The Star Malaysia

US judge grants S’porean asylum

‘Blogger was persecuted and detained for his political opinions’

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‘Blogger was prosecuted and detained for his political opinions’.

CHICAGO: A US immigratio­n judge in Chicago granted asylum to a Singaporea­n blogger, saying he was persecuted for his political opinions in the South-East Asian city-state.

Amos Yee (pic), 18, who had been jailed twice in Singapore, qualifies as a political refugee, according to a 13-page opinion by the US immigratio­n judge.

Yee is immediatel­y eligible for release after having been held in US immigratio­n detention since Dec 16, 2016, according to his attorney, Sandra Grossman, who is based in Bethesda, Maryland.

The Singapore Embassy in Washington could not be reached for comment after business hours on Friday evening.

Judge Samuel Cole ruled Yee’s prosecutio­n, detention and maltreatme­nt at the hands of the Singapore authoritie­s “constitute­s persecutio­n on account of Yee’s political opinions,” and called him a “young political dissident”.

“The evidence presented at the hearing demonstrat­es Singapore’s prosecutio­n of Yee was a pretext to silence his political opinions critical of the Singapore government,” Cole wrote.

The US Department of Homeland Security had opposed Yee’s asylum applicatio­n, claiming the Singapore government legitimate­ly prosecuted Yee.

Grossman said the judge’s decision sup- ported the right of individual­s to criticise their government.

“The right to free speech is sacred, even when such speech is considered offensive,” she said in an email. “The decision timely underscore­s the vital need for an independen­t judiciary in a functionin­g democracy.”

Yee had been held by US authoritie­s since arriving at Chicago’s O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport, seeking political asylum. He was initially detained in Illinois, but is now being held at the Dodge County Detention Facility in Juneau, Wisconsin, Grossman said.

Yee has been jailed twice in Singapore for online comments.

His trials, which have been closely watched by rights groups and the United Nations, have fuelled the debate in Singapore over censorship, the limits of free speech and political correctnes­s.

In September of last year, Yee pleaded guilty to six charges of deliberate­ly posting comments on the internet – in videos, blog posts and a picture – that were critical of Christiani­ty and Islam. He was sentenced to six weeks in jail.

In 2015, Yee was convicted on charges of harassment and insulting a religious group over comments he made about former premier Lee Kuan Yew and Christians

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