Section 377A was repeatedly challenged before the
courts of Singapore as being
unconstitutional. All challenges were chiefly based on
Article 12 of the Constitution of Singapore, which guarantees all persons
equality before the law, and
Article 9 of the Constitution of Singapore, which guarantees all persons the
right to life and the
right to personal liberty.
Tan Eng Hong v. Attorney-General On 24 September 2010, criminal lawyer
M Ravi filed an application in the
High Court to challenge the constitutionality of Section 377A on behalf of his client Tan Eng Hong, who was charged for allegedly having oral sex with another consenting adult male in a locked cubicle of a public toilet. On 19 March 2011, Tan's case was thrown out of court by High Court justice
Lai Siu Chiu, citing "a lack of a real controversy" for the court to deal with. This is important, as according to the
Rules of Court (), only cases which are not "frivolous" may be argued. However, on 21 August 2012, the
Court of Appeal reversed Lai's decision, ruling that 377A did "affect the lives of a not insignificant portion of [Singaporeans] in a very real and intimate way" and that the case would proceed once again in the High Court. Tan's case was finally heard on 6 March 2013, and decided against him by justice Quentin Loh on 2 October 2013. In his ruling, Loh wrote that the issue was one of "morality and societal values" and if it were to be changed, it would have to be by Singapore's
Parliament. Tan appealed the ruling to the Court of Appeal, and his case was joined at his request as an
intervening party with
Lim Meng Suang and another v. Attorney-General (below), which was also pending before the Court of Appeal, on 11 October 2013.
Lim Meng Suang and another v. Attorney-General After Tan's successful appeal to be heard by the court, a separate constitutional challenge was filed on 30 November 2012 on behalf of Lim Meng Suang and Kenneth Chee Mun-leon, a gay couple of fifteen years, by attorney Peter Low. The case was heard
in camera on 14 February 2013, and decided against them by justice Quentin Loh on 9 April 2013, for much the same reasons as his decision against Tan (above). Lim and Chee appealed to the Court of Appeal on 30 April 2013. In July 2013, after a successful crowdfunding campaign, they hired two highly esteemed lawyers: Deborah Barker, Senior Counsel at
KhattarWong LLP, and British lawyer,
Debevoise & Plimpton partner and former
Attorney General for England and Wales Lord Peter Henry Goldsmith. Goldsmith had agreed to take the case
without pay, but that September was disallowed from arguing the case before the court by Justice
V. K. Rajah, as he believed that the legal issues were arguable by domestic lawyers, which is preferred by
Singapore law. On 29 October 2014, more than four years after the original challenge by Tan, the Court of Appeal, the highest court in Singapore, rejected Lim and Chee's challenge, finally ending the case. The court held that 377A was consistent with Article 9 as it is meant to protect against
unlawful imprisonment, and that it was consistent with Article 12 as it only mentions
religion,
race and
place of birth—not
gender,
sexual orientation, or
sex.
The Huffington Post featured Chee and Lim's story prominently under the headline "How One of the World's Richest Countries Is Limiting Basic Human Rights" and
Bloomberg also published an article on the ruling. After India's Supreme Court decriminalised sex between two people of the same sex, with Professor
Tommy Koh encouraging a constitutional challenge of Section 377A and chief of Singapore government communications Mr
Janadas Devan hoping that Section 377A would go, several constitutional challenges have been brought to the
Supreme Court. The first challenge after India's ruling was filed on 10 September 2018 by Johnson Ong, known by stage name DJ Big Kid, and was based on Article 9 of the
Constitution. The second challenge was filed by
LGBT rights activist Choong Chee Hong in November 2018 and argues that Section 377A is inconsistent with Articles 9, 12 and
14 of the Constitution. A third was filed by retired general practitioner Tan Seng Kee on 20 September 2019, also based on Articles 9, 12 and 14 of the Constitution. In addition, he argued that although the Government will not enforce the law on acts done in private, the Public Prosecutor can decide whether to prosecute someone under Section 377A, which would be inconsistent with Section 14 of the
Criminal Procedure Code, which requires the police to "unconditionally investigate all complaints of suspected arrestable offences". On 30 March 2020, justice
See Kee Oon consolidated the three challenges into one case and ruled against them, arguing that the law was intended to safeguard morals and prosecute all forms of indecency between men whether in public or private, and not just male prostitution when the law was made in 1938. He also stated that there's no strong scientific evidence that a person's sexual orientation is unchangeable, and once again ruled that
Parliament is the proper venue for repeal. Appeals were filed on 31 March 2020. On 28 February 2022, it was ruled by the
Court of Appeal that, because the law is not enforced, the constitutional challenges against it had failed. ==Repeal of Section 377A==