shall be construed as a reference to the President;
(d)
any reference to the Cabinet or to
the Prime Minister or a Minister of Malaysia shall be construed
as a reference to the Cabinet or to the Prime Minister or the appropriate
Minister of Singapore;
(e)
any reference to the Parliament or
to the House of Representatives of Malaysia shall be construed as
a reference to the Parliament of Singapore;
(f)
any reference to the Legislative Assembly
shall be construed as a reference to the Parliament of Singapore;
(g)
any reference to the Attorney-General
of Malaysia shall be construed as a reference to the Attorney-General
of Singapore;
(h)
any reference to the State Advocate-General
of Singapore shall be construed as a reference to the Attorney-General
of Singapore; and
(i)
any reference to any person holding
a public office under the Government of Malaysia or to any other
authority or body constituted under the Constitution of Malaysia
or any written law of Malaysia shall be construed as a reference
to the corresponding public officer or corresponding authority or body
of Singapore.
(3)
(a) The President
may, by order made at any time during the period of 3 years after
the coming into operation of this Act and published in the Gazette, make such modifications in any written
law as appear to him to be necessary or expedient in consequence
of the enactment of this Act and in consequence of the independence of
Singapore upon separation from Malaysia.(b)
Any order made under this subsection
may be amended or repealed by a further order so made.
(c)
An order made under this subsection
shall have effect from such date, not being earlier than Singapore
Day, as may be specified therein.
(d)
An order made under this subsection
shall be presented to Parliament as soon as possible after it is
made.
(4)
Without prejudice to the generality
of the powers contained in subsection (3), the President may by
order make such modifications in any written law as appear to him
to be necessary or expedient in consequence of the abolition of
the City Council and of the Rural Board and of the assumption of
the powers of the local authorities by the Government.
(5)
The Prime Minister may by order declare
which Minister is the appropriate Minister for the purpose of subsection
(2) (d) and may similarly declare who is the corresponding
public officer or which is the corresponding authority or body referred
to in subsection (2) (i).
(6)
In subsection (3), “modification” includes
amendment, adaptation and repeal and in relation to any law of Malaysia
or of the United Kingdom for the time being in force in Singapore
includes power to declare that such law shall cease to apply to Singapore.
(7)
In this section —"existing
law"
means any law including
written law having effect as part of the law of Singapore prior
to Singapore Day; and
"written
law"
includes the Constitution
of Malaysia and the Constitution of Singapore and all Acts, Ordinances
and enactments by whatever name called and subsidiary legislation
made thereunder for the time being in force in Singapore.
Saving.
14.
Nothing
in this Act shall affect the validity of any acts done in the name
of, or by, the Yang di-Pertuan Negara or the State Advocate-General
before the enactment of this Act.