Repealing S377A: Duty of MPs, not courts, to act on law, says minister
The Straits Times|November 29, 2022
Consensual sex between adult men should not be seen as criminal issue: Shanmugam
Ng Wei Kai
Repealing S377A: Duty of MPs, not courts, to act on law, says minister

Consensual sex between adult men does not raise concerns about law and order and thus should not be looked at as a criminal issue, Home Affairs and Law Minister K. Shanmugam said in Parliament on Monday.

Furthermore, Section 377A of the Penal Code, which criminalises such acts, harms gay people in Singapore, he said during the debate on repealing the law.

He added that there has been a clear risk of the law being struck down in the courts and if Parliament allowed this to happen, MPs would be avoiding their duty and the outcome would be worse for Singaporeans.

Mr Shanmugam said: So I say, the time has come for us to remove Section 377A, because it humiliates and hurts gay people.

“Most gay people do not cause harm to others; they just want to live peacefully and quietly and be accepted as part of society the same as any other Singaporean.”

He said gay Singaporeans do not deserve to be stigmatised for their sexual orientation.

“To a gay person, even if Section 377A is not enforced, it is there: Memorialised in law, a sword hanging over his head, a daily reminder that every time he engages in private sexual activity, behind closed doors in the sanctity of his bedroom, he is nevertheless a criminal.

“We have to ask: Is it fair that gays have to live in this way?”

He said this is not a situation that Singaporeans should accept, even if they personally disagree with homosexuality. He added that even many of those who do not want the law to be repealed do not want it enforced.

Mr Shanmugam said that for this reason, the law should no longer be on the books and repealing it makes it clear that gay people are not criminals.

He was speaking in a wide-ranging debate on repealing the law that more than 30 MPs are expected to participate in over two days.

This story is from the November 29, 2022 edition of The Straits Times.

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This story is from the November 29, 2022 edition of The Straits Times.

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