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Singapore announces to end ban on gay sex
Singapore, officially the Republic of Singapore, is a sovereign island country and city-state in maritime Southeast Asia - Photo. Pixabay

Singapore will repeal a law that bans gay sex, effectively making it legal to be homosexual in the city-state, the BBC reported.

Singapore inherited 377A from the British and chose to retain it after independence in 1965.

Though the law technically criminalises sex between men, it is effectively seen as a ban on homosexuality.

The decision, announced by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong on national TV, comes after years of fierce debate.

LGBT activists in Singapore have hailed the move as "a win for humanity".

Singapore is the latest place in Asia to move on LGBT rights, after India, Taiwan and Thailand.

The government's previous stance was to keep 377A - which bans sex between men - but it also promised not to enforce the law in an effort to appease both sides.

Pride flag of LGBT (Photo: Pixabay)

But on Sunday night (August 20), Mr Lee said they would abolish the law as he believed "this is the right thing to do, and something that most Singaporeans will accept".

He noted that "gay people are now better accepted" and scrapping 377A would bring the country's laws in line with "current social mores, and I hope, provide some relief to gay Singaporeans".

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"We finally did it, and we're ecstatic that this discriminatory, antiquated law is finally going to be off the books. There's a sense that maybe it took a little too long, but it had to happen, you know. Today we are very, very happy," gay activist Johnson Ong told the BBC.

A coalition of LGBT rights groups called it a "hard-won victory and a triumph of love over fear", adding it was the first step towards full equality.

But they also expressed concern over another announcement Mr Lee made in the same speech.

He had said the government would ensure better legal protection for the definition of marriage as one between a man and a woman. This would effectively make it harder for gay marriage to be legalised.

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He said Singapore remains a traditional society with many keen on maintaining family and social norms.

LGBT activists called this "disappointing" and warned that it would only further entrench discrimination in society.

Meanwhile Protect Singapore, a conservative group, said they were "deeply disappointed" that the repeal was going ahead without assurance of "comprehensive safeguards".

They called for the definition of heterosexual marriage to be fully enshrined in the constitution, as well as laws banning "LGBT promotion" to children.

levantnews-BBC