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Singapore Gives 'Pro-Gay' Children's Books a Reprieve


FILE - A man is silhouetted at a library in Singapore.
FILE - A man is silhouetted at a library in Singapore.

Singapore has decided not to proceed with the pulping of two children's books judged to be pro-homosexual after a flood of complaints about censorship.

The National Library Board (NLB) said last week that it had withdrawn three books, including one about a pair of male penguins hatching an egg, following a complaint that they were not pro-family.

The NLB said it had planned to destroy them, a proposed move that prompted a “read-in” protest of the books, complaints from prominent Singaporean authors and made news reports around the world.

On Friday, Minister for Communications and Information Yaacob Ibrahim said that although one of the books had already been destroyed, he has instructed the library to save the other two but place them in the adult section instead.

“I have also asked NLB to review the process by which they deal with such books,” Ibrahim said.

The library had previously said that the books went against “social norms”, with the majority of Singaporeans appearing to be against same-sex relationships.

A study by the Institute of Policy Studies released at the beginning of the year found that 78.2 percent of Singaporeans felt sex between two adults of the same sex was always or almost always wrong, and 72.9 percent of them were against gay marriage.

However, there is growing support for same-sex rights, with a record turnout for the pro-gay 'Pink Dot' rally last month.

A volume of the Archie comic book series which featured a gay wedding has not had a reprieve though. Singapore's Media Development Authority ordered it be removed from book shelves earlier this year saying it breached their content guidelines.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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