Last updated on 15 Apr 2011
The following Act was passed by Parliament on 13th April
2009 and assented to by the President on 28th April 2009:—PUBLIC ORDER ACT 2009
(No. 15 of 2009.)
I assent.S R NATHAN,
President.
28th April 2009.
Date of coming into operation: 9th October 2009
An
Act to regulate assemblies and processions in public places, to
provide powers necessary for preserving public order and the safety
of individuals at special event areas, to supplement other laws
relating to the preservation and maintenance of public order in
public places, and to make consequential and related amendments to
certain other written laws.
Be it enacted by the President
with the advice and consent of the Parliament of Singapore, as follows:PART I
PRELIMINARY
Short title and commencement
1.
This
Act may be cited as the Public Order Act 2009 and shall come into
operation on such date as the Minister may, by notification in the Gazette, appoint.
Interpretation
2.
—(1)
In
this Act, unless the context otherwise requires —"act
of terrorism"
means any of the
following:
(a)
a terrorist bombing offence within
the meaning of the Terrorism (Suppression of Bombings) Act (Cap.
324A);
(b)
a terrorist act within the meaning
of the Terrorism (Suppression of Financing) Act (Cap. 325);
"assembly"
means a gathering or meeting (whether
or not comprising any lecture, talk, address, debate or discussion)
of persons the purpose (or one of the purposes) of which is —
(a)
to demonstrate support for or opposition
to the views or actions of any person, group of persons or any government;
(b)
to publicise a cause or campaign;
or
(c)
to mark or commemorate any event,
and includes a demonstration by a person
alone for any such purpose referred to in paragraph (a),
(b) or (c);
"authorised
officer"
, in relation to any
provision in this Act or the regulations, means any police officer
authorised in that behalf by the Commissioner for the purposes of
that provision;
"Commissioner"
means the Commissioner of Police
appointed under the Police Force Act (Cap. 235);
"copy"
, in relation to a film, means any
article or thing in which the visual images or sounds comprising
the film are embodied;
"declaration"
means a declaration made under section
21;
"event"
includes any rehearsal, sound and
light testing and other ancillary activities necessary and incidental
to an event;
"permit"
means a permit granted under section
7 in respect of a public assembly or public procession;
"place"
includes any motor vehicle, train,
vessel, aircraft or other conveyance;
"procession"
means a march, parade or other procession
(whether or not involving the use of vehicles or other conveyances) —
(a)
comprising 2 or more persons gathered
at a place of assembly to move from that place substantially as
a body of persons in succession proceeding by a common route or
routes; and
(b)
the purpose (or one of the purposes)
of which is —(i)
to demonstrate support for or opposition
to the views or actions of any person, group of persons or any government;
(ii)
to publicise a cause or campaign;
or
(iii)
to mark or commemorate any event,
and includes any assembly held in conjunction
with such procession, and a march by a person alone for any such
purpose referred to in paragraph (b)(i), (ii)
or (iii);
"prohibited
area"
means any area that is
specified in an order made under section 12;
"public
assembly"
means an assembly
held or to be held in a public place or to which members of the
public in general are invited, induced or permitted to attend;
"public
place"
means —
(a)
any place (open to the air or otherwise)
to which members of the public have access as of right or by virtue
of express or implied permission, whether or not on payment of a
fee, whether or not access to the place may be restricted at particular
times or for particular purposes, and whether or not it is an “approved
place” within the meaning of the Public Entertainments
and Meetings Act (Cap. 257); or
(b)
a part of a place that the occupier
of the place allows members of the public to enter, but only while
the place is ordinarily open to members of the public;
"public
procession"
means a procession
in, to or from a public place;
"regulated
place"
means any place to which
Part IV applies;
"security
officer"
means an individual
who is a licensed security officer within the meaning of the Private
Security Industry Act (Cap. 250A);
"special
event"
means an event declared
under section 21 to be a special event;
"special
event area"
, in relation to
a special event, means, for the period the declaration under section
21 of the event is in force —
(a)
the place or places stated in the
declaration as the location or locations at which the event is or
is to be; and
(b)
any place reasonably incidental to
the holding of the event;
"unrestricted
area"
means a public place specified
in an order made under section 14.
(2)
Any reference
in this Act to an assembly or a procession that is unlawful under Part
II shall be a reference to an assembly or a procession —(a)
in respect of which no permit has
been granted under section 7 or no such permit is in force;
(b)
which is held —(i)
on a date or at a time which differs
from the date or time specified in relation to the assembly or procession
in the notice given under section 6; or
(ii)
in the case of a procession, along
a route which differs from the route specified in relation to the
procession in the notice given under section 6;
(c)
which is not in compliance with any
requirement imposed by section 8(1) or any condition imposed under
section 8(2) on organisers or persons taking part in that assembly
or procession;
(d)
which is held within a prohibited
area and the holding thereof is prohibited by an order under section
12(1);
(e)
the holding of which is prohibited
by an order or a notification under section 13(1) or (2); or
(f)
which is held within an unrestricted
area and the holding thereof is not in accordance with any condition
that applies by virtue of section 14 to the organising or taking
part in the assembly or procession.
Meanings of “organising” and “taking
part in”
3.
—(1)
In
this Act, a reference to a person organising an assembly or a procession shall
be a reference to a person who is responsible for holding, convening,
forming or collecting the assembly or procession, and includes —(a)
any person who assists or promotes
the holding, convening, forming or collecting of any assembly or
procession; and
(b)
where any person will receive revenue
from the sale (if any) of tickets to the assembly or procession,
that person,
but does not include a person carrying
on a demonstration by himself or marching alone.
(2)
A reference to
a person or persons taking part in an assembly or a procession shall
include, as the case may be, a person carrying on a demonstration
by himself, or a march by a person alone, for any such purpose referred
to in the definitions of an assembly and a procession, respectively,
in section 2(1).
Commissioner and authorised officers
4.
—(1)
The
Commissioner shall, subject to any general or special directions
of the Minister, be responsible for the administration of this Act
and may perform such duties as are imposed and may exercise such
powers as are conferred upon him by this Act.
(2)
The Minister may
from time to time give the Commissioner directions of a general
character, and not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act,
as to the exercise of the powers and discretions conferred on the
Commissioner by, and the duties required to be discharged by the
Commissioner under, this Act; and the Commissioner shall give effect
to all such directions given.
(3)
The Commissioner
may delegate the exercise of all or any of the powers conferred
or duties imposed upon him by this Act (except the power of delegation
conferred by this subsection) to any authorised officer, subject
to such conditions or limitations as set out in this Act or as the
Commissioner may specify by directions; and any reference in this
Act to the Commissioner shall include a reference to such an authorised
officer.
(4)
In exercising
any powers or functions under a delegation under subsection (3), an
authorised officer must comply with any direction of the Commissioner.
PART II
ASSEMBLIES
AND PROCESSIONS
Regulation of public assemblies and public processions
5.
—(1)
Subject
to the provisions of this Act, a public assembly and a public procession
shall not take place unless —(a)
the Commissioner is notified under
section 6 of the intention to hold the public assembly or public
procession, and a permit is granted under section 7 in respect of
that public assembly or public procession, as the case may be; and
(b)
the holding of that public assembly
or public procession is not prohibited under section 12 or 13.
(2)
This section shall
not apply to —(a)
an assembly or a procession exempted
from this section under section 46; and
(b)
an assembly or a procession within
any part of an unrestricted area not falling within a special event
area.
Advance notice of public assembly or public procession
6.
—(1)
Notice
of intention to organise a public assembly or public procession shall
be given in accordance with subsections (2) and (3) to the Commissioner
in the prescribed manner accompanied by an application for a permit
in respect of that assembly or procession, as the case may be.
(2)
Notice under this
section shall be given not less than the prescribed period before
the date on which the assembly or procession, as the case may be,
is to be held.
(3)
Notice under this
section shall —(a)
be given in writing in such form
as may be prescribed;
(b)
be given —(i)
if it is a demonstration carried
on by a person by himself or a march by a person alone, by that
person; and
(ii)
in any other case, by any of the
organisers of the assembly or procession; and
(c)
contain all the following particulars:(i)
the location, date and time where
and when the assembly or procession, as the case may be, is to be
held and the estimated time at which it will disband;
(ii)
in the case of a procession, the
location, time of commencement and duration of any assembly to be
held in conjunction with the procession and the route, the places
(if any) at which the procession will halt and time for which it
will remain stationary in each such place;
(iii)
the number of persons likely to take
part in it;
(iv)
the purpose of the assembly or procession;
(v)
the name, address and telephone number
of the organiser of the assembly or procession, and of a person
able to act, if necessary, in place of the organiser for the purposes
of section 8(1)(a);
(vi)
the arrangements for its control
being made by the person proposing to organise it;
(vii)
such other particulars and information
relating to the assembly or procession as may be prescribed;
(viii)
such other particulars and information
relating to that particular assembly or procession, as the case
may be, as the Commissioner may require.
(4)
Notwithstanding
subsection (2), the Commissioner may, and shall in any case where
he is reasonably satisfied that earlier notice could not have been
given, accept shorter notice than is as mentioned in that subsection.
(5)
In cases where
the Commissioner has decided not to accept shorter notice than is
as mentioned in subsection (2), he shall as soon as practicable
inform in writing the person purporting to give such notice of his
decision.
Permit for public assembly or public procession
7.
—(1)
The
Commissioner shall, upon receipt of any notice and application under
section 6 for a permit in respect of a proposed public assembly
or public procession, have regard to the information furnished in
the notice and any other information available to him in relation
to the proposed public assembly or public procession, as the case
may be, and may thereafter either —(a)
grant a permit (with or without conditions)
in respect of the proposed public assembly or public procession,
as the case may be; or
(b)
refuse to grant a permit in respect
of the proposed public assembly or public procession.
(2)
The Commissioner
may refuse to grant a permit for a public assembly or public procession
in respect of which notice under section 6 has been given if he
has reasonable ground for apprehending that the proposed assembly
or procession may —(a)
occasion public disorder, or damage
to public or private property;
(b)
create a public nuisance;
(c)
give rise to an obstruction in any
public road;
(d)
place the safety of any person in
jeopardy;
(e)
cause feelings of enmity, hatred,
ill-will or hostility between different groups in Singapore;
(f)
glorify the commission or preparation
(whether in the past, in the future or generally) of acts of terrorism
or any offence or otherwise have the effect of directly or indirectly
encouraging or otherwise inducing members of the public to commit,
prepare or instigate acts of terrorism or such an offence; or
(g)
be held within or enter a prohibited
area, or an area to which an order or a notification under section
13 applies.
Conditions applying to public assembly or public
procession
8.
—(1)
At
every public assembly or public procession —(a)
there shall be present throughout
the assembly or procession either the person who organised the assembly
or procession or, if he is not present, a person nominated by him,
in writing, to act in his place; and
(b)
good order and public safety shall
be maintained throughout the assembly or procession, as the case
may be.
(2)
In granting a
permit for a public assembly or public procession, the Commissioner
may impose on the organisers of, and the persons taking part in,
the assembly or procession such conditions specified in the permit
and relating to the assembly or procession as in the Commissioner’s
opinion are necessary to prevent the assembly or procession, as
the case may be, being carried out to result in anything referred
to in section 7(2)(a) to (g).
(3)
Without prejudice
to the generality of subsection (2), the conditions may, in particular,
impose requirements as to —(a)
the number of persons who may take
part in the public assembly or public procession;
(b)
the number and size of banners, placards,
displays or other paraphernalia used;
(c)
the engagement of such number of
marshals and security officers as may be necessary to ensure that
good order and public safety shall be maintained throughout the
assembly or procession, as the case may be; and
(d)
the place or places where the public
assembly or public procession may, or may not, be carried on.
(4)
The Commissioner
may, if he reasonably believes that it is necessary in order to
prevent anything referred to in section 7(2)(a)
to (g) from happening —(a)
impose additional conditions on those
organising or taking part in an assembly or a procession authorised
by a permit; or
(b)
amend any condition previously imposed
under subsection (2) or paragraph (a),
and the senior police officer may give
directions to those organising or taking part in the assembly or
procession to ensure the due observance of any condition imposed under
subsection (2).
(5)
Any reference
in this Act to a condition imposed under subsection (2) shall, except
where the context otherwise requires, include reference to an additional
condition or amendment to such a condition imposed under subsection
(4).
(6)
In this section —“assembly” and “procession” include the period of first assembly
of the assembly and procession, respectively, to the time it disbands;
"senior
police officer"
means the most
senior in rank of the police officers present at the scene of the
assembly or procession, or any one of them if there are more than
one of the same rank.
Form and validity of permit
9.
A
permit granted under section 7 shall —(a)
be in such form as the Commissioner
may determine;
(b)
contain the conditions subject to
which it is granted; and
(c)
unless earlier cancelled by or under
this Act, be valid —(i)
in respect of the holding of such
particular public assembly or public procession specified in the
permit; or
(ii)
for such period (not exceeding one
year) as may be specified therein.
When permit may be cancelled
10.
—(1)
The
Commissioner may, by notice in writing to the person to whom the permit
is granted, cancel the permit that has been granted thereto.
(2)
Without prejudice
to subsection (1), the Commissioner may, by notice in writing, cancel
a permit that has been granted to any person if —(a)
the permit has been reported lost
or stolen;
(b)
there is reasonable cause to believe
that the permit has been obtained by means of any false statement
or any statement that is false in a material particular;
(c)
the Commissioner becomes aware of
a circumstance that would have required or permitted him to refuse
the permit to the person had he been aware of the circumstance immediately
before the grant thereof; or
(d)
there is reasonable cause to believe
that any condition of the permit has been contravened.
(3)
Every permit that
is cancelled under subsection (1) shall thereupon be invalid and
cease to be in force.
Appeal to Minister
11.
—(1)
If
a person is aggrieved by the Commissioner's decision under
this Part —(a)
to refuse to grant a permit;
(b)
to cancel a permit; or
(c)
to impose any particular condition
on a permit,
the person may, within 7 days after
being notified of the decision (or such longer period as the Minister
allows in exceptional circumstances, whether before or after the
end of the 7 days), appeal to the Minister whose decision shall
be final.
(2)
An appeal must
be in writing, and specify the grounds on which it is made.
(3)
After receiving
an appeal under subsection (1), the Minister shall consider the appeal
and —(a)
reject the appeal and confirm the
Commissioner’s decision;
(b)
allow the appeal in whole or in part
and vary the Commissioner’s decision;
(c)
set aside the Commissioner’s
decision and make a decision in substitution for it; or
(d)
direct the Commissioner to reconsider
his decision,
and the appellant shall be notified
in writing of the Minister’s decision in respect of his
appeal accordingly.
(4)
In this section,
any reference to the Minister shall include a reference to any Minister
of State designated by the Minister to hear any appeal under this
section in place of the Minister.
Prohibited areas
12.
—(1)
If,
in relation to any public place, the Minister is of the opinion
that, having regard to the extent of powers exercisable under section
13, it is necessary in the public interest to do so, the Minister
may, by order published in the Gazette, prohibit the
holding of all public assemblies or public processions or both in
the public place (referred to in this Act as a prohibited area).
(2)
An order made
under subsection (1) may exclude any assembly or procession, or
any assembly or procession of any class or description, specified
in the order from the prohibition therein.
(3)
An order made
under subsection (1) shall have the effect of cancelling any previous
permit granted under section 7 in relation to any public assembly
or public procession, the holding of which is prohibited by the
order.
(4)
All orders made
under this section shall be presented to Parliament as soon as possible
after publication in the Gazette.
Power to prohibit assembly or procession in public
interest
13.
—(1)
If,
in the case of any proposed public assembly or public procession,
the Minister is of the opinion that it is necessary in the public
interest to do so, the Minister may, by order published in the Gazette, prohibit the holding of that public
assembly or public procession.
(2)
If, in relation
to any public place and any period of time not exceeding 28 days,
the Commissioner is of the opinion that, having regard to —(a)
any serious public disorder or serious
damage to public or private property which may result from public
assemblies or public processions of a particular class or description
in that public place during that period;
(b)
any serious public nuisance or obstruction
in any public road, or threat to the safety of persons in that public
place, that may result from such public assemblies or public processions;
(c)
any serious impact which such public
assemblies or public processions may have on relations between different
groups in Singapore;
(d)
any undue demands which such public
assemblies or public processions may cause to be made on the police
or military forces; and
(e)
the extent of powers exercisable
under subsection (1),
it is necessary in the public interest
to do so, he may, with the concurrence of the Minister, by notification
published in the Gazette, prohibit the holding
of all public assemblies or public processions or both, or of that
class or description, in that public place during that period.
(3)
An order made
under subsection (1) in relation to an assembly or a procession shall
have the effect of cancelling any previous permit granted under
section 7 in relation to that assembly or procession.
(4)
A notification
made under subsection (2) shall have the effect of cancelling any
previous permit granted under section 7 in relation to any assembly
or procession, the holding of which is prohibited by the notification.
Unrestricted areas
14.
—(1)
If
the Minister is of the opinion that, having regard to the natural
environment of any public place and the likelihood of any serious
disruption to the life of the community (such as but not limited
to the rights of members of the public to enjoy the natural environment
and the rights of persons to carry on business), it is appropriate
to allow citizens and other persons to exercise the right to participate
in assemblies and processions in that public place, the Minister
may, by order published in the Gazette, designate
that public place (referred to in this Act as an unrestricted area)
to be an area whereby no notice under section 6, and no permit under section
7, shall be required for the holding of all assemblies or processions
or both therein.
(2)
An order made
under subsection (1) shall —(a)
describe the unrestricted area, whether
by means of a description, map or other document;
(b)
state any period for which the order
is in force; and
(c)
state the conditions (if any) that
apply to the organising of, or taking part in, any assembly or procession
within that unrestricted area.
(3)
An order made
under subsection (1) may —(a)
provide that any contravention of
any condition therein that is applicable to the organising of or
taking part in any assembly or procession within the unrestricted
area subject to the order shall be an offence punishable with a fine
not exceeding $10,000 or with imprisonment for a term not
exceeding 6 months or with both; and
(b)
provide for such transitional, savings
and other consequential, incidental and supplemental provisions
as the Minister considers necessary or expedient.
(4)
All orders made
under this section shall be presented to Parliament as soon as possible
after publication in the Gazette.
(5)
This section shall
have effect subject to section 33.
Offences in prohibited areas, etc.
15.
—(1)
A
person who organises an assembly or a procession the holding of which
he knows or ought reasonably to know is prohibited by an order under
section 12(1) or 13(1) or a notification under section 13(2), as
the case may be, shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable
on conviction to a fine not exceeding $10,000 or to imprisonment
for a term not exceeding 6 months or to both.
(2)
A person who takes
part in an assembly or a procession the holding of which he knows
or ought reasonably to know is prohibited by an order under section
12(1) or 13(1) or a notification under section 13(2), as the case
may be, shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction
to a fine not exceeding $5,000.
Other offences in relation to assemblies or processions
16.
—(1)
Each
person who organises a public assembly or public procession —(a)
in respect of which no permit has
been granted under section 7 or no such permit is in force, where
such permit is required by this Act;
(b)
which is held —(i)
on a date or at a time which differs
from the date or time specified in relation to the assembly or procession
in the notice given under section 6; or
(ii)
in the case of a procession, along
a route which differs from the route specified in relation to the
procession in the notice given under section 6; or
(c)
which is not in compliance with any
condition imposed under section 8(2) on persons taking part in that
assembly or procession,
shall be guilty of an offence and shall,
subject to subsection (3), be liable on conviction to a fine not
exceeding $5,000.
(2)
Each person who
takes part in a public assembly or public procession —(a)
in respect of which no permit has
been granted under section 7 or no such permit is in force, where
such permit is required by this Act;
(b)
which is held —(i)
on a date or at a time which differs
from the date or time specified in relation to the assembly or procession
in the notice given under section 6; or
(ii)
in the case of a procession, along
a route which differs from the route specified in relation to the
procession in the notice given under section 6; or
(c)
which is not in compliance with any
requirement imposed by section 8(1)(b) or any
condition imposed under section 8(2) on persons taking part in that
assembly or procession,
shall be guilty of an offence and shall,
subject to subsection (3), be liable on conviction to a fine not
exceeding $3,000.
(3)
Where a person
who is convicted or found guilty of an offence under subsection
(1) or (2) is a repeat offender, the person shall be liable on conviction —(a)
if the person is one who organises
an assembly or a procession — to a fine not exceeding $10,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months or to both;
and
(b)
if the person is one who takes part
in an assembly or a procession — to a fine not exceeding $5,000.
(4)
A person organising
or taking part in an assembly or a procession who knowingly fails
to comply with any direction of the senior police officer given
under section 8(4) shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable
on conviction —(a)
in the case of a person organising
an assembly or a procession — to a fine not exceeding $10,000;
and
(b)
in the case of a person taking part
in an assembly or a procession — to a fine not exceeding $5,000.
(5)
For the purposes
of subsection (3), a person is a repeat offender in relation to an
offence under subsection (1) or (2) if the person who is convicted,
or found guilty, of an offence under subsection (1) or (2) (referred
to as the current offence) has been convicted or found guilty of —(a)
an offence under subsection (1) or
(2);
(b)
an offence under section 5(4) of
the Miscellaneous Offences (Public Order and Nuisance) Act (Cap.
184) as in force immediately before the commencement of this section;
or
(c)
an offence under any rules made under
section 5(1) of the Miscellaneous Offences (Public Order and Nuisance)
Act as in force immediately before the commencement of this section,
in relation to any assembly or procession in any public road, public
place or place of public resort held without a permit under those
rules or in contravention of any term or condition of such a permit,
on at least one other occasion within
the period of 5 years immediately before the date on which he is
convicted or found guilty of the current offence.
(6)
This section shall
not apply to —(a)
an assembly or a procession exempted
from this section under section 46; and
(b)
an assembly or a procession within
an unrestricted area not falling within a special event area.
Defences
17.
—(1)
In
any proceedings for an offence under section 16(1)(a)
or (2)(a), it shall be a defence for the person
charged to prove that he did not know, and neither suspected nor
had reason to suspect, that no permit had been granted under section 7
in respect of the assembly or procession or that no such permit
is in force, as the case may be.
(2)
In any proceedings
for an offence under section 16(1)(b) or (2)(b), it shall be a defence for the person charged
to prove that —(a)
he did not know, and neither suspected
nor had reason to suspect, the difference in date, time or route;
or
(b)
the difference arose from —(i)
circumstances beyond his control;
(ii)
something done in compliance with
conditions imposed under section 8(2); or
(iii)
something done with the agreement
of a police officer not below the rank of sergeant or by the senior
police officer’s direction under section 8(4).
(3)
In any proceedings
for an offence under section 16(1)(c) or (2)(c), it shall be a defence for the person charged
to prove that he did not know, and neither suspected nor had reason
to suspect, that the assembly or procession was not in compliance with
any of the conditions of the permit for the assembly or procession.
(4)
In any proceedings
for an offence under section 16(4), it shall be a defence for the
person charged to prove that his failure to comply with a direction
of the senior police officer given under section 8(4) arose from
circumstances beyond his control.
Obstructing free passage of any ambulance, etc.
18.
Where
a person at, or in relation to, an assembly or a procession conducted pursuant
to a permit —(a)
acts in a disorderly manner for the
purpose of preventing the transaction of the business for which
the assembly or procession assembled;
(b)
obstructs the free passage of any
ambulance, fire engine or vehicle belonging to the Singapore Police
Force or the Singapore Civil Defence Force or, otherwise than in
the manner and to the extent authorised by the permit relating to
that assembly or procession, impedes or disrupts the use by members
of the public in general of any road; or
(c)
incites other persons to do so,
the person shall be guilty of an offence
and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $10,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months or to both.
Legal immunity for participant in lawful assembly
or procession
19.
If
an assembly or a procession —(a)
is the subject of a permit;
(b)
is peaceful; and
(c)
is held in accordance with the conditions
imposed on the permit,
a person who takes part in the assembly
or procession, does not, merely because of his taking part, incur
any civil or criminal liability because of the obstruction of a public
place.
PART III
SPECIAL
EVENTS SECURITY
Interpretation of this Part
20.
In
this Part, unless the context otherwise requires —"approved
person"
, in relation to any
power under section 22, 24, 27, 28 or 29, means any of the following
persons approved by the Commissioner in writing to exercise such
power under that provision at or in relation to a special event
area specified in that approval:
(a)
any member of an auxiliary police
force; or
(b)
any security officer who is employed
by, or whose services are supplied to, the occupier of the special
event area;
"entrant"
, in relation to a special event
area, means a person who is about to enter or is in the area;
"event
organiser"
, in relation to
an event, means a person who is responsible (whether fully or substantially)
for the organisation and holding of the event and the receipt of
revenue from the event (if any);
"garment"
includes a cloak, coat or shirt;
"hand-held
scanner"
means a device that
may be passed over or around a person or a person's personal
property to detect metal, objects or other substances;
"occupier"
, in relation to a special event
area, includes the event organiser of the special event at that
special event area;
"personal
property"
, in relation to a
person, means things carried by the person or things apparently
in the immediate control of the person, but does not include clothing
being worn by the person;
"place"
includes an area;
"prohibited
item"
, in relation to a special
event, means such thing or animal that is stated to be a prohibited
item in the notification in respect of the event under section 22;
"search"
includes —
(a)
a search of a person conducted by
quickly running the hands over the person's outer garments;
and
(b)
an examination of anything worn or
carried by the person;
"statutory
condition of entry"
, in relation
to a special event, means a condition that is stated in the notification
concerning the event under section 22 to be a statutory
condition of entry to the special event area;
"vehicle"
includes an aircraft and a boat;
"X-ray
machine"
means a device through
which a person’s belongings are passed and X-rayed.
Declaration of special event
21.
—(1)
Subject
to subsections (2) and (3), the Minister may declare an event to be
a special event for the purposes of this Part.
(2)
In deciding whether
to make a declaration, the Minister shall have regard to —(a)
the nature of the event;
(b)
the number and kind of people expected
to attend the event;
(c)
Singapore’s obligations
for holding the event; and
(d)
any other relevant matter.
(3)
The Minister may
make a declaration only if he is satisfied —(a)
that the declaration is necessary
for preserving public order and the safety of individuals involved
in the event and other individuals and for the avoidance of disruptions
to the event; and
(b)
that either —(i)
there is a reasonable likelihood
that the event may be disrupted if the powers in sections 24 to
30 are not exercised;
(ii)
the exercise of the powers is necessary
because of the need to protect persons involved in or at the event;
(iii)
the exercise of the powers is required
as a condition of holding the event in Singapore; or
(iv)
there is a reasonable likelihood
that the event because of its nature might be at risk of an act
of terrorism.
(4)
A declaration
under subsection (1) must —(a)
contain a brief description of the
event to which it applies, whether by means of a description, map
or other document;
(b)
state the proposed time and date
of the event or the proposed period in which the event is to take
place, and the location of the special event area for the event;
(c)
state the period (not exceeding 3
years) for which the declaration is in force; and
(d)
be published in the Gazette.
(5)
Once such a declaration
is made, the Minister shall, within 7 days thereafter and before
the date the declaration comes into force, cause to be published
a notice of the making of the declaration, describing briefly the
event and the special event area in such manner as will secure adequate
publicity for the declaration.
(6)
Failure to comply
with subsection (5) in respect of any declaration shall not invalidate
the declaration.
(7)
Unless sooner
revoked, a declaration shall expire on the date, and at the time (if
any) stated in, or worked out in accordance with the declaration.
(8)
At any time before
a declaration comes into force, the Minister may amend the description
of the location of the special event area to which the declaration
applies by publishing the amendment in the Gazette;
and notice of the amendment describing briefly the changes therein
shall be published as soon as practicable in such manner as will
secure adequate publicity for the amended declaration.
Statutory conditions of entry
22.
—(1)
At
any time after a declaration is made in respect of a special event
and the special event area for that event, the Commissioner may,
with the approval of the Minister, determine that any or all of
the following conditions apply to the special event area:(a)
that a person seeking to enter or
in the special event area must, if asked by a police officer or
an approved person, permit an inspection to be made of his personal
property;
(b)
that a person seeking to enter or
in the special event area must, if asked by a police officer, permit
a search to be made of the person;
(c)
that a person must not take into
or possess in the special event area a prohibited item;
(d)
that a person seeking to enter or
in the special event area must comply with any lawful order of a
police officer or an approved person regarding the entrant's
entry into and remaining in that area.
(2)
Once any such
determination is made in respect of a special event and its special
event area, the Commissioner shall, by notification published in
the Gazette, specify —(a)
the places, if any, at which a police
officer or an approved person may exercise specified powers under
sections 24 to 29;
(b)
if the determination includes the
statutory condition of entry that a person shall not take into or
possess in the special event area a prohibited item, the thing or
animal a person is prohibited from bringing into the special event area;
and
(c)
any other conditions that apply to
entry to the special event area or any part of it.
(3)
Any notification
under subsection (2) in respect of a special event and its special
event area shall be made and published at least 7 days before the
proposed date of the special event or, in the case where the special
event is to take place during a proposed period, the beginning of
that proposed period.
(4)
Once such a notification
under subsection (2) is published, the Commissioner shall, within
7 days thereafter and before the proposed date of the special event
or, in the case where the special event is to take place during
a proposed period, the beginning of that proposed period, cause
to be published a copy of the notification in such manner as will
secure adequate publicity for it.
(5)
The Commissioner
may at any time amend the notification under subsection (2) relating
to a special event and special event area; and notice of the amendment describing
briefly the changes therein shall be published as soon as practicable
in such manner as will secure adequate publicity for the amended
declaration.
Tickets sellers to inform of statutory conditions
of entry
23.
—(1)
If
any person who sells tickets to an event has reasonable grounds
for believing that the event may be declared a special event, the
person shall take reasonable steps to tell a person, before the
person buys tickets to the event, that statutory conditions of entry
may apply to the event.
(2)
If an event has
been declared a special event under section 21, the person who sells
tickets to the event must take reasonable steps to tell a person,
before the person buys tickets to the event, the statutory conditions
of entry that apply to the event.
Inspection of personal property, etc., as condition
of entry
24.
—(1)
This
section shall apply only if the notification under section 22(2)
relating to the special event to be held at a special event area
states that it is a condition of entry to the special event area
that an entrant to the area must, if asked by a police officer or
an approved person, permit an inspection to be made of the entrant’s
personal property.
(2)
Subject to subsection
(3), a police officer or an approved person may ask the entrant
to do one or more of the following:(a)
allow the police officer or approved
person to inspect the entrant’s personal property;
(b)
remove one or more garments worn
by the entrant as specified by the police officer or approved person
and allow the police officer or approved person to inspect the garments;
(c)
remove all articles from the entrant’s
clothing and allow the police officer or approved person to inspect
them;
(d)
open an article for inspection and
allow the police officer or approved person to inspect it;
(e)
open a vehicle or a part of it for
inspection and allow the police officer or approved person to inspect
it;
(f)
remove an article from the vehicle
as specified by the police officer or approved person and allow
the police officer or approved person, as the case may be, to inspect
it.
(3)
A police officer
or an approved person may make a request under subsection (2) if
the police officer or approved person reasonably considers it necessary
to make a request under subsection (2) in relation to an entrant
or the entrant’s personal property, whether or not the
entrant or his personal property have been subjected to screening.
(4)
Any person who
fails to comply with the request of a police officer or an approved
person under subsection (2) shall be guilty of an offence and shall
be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $10,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months or to both.
(5)
In this section,
inspecting an article includes handling the article, opening it and
examining its contents.
Search of person
25.
—(1)
This
section shall apply only if the notification under section 22(2)
relating to the special event to be held at a special event area
states that it is a condition of entry to the special event area
that an entrant to the area must, if asked by a police officer,
permit a search to be made of the person.
(2)
A police officer
may ask a person to permit a search of the person where —(a)
the person is entering or about to
enter a special event area; or
(b)
the person is in a special event
area.
(3)
Any person who
fails to comply with the request of a police officer under subsection
(2) shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction
to a fine not exceeding $10,000 or to imprisonment for
a term not exceeding 6 months or to both.
Prohibited items
26.
—(1)
This
section shall apply only if the notification under section 22(2)
relating to the special event to be held at a special event area
states that it is a condition of entry to the special event area
that an entrant must not take into or possess in the special event
area a prohibited item.
(2)
A person shall
not take a prohibited item into, or possess a prohibited item in, a
special event area, unless the person has the express permission
of a police officer to do so.
(3)
Any person who
fails to comply with subsection (2) shall be guilty of an offence
and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $20,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or to both.
(4)
It shall not be
an offence under this section if the person disposes of the prohibited
item before entering the special event area.
Security screening at special event area
27.
—(1)
This
section shall apply if the security system for a special event area involves
the use of screening devices, such as (but not limited to) the following:(a)
a walk-through detector;
(b)
an X-ray machine;
(c)
a hand-held scanner.
(2)
A police officer
or an approved person may ask an entrant to a special event area
to undergo any form of security screening, including doing one or
more of the following:(a)
to walk through a walk-through detector;
(b)
to pass the entrant’s personal
property through an X-ray machine;
(c)
to allow the police officer or approved
person to pass a hand-held scanner in close proximity to the entrant;
(d)
to allow the police officer or approved
person to pass a hand-held scanner in close proximity to the entrant's
personal property.
(3)
Any person who
fails to comply with the request of a police officer or an approved
person under subsection (2) shall be guilty of an offence and shall
be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $10,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months or to both.
Power to require reasons for entry to special event
area
28.
—(1)
A
police officer or an approved person may ask an entrant to a special event
area to state the person’s name and residence and his reason
for being in, or about to enter, the area.
(2)
If the person
fails to comply with the request of a police officer or an approved person
under subsection (1), the person shall be guilty of an offence and
shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $5,000.
(3)
In this section, “residence”,
in relation to a person, means the address of the place where the
person usually lives in Singapore.
Refusal of entry and removal from special event area
29.
—(1)
This
section shall apply if —(a)
the entrant fails to comply with
a request of a police officer or an approved person made under this
Part;
(b)
the entrant fails to satisfy a police
officer or an approved person that the entrant has a good and lawful
reason to be at the special event area or a particular part of it;
or
(c)
a police officer or an approved person
reasonably suspects that the entrant is about to commit, has committed
or is committing an offence under section 26(3), 31 or 32.
(2)
Unless the entrant
is arrested —(a)
if the entrant has entered the special
event area — a police officer or an approved person may
direct the entrant to leave and not re-enter the special event area;
and
(b)
if the entrant is about to enter
the special event area — a police officer or an approved
person may by direction refuse him entry to the special event area.
(3)
If a person contravenes
any direction given by a police officer or an approved person under
subsection (2)(a) or (b)
to leave a special event area, or attempts to enter or re-enter
the special event area contrary to such a direction, a police officer
may use such force as is reasonable and necessary to arrest and
detain the person for the purpose of removing the person from or
preventing his entry or re-entry to the special event area, or to
remove the person from the area, as the case may be.
Directions to event organiser
30.
—(1)
The
Commissioner may, if he reasonably believes that it is necessary for
preserving public order and the safety of individuals involved in
the special event and other individuals and for the avoidance of
disruptions to the special event, at any time during the period
the declaration relating to that special event is in force, give written
directions to the event organiser of the special event requiring
the event organiser concerned (according to the circumstances of
the case) to do, or not to do, such things as are specified in the
direction or are of a description as specified therein as are necessary
for preserving public order and the safety of individuals involved in
the special event and other individuals and for the avoidance of
disruptions to the special event.
(2)
Without prejudice
to the generality of subsection (1), a written direction under that
subsection may require the event organiser concerned —(a)
to alter, demolish or remove any
gate, door, fence, platform, staging, hoarding or other structure
which is wholly within the special event area;
(b)
to keep unblocked any stairs, steps,
aisle, gangway, overpass, underpass, bridge, passage, entry, exit
or other thoroughfare wholly or partly within the special event
area;
(c)
to arrange for the removal of a vehicle
from, or the movement of a vehicle within, the special event area;
(d)
to give access or priority of access
to the public to specified kinds of facilities, amenities or services
provided by the event organiser; or
(e)
to cease, either wholly or to the
extent specified in the direction, any activity on the special event
area or part thereof.
(3)
The manner in
which that access, or priority of access, is to be given shall be set
out in the direction under subsection (1).
(4)
The terms and
conditions on which that access, or priority of access, is to be given
shall be set out in the direction under subsection (1).
(5)
An event organiser
who, without reasonable excuse, fails to comply with any written
direction given under subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $20,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or to both
and, in the case of a continuing offence, to a further fine not
exceeding $1,000 for every day or part thereof during which
the offence continues after conviction.
(6)
Notwithstanding
subsection (5), no event organiser shall, by virtue of this section,
be guilty of an offence of failing to comply with a written direction
containing requirements mentioned in subsection (2)(a)
or (b) if the event organiser —(a)
is not the owner of the gate, door,
fence, platform, staging, hoarding or other structure, or the stairs,
steps, aisle, gangway, overpass, underpass, bridge, passage, entry,
exit or other thoroughfare, mentioned in the direction at the relevant
time relating to the offence concerned; and
(b)
within 7 days after service on him
of a notice alleging that he has been guilty of the offence, furnishes
by declaration to the Commissioner, the name and address of the
person who is the owner of the gate, door, fence, platform, staging,
hoarding or other structure, or the stairs, steps, aisle, gangway,
overpass, underpass, bridge, passage, entry, exit or other thoroughfare,
as the case may be.
(7)
Upon receipt of
a declaration under subsection (6), the Commissioner may, with the
approval of the Minister, during the period a declaration relating
to that special event is in force, give another written direction
in writing requiring the person named in the declaration under subsection
(6) as the owner of —(a)
the gate, door, fence, platform,
staging, hoarding or other structure; or
(b)
the stairs, steps, aisle, gangway,
overpass, underpass, bridge, passage, entry, exit or other thoroughfare,
specified in the written direction
to the event organiser (referred to as the original direction) requiring
that owner to do, or not to do, such things as are specified in
the original direction or are of a description as specified therein
as necessary for preserving public order and the safety of individuals
involved in the special event and other individuals and for the
avoidance of disruptions to the special event.
(8)
If, after the
expiration of 7 days from the date of the written direction under subsection
(7), the owner to whom the written direction is given fails, without
reasonable excuse, to comply with the written direction, he shall
be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine
not exceeding $20,000 or to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding 12 months or to both and, in the case of a continuing
offence, to a further fine not exceeding $1,000 for every
day or part thereof during which the offence continues after conviction.
(9)
In subsections
(6), (7) and (8), “owner”, in relation to any
gate, door, fence, platform, staging, hoarding or other structure,
or stairs, steps, aisle, gangway, overpass, underpass, bridge, passage,
entry, exit or other thoroughfare, in any premises means —(a)
except as otherwise provided in paragraph
(b) or (c) — the
person for the time being receiving the rent of the premises, whether
on his own account or as agent or trustee or as receiver, or who
would receive the same if the premises were let to a tenant and
includes a mortgagee in possession;
(b)
where the gate, door fence, platform,
staging, hoarding or structure, or the stairs, steps, aisle, gangway,
overpass, underpass, bridge, passage, entry, exit or other thoroughfare,
is part of any common property or limited common property within
the meaning of the Building Maintenance and Strata Management Act
(Cap. 30C) —(i)
the management corporation established
under that Act having control of the common property if comprised
in a strata title plan, or the person receiving any rent or charge
for the maintenance of that common property;
(ii)
the subsidiary management corporation
established under that Act having control of the limited common
property if comprised in a strata title plan, or the person receiving
any rent or charge for the maintenance of that limited common property;
or
(iii)
the person receiving any rent or charge
for the maintenance and management of the common property not comprised
in a strata title plan; and
(c)
where the gate, door fence, platform,
staging, hoarding or structure, or the stairs, steps, aisle, gangway,
overpass, underpass, bridge, passage, entry, exit or other thoroughfare,
is part of the common property of any housing estate of the Housing
and Development Board — that Board or the Town Council
established under the Town Councils Act (Cap. 329A) for that housing
estate.
Unauthorised entry to special event area, etc.
31.
—(1)
A
person shall not enter or remain in a special event area unless
the person —(a)
has the consent of the event organiser;
and
(b)
is otherwise authorised to enter
or remain at the area under this Act.
(2)
A person who —(a)
contravenes subsection (1); or
(b)
contravenes any direction given by
a police officer or an approved person under section 29(2) to leave
a special event area, or attempts to enter or re-enter the special
event area contrary to such a direction,
shall be guilty of an offence and shall
be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $20,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or
to both.
Interference with special event, etc.
32.
If
a person in a special event area —(a)
engages in violent behaviour;
(b)
disrupts, interferes with, delays
or obstructs the conduct of a special event, or any activity associated
with the special event, by throwing anything or in any other way;
or
(c)
in any other way interferes with
the reasonable enjoyment of a special event, or an activity associated
with the special event, by someone else,
he shall be guilty of an offence and
shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $10,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months or
to both.
Saving of operation of Part II
33.
Notwithstanding
anything in Part II, no public assembly and no public procession
of any class or description (whether or not exempted from section
5 under section 46, and whether or not excluded from any prohibition
under section 12(2)) shall take place within any special event area
for such period as the declaration relating to the special event
area is in force unless the Commissioner is notified under section 6
of the intention to hold the public assembly or public procession,
and a permit is granted under section 7 in respect of that public
assembly or public procession, as the case may be; and the provisions
of Part II shall apply to such a public assembly and public procession.
PART IV
POWERS
TO PRESERVE AND MAINTAIN PUBLIC ORDER
Application of this Part
34.
—(1)
This
Part shall apply in relation to the following places (referred to
in this Act as regulated places):(a)
all public places; and
(b)
such other places that are prescribed,
and in this section, “place” includes
an area.
(2)
This Part shall
not apply to any assembly or procession that is not unlawful under
Part II.
When power applies to behaviour
35.
—(1)
Subject
to this section, a police officer may exercise a power under section
36 in relation to any person at or near a regulated place if a police
officer reasonably suspects the person's behaviour —(a)
is or has been interfering with trade
or business at the place by obstructing, hindering or impeding someone
entering, at or leaving the place;
(b)
is or has been disorderly, indecent,
offensive, or threatening to someone entering, at or leaving the
place;
(c)
is or has been disrupting the peaceable
and orderly conduct of any event, entertainment or gathering at
the place; or
(d)
shows that he is just about to commit
an offence or has just committed or is committing an offence.
(2)
If the regulated
place is a public place, subsection (1) shall apply in relation
to a person at or near the public place only if the person's
behaviour has or had the effect mentioned in subsection (1)(a), (b), (c)
or (d) in the part of the public place at or
near where the person then is.
(3)
Subsection (1)(a) shall apply to premises used for trade or
business only if the occupier of the premises complains about the
person's behaviour.
(4)
For the avoidance
of doubt, subsections (1)(a) and (3) do not
limit subsection (1)( b), (c)
and (d).
Direction to move on
36.
—(1)
Subject
to this section, a police officer of or above the rank of sergeant may
give to a person or group of persons whose behaviour is of a kind
mentioned in section 35 any direction in writing that is reasonable
in the circumstances.
(2)
A police officer
shall not give a direction under subsection (1) that interferes with
a person's right of peaceful assembly unless it is reasonably
necessary in the interests of —(a)
public safety;
(b)
public order; or
(c)
the protection of the rights and
freedoms of other persons.
(3)
The rights and
freedoms referred to in subsection (2)(c) includes
a reference to the rights and freedoms of the public to enjoy the
place and the rights of persons to carry on lawful business in or
in association with the place.
(4)
Without prejudice
to the generality of subsection (1), a direction may require a person
to do one of the following:(a)
leave the regulated place and not
return or be within the regulated place within a stated reasonable
time of not more than 24 hours;
(b)
leave a stated part of the regulated
place and not return or be within the stated part of the regulated
place within a stated reasonable time of not more than 24 hours;
(c)
move from a particular location at
or near the regulated place for a stated reasonable distance, in
a stated direction, and not return or be within the stated distance
from the place within a stated reasonable time of not more than
24 hours.
Contravening direction to move on
37.
Any
person who, without reasonable excuse, contravenes any direction
under section 36 to him shall be guilty of an offence and shall
be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $20,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or to both.
Seizure of films of law enforcement activities
38.
—(1)
Any
police officer of or above the rank of sergeant, or any CPIB officer, narcotics
officer, intelligence officer or immigration officer, if satisfied
upon information and after such further inquiry as he thinks necessary,
that any person —(a)
is making, has made or is about to
make;
(b)
is exhibiting or communicating or
is about to exhibit or communicate; or
(c)
has in his possession,
any film or picture containing a record
of any law enforcement activities, and he reasonably believes that
the film or picture, if exhibited or communicated (whether to the
public or any section thereof or otherwise) —(i)
prejudices the effective conduct
of an ongoing law enforcement operation or investigation, or any
intelligence operation; or
(ii)
endangers or will endanger the safety
of any law enforcement officer in an ongoing law enforcement operation
or investigation, or any intelligence operation,
he may exercise any of the powers specified
in subsection (2).
(2)
A police officer
of or above the rank of sergeant, a CPIB officer, a narcotics officer,
an intelligence officer or an immigration officer may —(a)
direct the person reasonably believed
to be making, exhibiting or communicating a film or picture or about
to do so to immediately cease making, exhibiting or communicating
the film, and either to immediately delete, erase or otherwise destroy
the film or picture or to surrender the film or picture to the police
officer, CPIB officer, narcotics officer, intelligence officer or
immigration officer, as the case may be;
(b)
without warrant, search any person
whom he has reason to believe is in possession of a film or picture
referred to in subsection (1);
(c)
without warrant, and with such assistance
and by such force as is necessary, by night or by day, enter and
search any place where he has reason to believe any film or picture
referred to in subsection (1) is kept; or
(d)
without warrant, and with such assistance
and by such force as is necessary, seize any film or picture referred
to in subsection (1) and any copy thereof, and any equipment (including
a handphone) used or about to be used in the making, exhibition
or communication of the film or picture,
and take into custody any person reasonably
believed to be in possession thereof.
(3)
Any film, picture
and any equipment (including a handphone) used in the making, exhibition
or communication of the film or picture may be forfeited and shall
be destroyed or otherwise disposed of in such manner as the Commissioner may
direct.
(4)
Where a person
to whom a direction under subsection (2)(a)
is given fails to comply with the direction, he shall be guilty
of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $20,000
or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or to both.
(5)
In this section —"cinematograph
film"
means the aggregate of
visual images embodied in an article or a thing so as to be capable
by the use of that article or thing —
(a)
of being shown as a moving picture;
or
(b)
of being embodied in another article
or thing by the use of which it can be so shown,
and includes the aggregate of the sounds
embodied in a sound-track associated with such visual images;
"communicate"
means to transmit by electronic means
(whether over a path, or a combination of paths, provided by a material
substance or by wireless means or otherwise) a film or picture,
whether or not it is sent in response to a request, and includes —
(a)
the broadcasting of the film or picture;
(b)
the inclusion of the film or picture
in a cable programme; and
(c)
the making available of a film or
picture on a network or otherwise in such a way that the film or
picture may be accessed by any person from a place and at a time
chosen by him,
and “communicating” and “communication” shall
be construed accordingly;
"CPIB
officer"
has the same meaning
as in the Prevention of Corruption Act (Cap. 241);
"film"
means —
(a)
any cinematograph film;
(b)
any video recording, or any disc
or solid state recording device containing information by the use
of which one or more series of visual images may be produced electronically
and shown as a moving picture; or
(c)
any other material, record or thing
on which is recorded or stored for immediate or future retrieval
any information that, by the use of any computer or electronic device,
is capable of being reproduced or displayed as wholly or partly
visual moving pictures,
and includes any part of a film, and
any copy or part of a copy of the whole or any part of a film;
"immigration
officer"
means an immigration
officer appointed under section 3 of the Immigration Act (Cap. 133);
"intelligence
officer"
means a public officer
appointed to such Scheme of Service as the Minister designates;
"law
enforcement"
means —
(a)
activities carried on by any police
officer, CPIB officer, narcotics officer, intelligence officer or
immigration officer in the exercise of any function, power or duty
of such an officer in accordance with law;
(b)
activities carried on by any police
officer, CPIB officer, narcotics officer, intelligence officer or
immigration officer for the purpose of dealing with terrorism, civil
unrest or public disorder; or
(c)
activities carried on by any police
officer, CPIB officer, narcotics officer, intelligence officer or
immigration officer, as the case may be, in preparation for or directly
in support of any activity referred to in paragraph (a)
or (b);
"narcotics
officer"
means a public officer
appointed to the Narcotics Service;
"picture"
includes —
(a)
any drawing, whether made by computer-graphics
or otherwise; and
(b)
any photograph, photographic negative,
photographic plate or photographic slide,
and includes any part of a picture;
"photograph"
means a product of photography or
of a process similar to photography, other than an article or thing
in which visual images forming part of a cinematograph film have
been embodied, and includes a product of xerography, photocopy,
and record an image, whether digitally or in another way.
Obstruction of police officers under section 29 or
38
39.
Any
person who wilfully obstructs any police officer in the exercise
of any power conferred by or under section 29(3) or 38(2) shall
be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine
not exceeding $20,000 or to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding 12 months or to both.
PART V
MISCELLANEOUS
Power of arrest
40.
Any
police officer may arrest without warrant any person offending in
his view against any of the provisions of this Act, and take him
before a Magistrate’s Court to be dealt with according
to law.
Composition of offences
41.
—(1)
The
Commissioner or any police officer authorised in writing by the Commissioner
may, in his discretion, compound any offence under this Act which is
prescribed as an offence which may be compounded by the Commissioner
or such police officer by collecting from a person reasonably suspected
of having committed the offence a sum not exceeding the lower of
either of the following amounts:(a)
one half of the amount of the maximum
fine that is prescribed for the offence; or
(b)
$5,000.
(2)
On payment of
such sum of money, no further proceedings shall be taken against
that person in respect of the offence.
Owner or occupier of premises where unlawful assembly,
etc., takes place
42.
Where
the owner or occupier of any premises upon which an assembly or
a procession is about to take place is given notice by any police
officer that the assembly or procession is unlawful under Part II,
and such assembly or procession does take place on those premises,
the owner or occupier of those premises shall be guilty of an offence
and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $5,000,
unless he took all reasonable measures and exercised all due diligence
to prevent the assembly or procession from taking place.
Onus of proof
43.
In
any proceedings under this Act, the onus of proving that the public
or any class of the public did not have access to any public place
shall lie on the person alleging the fact.
Offences by bodies corporate, etc.
44.
—(1)
Where
an offence under this Act committed by a body corporate is proved —(a)
to have been committed with the consent
or connivance of an officer; or
(b)
to be attributable to any act or
default on his part,
the officer as well as the body corporate
shall be guilty of the offence and shall be liable to be proceeded
against and punished accordingly.
(2)
Where the affairs
of a body corporate are managed by its members, subsection (1) shall
apply in relation to the acts and defaults of a member in connection.
(3)
Where an offence
under this Act committed by a partnership is proved —(a)
to have been committed with the consent
or connivance of a partner; or
(b)
to be attributable to any act or
default on his part,
the partner as well as the partnership
shall be guilty of the offence and shall be liable to be proceeded
against and punished accordingly.
(4)
Where an offence
under this Act committed by a limited liability partnership is proved
to have been committed with the consent or connivance of, or to
be attributable to any neglect on the part of, a partner or manager
of the limited liability partnership, the partner or manager (as
the case may be) as well as the partnership shall be guilty of that
offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against and punished
accordingly.
(5)
Where an offence
under this Act committed by an unincorporated association (other
than a partnership) is proved —(a)
to have been committed with the consent
or connivance of an officer of the unincorporated association or
a member of its governing body; or
(b)
to be attributable to any act or
default on the part of such an officer or a member,
the officer or member as well as the
unincorporated association shall be guilty of the offence and shall
be liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly.
(6)
In this section —“body corporate” and “partnership” exclude a limited liability partnership
within the meaning of the Limited Liability Partnerships Act (Cap.
163A);
"officer"
—
(a)
in relation to a body corporate,
means any director, member of the committee of management, chief
executive, manager, secretary or other similar officer of the body
corporate and includes any person purporting to act in any such
capacity; and
(b)
in relation to an unincorporated
association (other than a partnership), means the president, the
secretary, or any member of the committee of the unincorporated
association, or any person holding a position analogous to that
of the president, secretary or member of the committee and includes
any person purporting to act in any such capacity;
"partner"
includes a person purporting to act
as a partner.
(7)
The regulations
may provide for the application of any provision of this section,
with such modifications as the Minister considers appropriate, to
any body corporate or unincorporated association formed or recognised
under the law of a territory outside Singapore.
Service of documents, etc.
45.
—(1)
Any
document required or authorised to be given or served under this Act
may be served —(a)
in the case of an individual —(i)
by delivering it to the individual
personally;
(ii)
by leaving it with an adult person
apparently resident at, or by sending it by pre-paid registered
post to, the usual or last known address of the place of residence
of the individual;
(iii)
by leaving it with an adult person
apparently employed at, or by sending it by pre-paid registered
post to, the usual or last known address of the place of business
of the individual;
(iv)
by affixing a copy of the notice
in a conspicuous place at the usual or last known address of residence
or business of the individual;
(v)
by sending it by facsimile transmission
to the fax transmission number operated at the usual or last known
address of the place of residence or business of the individual,
or the last fax number given to the Commissioner or an authorised
officer by the individual as the facsimile transmission number for
the service of documents on the individual; or
(vi)
by electronic communication, by sending
an electronic communication of the document to the last email address
given to the Commissioner or an authorised officer by the individual
as the email address for the service of documents on the individual;
(b)
in the case of a partnership other
than a limited liability partnership —(i)
by delivering it to any one of the
partners or the secretary or other like officer of the partnership;
(ii)
by leaving it at, or by sending it
by pre-paid registered post to, the principal or last known place
of business of the partnership in Singapore;
(iii)
by sending it by facsimile transmission
to the fax transmission number operated at the principal or last
known place of business of the partnership in Singapore; or
(iv)
by electronic communication, by sending
an electronic communication of the document to the last email address
given to the Commissioner or an authorised officer by the partnership
as the email address for the service of documents on the partnership;
and
(c)
in the case of any limited liability
partnership or any other body corporate —(i)
by delivering it to the secretary
or other like officer of the body corporate or, in the case of a
limited liability partnership, the manager thereof;
(ii)
by leaving it at, or by sending it
by pre-paid registered post to, the registered office or principal
office of the limited liability partnership or body corporate in
Singapore;
(iii)
by sending it by facsimile transmission
to the fax transmission number operated at the registered office
or principal office of the limited liability partnership or body
corporate in Singapore; or
(iv)
by electronic communication, by sending
an electronic communication of the document to the last email address
given to the Commissioner or an authorised officer by the limited
liability partnership or body corporate as the email address for
the service of documents on the limited liability partnership or
body corporate.
(2)
In addition to
the modes of service prescribed in subsection (1), any document required
or authorised to be given or served under Part II in connection
with an advance notice of or an application for a permit in respect
of a public assembly or public procession, the grant or cancellation
of such a permit, or an appeal under section 11, may, subject to
subsection (4), be served by electronic communication, by sending
an electronic communication of the document —(a)
in the case of an individual — to
the last email address given to the Commissioner or an authorised
officer by the individual as the email address for the service of
documents on the individual;
(b)
in the case of a partnership other
than a limited liability partnership — to the last email
address given to the Commissioner or an authorised officer by the
partnership as the email address for the service of documents on
the partnership; and
(c)
in the case of any limited liability
partnership or any other body corporate — to the last email
address given to the Commissioner or an authorised officer by the
limited liability partnership or body corporate as the email address
for the service of documents on the limited liability partnership
or body corporate.
(3)
Where any notice
or other document to be served by the Commissioner or the Minister
is —(a)
sent by a facsimile transmission
to the fax transmission number operated at the last known place
of residence or business or registered office or principal office
in accordance with subsection (1), it shall be deemed to have been
duly served on the person to whom it is addressed on the day of
transmission, subject to receipt on the sending facsimile machine
of a notification (by electronic or other means) of a successful
transmission to the place of residence or business or registered
office or principal office, as the case may be;
(b)
sent by electronic communication
to an email address in accordance with subsection (1), it shall
be deemed to have been duly served on the person to whom it is addressed
at the time of entering the information system addressed to the
email address; and
(c)
sent by pre-paid registered post,
it shall be deemed to have been duly served on the person to whom
it is addressed 2 days after the day the notice or document was
posted, whether or not it is returned undelivered.
(4)
Service of any
document under subsection (2) on a person by electronic communication
may be effected only if the person gives as part of his or its address
for service an email address.
(5)
This section shall
not apply to notices and documents to be served in proceedings in
court.
Power to exempt
46.
The
Minister may, by order published in the Gazette,
with or without conditions, exempt any person or class of persons,
or any assembly or procession or class of assemblies or processions,
from any of the provisions of this Act.
Regulations
47.
—(1)
The
Minister may make regulations necessary or convenient to be prescribed
for carrying out or giving effect to the provisions of this Act.
(2)
Without prejudice
to the generality of subsection (1), the Minister may make regulations
for or with respect to all or any of the following matters:(a)
the form or particulars of application
for the issue of a permit;
(b)
the conditions subject to which such
a permit may be issued;
(c)
the procedure as regards the lodging
of an appeal under section 11 and the practice and procedure
upon the hearing of such an appeal;
(d)
the fees to be paid in respect of
any matter or anything done, or any services rendered, by the Commissioner
under or by virtue of this Act;
(e)
the waiver or refund, in whole or
in part, by authorised officers of any such fees in the circumstances
of any particular case;
(f)
the offences which may be compounded
under section 41 and the manner in which such offences may be compounded;
(g)
the prescribing of anything that
is required or permitted to be prescribed under this Act.
(3)
The regulations
may —(a)
provide that any contravention of
any provision of the regulations shall be an offence punishable
with a fine not exceeding $5,000 or with imprisonment for
a term not exceeding 6 months or with both;
(b)
prescribe different fees for different
classes of permits; and
(c)
provide for such transitional, savings
and other consequential, incidental and supplemental provisions
as the Minister considers necessary or expedient.
(4)
All regulations
made under this section shall be presented to Parliament as soon
as possible after publication in the Gazette.
Application of other laws
48.
—(1)
This
Act shall have effect notwithstanding any other law relating to
the movement of traffic or pedestrians on roads or the use or obstruction
of a public place, to public entertainment or to undesirable publications.
(2)
Notwithstanding
subsection (1), nothing in this Act shall affect the common law
of trespass and, in particular, the right of a person in, or entitled
to, possession of land to request a trespasser to leave the land,
and if the trespasser refuses to leave on being requested, to remove
the trespasser from the land.
Consequential and related amendments to other written
laws
49.
—(1)
Section
5 of the Miscellaneous Offences (Public Order and Nuisance) Act
(Cap. 184) is repealed.
(2)
Section 18(1)
of the Police Force Act (Cap. 235) is amended by deleting the words “licences
under the Miscellaneous Offences (Public Order and Nuisance) Act (Cap.
184)” in paragraph (a) and substituting
the words “permits under the Public Order Act 2009”.
(3)
The Schedule to
the Public Entertainments and Meetings Act (Cap. 257) is amended —(a)
by deleting sub-paragraph (m)
of paragraph 2;
(b)
by deleting the word “and” at
the end of paragraph 3(d); and
(c)
by deleting the full-stop at the
end of sub-paragraph (e) of paragraph 3 and substituting
the word “; and”, and by inserting immediately
thereafter the following sub-paragraph:“(f)
any lecture, talk, address, debate or discussion in any place
to which the public or any class of the public has access whether gratuitously
or otherwise.”.
Saving and transitional provisions
50.
—(1)
Any —(a)
permit granted before the commencement
of section 49(1) under any rules made under section 5 of the Miscellaneous
Offences (Public Order and Nuisance) Act (Cap. 184) in respect of
any assembly or procession; or
(b)
licence granted before the commencement
of section 49(3) for a licence under the Public Entertainments and
Meetings Act (Cap. 257) in respect of any lecture, talk,
address, debate or discussion,
shall, so far as it is not inconsistent
with the provisions of this Act, continue and be deemed to be a
permit granted under Part II of this Act.
(2)
Any notice, order
or other document prepared, issued or made under —(a)
any rules made under section 5 of
the Miscellaneous Offences (Public Order and Nuisance) Act (Cap.
184) in respect of any assembly or procession; or
(b)
the Public Entertainments and Meetings
Act (Cap. 257) in respect of any lecture, talk, address, debate
or discussion by the Licensing Officer under that Act,
shall, so far as it is not inconsistent
with the provisions of this Act, continue and be deemed to have
been prepared, issued or made by the Commissioner under the corresponding
provisions of Part II of this Act.
(3)
Any —(a)
application before the commencement
of section 49(1) for a permit under any rules made under section
5 of the Miscellaneous Offences (Public Order and Nuisance) Act
in respect of any assembly or procession; or
(b)
application before the commencement
of section 49(3) for a licence under the Public Entertainments and
Meetings Act in respect of any lecture, talk, address, debate or
discussion,
whose application was not granted before
that commencement shall, where applicable, be deemed to be an application
for a permit under Part II of this Act.
(4)
Where —(a)
an appeal has been made to the Minister
under section 10(5), 11(6), 13(3) or 14(5) of the Public Entertainments
and Meetings Act as in force immediately before the commencement
of section 49(3); and
(b)
the appeal has not been dealt with
or disposed of immediately before that commencement,
the appeal may continue to be dealt
with in accordance with that Act as if section 49(3) had
not been enacted.
(5)
Except as otherwise
expressly provided in an order made under subsection (7) or in this
section, where any period of time specified in —(a)
any rules made under section 5 of
the Miscellaneous Offences (Public Order and Nuisance) Act as in
force immediately before the commencement of section 49(1); or
(b)
the Public Entertainments and Meetings
Act (Cap. 257) as in force immediately before the commencement of
section 49(3) in relation to any lecture, talk, address, debate
or discussion,
is current immediately before the relevant
commencement, this Act shall have effect as if the corresponding
provision in this Act had been in force when the period began to
run; and (without prejudice to the foregoing) any period of time
so specified and current shall be deemed for the purposes of this
Act —(i)
to run from the date or event from
which it was running immediately before that day; and
(ii)
to expire (subject to any provision
of this Act for its extension) whenever it would have expired if
this Act had not been enacted,
and any rights, priorities, liabilities,
reliefs, obligations, requirements, powers, duties or exemptions
dependent on the beginning, duration or end of such a period as above
mentioned shall be under this Act as they were or would have been
under that former provision.
(6)
Except as otherwise
expressly provided, nothing in this section shall affect any saving
provided by the Interpretation Act (Cap. 1).
(7)
For a period of
2 years after the commencement of section 49(1), (2) or (3), as the
case may be, the Minister may, by order published in the Gazette,
prescribe such provisions of a savings or transitional nature consequent
on the enactment of section 49(1), (2) or (3) as he may consider
necessary or expedient.