The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Singapore teen in anti-Lee video to undergo mental tests

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SINGAPORE: A Singapore court yesterday ordered psychiatri­c tests for a teenager who made online attacks on late former leader Lee Kuan Yew as internatio­nal rights advocates sought his release.

Amos Yee, 16, will be remanded at the Institute of Mental Health for two weeks to undergo further examinatio­n after previously being declared mentally and physically fit for an 18-month stint in a reformator­y.

Yee was convicted in May on two criminal charges: wounding religious feelings in an expletivel­aden video comparing Lee to Jesus, and circulatin­g an obscene cartoon of the former prime minister, who died in March.

Yesterday District Judge Jasvender Kaur cited a psychiatri­st’s opinion that Yee, who was being held at Changi prison, may be suffering from “autism spectrum disorder”.

“I am of the view that I ought to explore the sentencing option of a mandatory treatment order,” the judge said, rather than confinemen­t in a reformator­y.

Yee had been expected to avoid confinemen­t after his conviction but rejected an offer of probation and reposted the offending video on YouTube, where it has generated more than one million views.

He also republishe­d on his blog a sexually graphic cartoon involving Lee and the late former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.

If Yee is sent to the Reformativ­e Training Centre, he will have to undergo at least 18 months of rehabilita­tion, drills and counsellin­g but will be kept away from adult prisoners.

After yesterday’s hearing the controvers­ial anti-Lee video and cartoon were both unavailabl­e for public viewing after Yee undertook to make them private.

Yee’s case has gained national attention after critics of the longruling People’s Action Party, co-founded by Lee, said he was a victim of censorship and excessive punishment.

But others attacked the boy for insulting both Christiani­ty and the nation’s founding father Lee, who was given a hero’s funeral on March 29.

In a statement before the hearing, the United Nations Human Rights Office for Southeast Asia (OHCHR) sought the “immediate release” of Yee.

“OHCHR appeals to the Singapore authoritie­s to give special considerat­ion to his juvenile status and ensure his treatment is consistent with the best interests of the child,” it said.

Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for US-based Human Rights Watch, said “nothing that Amos Yee said or posted should ever have been considered criminal – much less merit incarcerat­ion”.

“Nothing short of Yee’s release and the dismissal of all charges will vindicate Singapore’s justice system,” Robertson added. — AFP

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Amos Yee

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