Pregnant Australian Blogger Sentenced to 10 Months in Singapore

An Aussie blogger has been sentenced to prison after being found guilty of breaching the city-state’s laws against speech that instigates racial and religious discord.

(Bloomberg) -- An Australian blogger has been sentenced by a Singapore court to 10 months in prison after being found guilty of breaching the city-state’s laws against speech that instigates racial and religious discord.

Ai Takagi, a 23-year-old Australian of Japanese descent, published posts in 2014 on the now shut-down Real Singapore website that were intended to "provoke unwarranted hatred against foreigners in Singapore," Judge Salina Ishak said.

Takagi, who is eight-weeks pregnant, had pleaded guilty to the charges and expressed remorse during the proceedings. Her Singaporean husband Yang Kaiheng, with whom she ran the website, is due to go on trial on similar charges.

"The sentence is not surprising given Singapore’s stance on such issues, and it is within the range of sentences I was expecting, " Takagi said through her lawyer Choo Zheng Xi.

"I’m concerned about how this will impact my pregnancy as I will likely have to give birth to my first child while still serving this sentence.

In one of the blog posts, Takagi reportedly quoted a Singaporean who allegedly quit his job claiming that Filipinos in his company were treated better than his countrymen. The post reportedly described Filipinos as "two-faced" and "relentless back-stabbers," The Straits Times reported.

Recent articles & video

Promotions round beefs up Clyde & Co's Australia partnership

Piper Alderman, Holding Redlich recognised in 2025 Best Lawyers Australia

Far West Regional Law Soc roundtable focuses on access to justice

American Bar Association president Mary Smith calls for action as threats against judges surge

UK report finds barristers outperform solicitors in recruitment tests

Yale and Stanford dominate as the top US law schools in the latest rankings

Most Read Articles

QIC GC joins HSF as executive counsel

DLA Piper helps Indian tech company to boost customer service offering with acquisition

Nine promoted to partner at HSF's Australia branch

Allen & Overy and Shearman & Sterling name 40 partners for the merged firm