—Courtesy Facebook.
—Courtesy Facebook.

SINGAPORE: A Singaporean cartoonist has been arrested for alleged sedition over a satirical comic strip on his Facebook page that appeared to accuse the government of racism, his lawyer said Wednesday.

Leslie Chew, 37, was released on bail following his arrest Friday, two days after a complaint was filed about his cartoon strip that lampooned the government for being “racist” toward minority Malays, his lawyer Choo Zheng Xi told AFP.

The strip was posted on Chew's “Demon-cratic Singapore” Facebook page on March 27.

“He was released on Sg$10,000 ($8,060) bail on Sunday night, and is currently being investigated under the Sedition Act,” said Choo.

The cartoon depicts a politician addressing a crowd and praising the talents of expatriate Indian, Chinese and Caucasian communities.

A character in the audience asks “What, no mention of Malay talents?”, to which another responds “Damn! Racist government”.

A spokesman for the Attorney-General's Chambers told AFP: “The matter is currently under police investigation.”

Chew regularly posts satirical political cartoons linked to current events in Singapore on his Facebook page, which has over 21,000 followers.

His cartoon characters usually resemble local politicians, although a disclaimer on the page says it is “a totally fictional comic with entirely fictional characters based on wholly fictional events in a fictional country”.

Speaking to AFP on Wednesday, Chew said he was “surprised” that he had been picked up by the police.

“I thought I made it quite clear through the disclaimers on the cartoons that my work on Demon-cratic Singapore is purely fictional,” he said.

He added that he intends to continue to publish cartoons while he is being investigated as police had not imposed any restrictions.

“I want to continue to amuse my audience. The comics are simply for laughs,” said Chew, who is unemployed and makes a living from contributions from his online readers.

Singapore, a multi-racial island nation, clamps down hard on anyone seen to be inciting communal tensions after experiencing bloody racial riots in the 1960s.

Ethnic Chinese make up 74 percent of Singapore's resident population of 3.8 million, with Malay Muslims accounting for 13.3 percent, followed by ethnic Indians, Eurasians and other racial groups.

If convicted, Chew faces a jail term of up to three years or a fine of up to Sg$5,000 ($4,030), or both.

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