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I am all for 377A! These Ah Neh faggots have nothing better to do!:oIo::oIo:
AsiaOne
Tuesday, Sep 27, 2011
A court here has reserved judgement on a constitutional challenge to Section 377A of the Penal Code after a lawyer filed it as his client was charged for performing oral sex on his male partner in a public toilet in CityLink Mall in March 2010.
Lawyer M Ravi's client, Tan Eng Hong, was initially charged under Section 377A, but the Attorney-General's Chambers (AGC) replaced the charge to committing an obscene act in public, after Mr Ravi filed the constitutional challenge.
The Straits Times reported that Mr Tan, 48, and his partner, Ching Chee Shyong, 41, were both convicted and fined $3,000 each under the new charge
Lawyer Ravi back in dock
Mr Ravi then asked the Court of Appeal to allow the constitutional challenge to be heard on Sep 27. He said this was necessary because the law allowed possible prosecution of gay men in the future, even though Members of Parliament had said they would not be prosecuted for sexual acts in private.
He also added it was discriminatory, as the maximum two-year jail sentence for gay sex in public places is heavier than the maximum of a three-month jail term for sex between a man and a woman in public. There is also no law that criminalises sexual acts among lesbians.
However, Deputy Public Prosecutor Aedit Abdullah said there was no need for the challenge, as Mr Tan was charged for committing an obscene act in a public place to the annoyance of others. Since he was not prosecuted under 377A, he could not argue that his constitutional rights were being violated by that particular law.
But DPP Abdullah also told Appeal Judges Andrew Phang and V K Rajah and Justice Judith Prakash that the AGC cannot give a 'binding promise' that gay men would not be prosecuted under 377A.
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