Singapore teen in anti-Lee video walks free after sentencing

The sentences were backdated to June 2

Update: 2015-07-06 15:20 GMT
Member of the public hold up placards in support of 16-year-old Amos Yee who is behind online attacks on late former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew in Singapore on July 5, 2015. (Photo: AFP)

Singapore: The Singaporean teenager behind online attacks on former premier Lee Kuan Yew was given a four-week jail sentence today but freed in view of time served since being accused of offending Christians and posting an obscene image.

Amos Yee, 16, was jailed for three weeks for wounding religious feelings in an expletive-laden YouTube video comparing Lee Kuan Yew to Jesus, which was posted after the independence leader's death in March.

The sentences were backdated to June 2, when Yee was already in remand after violating probation terms.

District Court judge Jasvender Kaur said the offences "were not serious in nature but not trivial either".

Yee had faced an extended period behind bars. The maximum penalty for wounding racial or religious feelings is three years and distributing an obscene drawing is punishable by three months in jail.

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