Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-skm99 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T23:09:36.768Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Strange Career of Gross Indecency: Race, Sex, and Law in Colonial Singapore

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 November 2019

Abstract

In 1938, the British enacted Section 377A of the Straits Settlements Penal Code, criminalizing male same-sex acts in Singapore. Although the law was neither the first nor only attempt to regulate same-sex activity, it represented a stark intensification in sexual policing. Yet, the reasons for the introduction of Section 377A remain elusive. New sources, including recently declassified documents, reveal that Section 377A intersected with the colonial state's wider project of social control. In the early 1930s, intensified policing of female prostitution inadvertently magnified the visibility of male prostitution in Singapore, just as homosexuality was emerging as a distinct conceptual category. Meanwhile, scandals about sexual liaisons between European officials and Asians men threatened British legitimacy. This “discovery” of homosexuality led the British to introduce Section 377A. As British troops arrived in Singapore in the late 1930s in response to Japanese expansionism in the Far East, concerns about blackmail, military discipline, and the colonial color line governed the enforcement of Section 377A. Between 1938 and 1941, the British disproportionately used Section 377A to punish Asian male prostitutes whom they thought had seduced European men. Secondarily, the British used the provision to deter European soldiers, sailors, and non-officials from exposing themselves to extortion. Seen in this light, Section 377A served as a response to changing configurations of race, class, and sexuality in colonial Singapore.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
Copyright © the American Society for Legal History, Inc. 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

The author thanks George Chauncey, Rohit De, and Mary Lui for their advice and comments. He is also grateful to Kai Yan Chan for his translation services and Robbie Short for his support throughout the review process. Finally, he is indebted to Gautham Rao and the three anonymous reviewers for their feedback.

References

1. Straits Settlements Government Gazette, July 8, 1938, CO276/148, The National Archive, London, United Kingdom (hereafter TNA).

2. Although the Straits Settlements (in which Section 377A was introduced in 1938) included Malacca, Dinding, Penang, and Singapore, Singapore was the seat of the colonial government. As such, this study focuses on the enactment and enforcement of Section 377A in Singapore, while drawing on the experiences of the other territories in the Straits Settlements and the neighboring Federated Malay States, which shared the same governor and civil service.

3. Smith, F. B., “Labouchere's Amendment to the Criminal Law Amendment Bill,” Historical Studies 17 (1976): 165CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

4. For an overview of varying practices in different colonies, see Watch, Human Rights, This Alien Legacy: The Origins of ‘Sodomy’ Laws in British Colonialism (New York: Human Rights Watch, 2008)Google Scholar; Sanders, Douglas, “377 and the Unnatural Afterlife of British Colonialism in Asia,” Asian Journal of Comparative Law 4 (2009): 1018CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Han, Enze and O'Mahoney, Joseph, “British Colonialism and the Criminalization of Homosexuality,” Cambridge Review of International Affairs 27 (2014): 271–74CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

5. Chauncey, George, Gay New York (New York: Basic Books, 1994), ch. 12Google Scholar; Houlbrook, Matt, Queer London: Perils and Pleasures of the Sexual Metropolis, 1918–1957 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005), 33CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Healey, Dan, Homosexual Desire in Revolutionary Russia (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001), ch. 8CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Plant, Richard, The Pink Triangle: The Nazi War against Homosexuals (New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1986), ch. 1Google Scholar.

6. Bloembergen, Marieke, “Being Clean Is Being Strong: Policing Cleanliness and Gay Vices in the Netherlands Indies in the 1930s,” in Cleanliness and Culture: Indonesian Histories, ed. Van, Kees Dijk and Jean Gelman-Taylor (Leiden: KITLV Press, 2011), 121Google Scholar.

7. Mead, Margaret, Letters from the Field, 1925–1975 (New York: HarperCollins, 2001), 164Google Scholar.

8. Legg, Stephen, “Planning Social Hygiene: From Contamination to Contagion in Interwar India,” in Imperial Contagions: Medicine and Cultures of Planning in Asia, 1880–1949, ed. Peckham, R. and Pomfret, D. M. (Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2013), 121Google Scholar.

9. Manderson, Lenore, Sickness and the State: Health and Illness in Colonial Malaya, 1870–1940 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), xviiGoogle Scholar.

10. Weeks, Jeffery, Sex, Politics, and Society: The Regulation of Sexuality since 1800, 3rd ed. (London: Pearson, 2012), 226–27Google Scholar; Cocks, Harry, Nameless Offences: Homosexual Desire in the 19th Century (London: I.B. Tauris, 2003)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Houlbrook, Queer London: Perils and Pleasures of the Sexual Metropolis, 1918–1957, ch. 1; and Cook, Matt, London and the Culture of Homosexuality, 1885–1914 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 46Google Scholar.

11. Aldrich, Robert, Colonialism and Homosexuality (New York and London: Routledge, 2002)Google Scholar; Hyam, Ronald, Empire and Sexuality: The British Experience (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1990)Google Scholar; and Peletz, Michael G., Gender Pluralism: Southeast Asia since Early Modern Times (Oxon: Routledge, 2009), 116–17CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

12. See, for example, Stoler, Ann, Carnal Knowledge and Imperial Power (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mendoza, Victor Román, Metroimperial Intimacies: Fantasy, Racial-Sexual Governance, and the Philippines in U.S. Imperialism, 1899–1913 (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2015), 57CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Heath, Deana, Purifying Empire: Obscenity and the Politics of Moral Regulation in Britain, India, and Australia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Harris, Karen L., “Private and Confidential: The Chinese Mine Labourers and ‘Unnatural Crime,’South African Historical Journal 50 (2004): 128CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

13. See, for example, Rich, Jeffery, “Torture, Homosexuality, and Masculinities in French Central Africa: The Faucher-D'alexis Affair of 1884,” Historical Reflections 36 (2010): 89Google Scholar; Schmidt, Heike, “Colonial Intimacy: The Rechenberg Scandal and Homosexuality in German East Africa,” Journal of the History of Sexuality 17 (2008): 2526CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.

14. Yeoh, Brenda, Contesting Space in Colonial Singapore (Singapore: National University of Singapore Press, 2013), 24Google Scholar.

15. Chan, Helena, The Legal System of Singapore (Singapore: Butterworth Asia, 1995), 6Google Scholar.

16. Turnbull, C. M., A History of Singapore, 2nd ed. (Singapore: National University of Singapore Press, 2009), 101Google Scholar.

17. Hock, Saw Swee, “Population Trends in Singapore, 1819–1967,” Journal of South East Asian History 10 (1969): 42Google Scholar.

18. Report of the Chinese Protectorate, Singapore and Penang, for the year 1882, CO273/121/1312, TNA.

19. Sommer, Matthew, Sex, Law, and Society in Late Imperial China (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2000), 114–18Google Scholar; and Bleys, Rudi C., The Geography of Perversion: Male-to-male Sexual Behaviour Outside the West and the Ethnographic Imagination, 1750–1918 (London: Cassell, 1996), 216–19Google Scholar.

20. Tan, Beng Hui, “‘Protecting’ Women: Legislation and Regulation of Women's Sexuality in Colonial Malaya,” Gender, Technology, and Development 7 (2003): 11Google Scholar.

21. Hyam, Empire and Sexuality: The British Experience, 145.

22. Eng, Lai Ah, Peasants, Proletarians and Prostitutes: A Preliminary Investigation into the Work of Chinese Women in Colonial Malaya (Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 1986), 33Google Scholar.

23. “The Straits and the C.D.O.,” The Straits Times, December 20, 1897, 3.

24. Manderson, Sickness and the State, 167.

25. Butcher, John Glover, The British in Malaya, 1880–1941: The Social History of a European Community in Colonial South-East Asia (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1979), 194Google Scholar.

26. As quoted in Heussler, Robert, British Rule in Malaya: The Malayan Civil Service and Its Predecessors (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1981), 294Google Scholar.

27. Jim Allen to Robert Heussler, May 18, 1975, MSS British Empire 480/8/2, Weston Library, Oxford University (hereafter WL).

28. Jim Allen to Robert Heussler, 1975, MSS British Empire 480/8/2, WL.

29. Lowrie, Claire, “White ‘Men’ and Their Chinese ‘Boys’: Sexuality, Masculinity and Colonial Power in Singapore and Darwin, 1880s–1930s,” History Australia 10 (2013): 45CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Lowrie, Claire, Masters and Servants: Cultures of Empires in the Tropics (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2016), ch. 3Google Scholar.

30. Fauconnier, Henri, The Soul of Malaya, trans. Sutton, Eric (London: Purnell and Sons, 1931), 9, 163Google Scholar.

31. “The Soul of Malaya: Frenchman's Remarkable Book,” Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, November 25, 1931, 7; and “The Soul of Malaya: Melodrama in Malaya,” Straits Times, December 20, 1931, 5.

32. Tan, “‘Protecting’ Women,” 11; and Turnbull, A History of Singapore, 101. For prostitution as “barriers or roads” to sodomy, see Legg, Stephen, “Stimulation, Segregation and Scandal: Geographies of Prostitution Regulation in British India, between Registration (1888) and Suppression (1923),” Modern Asian Studies 46 (2012): 1488–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

33. Jackson, Robert Nicholas, Pickering: Protector of Chinese (Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press, 1965), 93Google Scholar.

34. Testimony of David Galloway, Text of Oral Evidence Taken by the Venereal Diseases Committee, FCO141/16522, TNA.

35. Legg, “Stimulation, Segregation and Scandal,” 1488–92.

36. Minute of Evidence of the Straits Committee on the Prevention of Venereal Diseases, CO882/6/1, TNA.

37. The Proposed Re-introduction of State Regulation of Vice in Singapore (and also a note concerning Hong Kong), 1924, 3AMS/D/40/01, London School of Economics The Women's Library, London, United Kingdom (hereafter TWL).

38. Memorandum RE certain conditions in Hong Kong and Singapore arising out of the methods adopted in those Colonies for dealing with prostitution and venereal disease and the desirability of establishing an advisory committee at the Colonial Office to deal with these and similar matters, 1925, 3ADMS/D/40/04, TWL; and “Prostitution Problem,” Malayan Saturday Post, May 31, 1924, 8.

39. Report of the Singapore Venereal Diseases Committee in “The Shield,” August 1924, 3AMS/D/40/04, TWL.

40. Campbell, Persia Crawford, Chinese Coolie Emigration to Countries within the British Empire (London: P.S. King & Son, 1923), 24Google Scholar.

41. See, by way of comparison to the United States and Canada, Canaday, Margot, The Straight State: Sexuality and Citizenship in Twentieth-Century America (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2009), ch. 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Shah, Nayan, Stranger Intimacy: Contesting Race, Sexuality and the Law in the American West (Berkeley: University of Califonia Press, 2012), ch. 6CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

42. See, for example, Howell, Phillip, “Race, Space and the Regulation of Prostitution in Colonial Hong Kong: Colonial Discipline/Imperial Governmentality,” Urban History 31 (2004): 241CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Legg, Stephen, Prostitution and the Ends of Empire: Scale, Governmentalities, and Interwar India (Durham, NC: Duke Unviersity Press, 2014), 240Google Scholar.

43. Letter from General Secretary of National Council for Combating Venereal Diseases to A. Neilans – Appendix/ Coercive Measures, 3AMS/B/05/10, TWL. The state-funded Council was formed in 1916 to extend free treatment for venereal disease, and established a traveling commission to visit the overseas colonies in 1920.

44. “Legislative Council: Last Meeting this Year,” Eastern Daily Mail and Straits Morning Advertiser, December 23, 1905, 2.

45. “Minutes of Legislative Council Ordinary Meeting, 22 December 1905,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, December 28, 1905, 11.

46. Cocks, H. G., Nameless Offences: Homosexual Desire in the 19th Century (London: I.B. Tauris, 2003), 18, 22, 31, 37CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

47. “The Assizes,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, July 15, 1896, 2.

48. “Indecency on the Esplanade,” The Straits Times, December 23, 1897, 2.

49. Chatterjee, Partha, The Nation and Its Fragments: Colonial and Postcolonial Histories (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1993), 21Google Scholar.

50. Kolsky, Elizabeth, “Codification and the Rule of Colonial Difference: Criminal Procedure in British India,” Law and History Review 23 (2005): 636–38CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

51. Lowrie, “White ‘Men’ and Their Chinese ‘Boys,’” 44; and Arondekar, Anjali, For the Record: On Sexuality and the Colonial Archive in India (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2009), 82Google Scholar.

52. “Patu Pahat Assizes,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, July 9, 1927, 20.

53. “Xingzhou jingting ti xun min ji qingnian zhuoqingquan shouxing baofa qitu jijian xiaotong faguan nian beigao nianshao wuzhi congqingpan fa chukku jiansan geyue lingtai tengshi xiayi jing,” 星洲警庭提訊 閩籍青年卓清泉 獸性暴 髮企圖 雞奸小童法官念被告年少无知从 情判罰 處苦 檻三个月另苔藤十下以儆 [Z.Q.Q., a Hokkien Youth, Bought to Court: Eruption of Bestial Instincts Led Him to Attempt Sodomizing a Child; Judge Passed a Light Sentence due to his Young Age and Ignorance], Nanyang siang pau 南洋商報, July 8, 1936, 8.

54. Harris, “Private and Confidential.”

55. Report of an Enquiry Held by Mr. J. A. S. Bucknill into Certain allegations as to the Prevalence of Unnatural Vice and Other Immorality Amongst the Chinese Indentured Labourers Employed on the Mines of the Witwatersrand, September 20, 1906, CO 537/541, TNA.

56. Betty Seow Guat Beng, interview by Ooi Yu-Lin, September 2 1989, Disc 17, Transcript, Oral History Interviews, National Archives of Singapore, Singapore, 262.

57. See, for example, Legg, Prostitution and the Ends of Empire, 3.

58. Letter to Mary Blacklock, January 25, 1940, CO273/659/13, TNA.

59. Warren, James Francis, Ah Ku and Karayuki-San: Prostitution in Singapore (Singapore: Oxford University Press, 1993), 153–77Google Scholar.

60. Annual Report on the Organization and Administration of the Straits Settlements Police and on the State of Crime, 1932, CO275/131, TNA.

61. Annual Report on the Organization and Administration of the Straits Settlements Police and on the State of Crime, 1933, CO275/134, TNA.

62. Annual Report on the Organization and Administration of the Straits Settlements Police and on the State of Crime, 1934, CO275/136, TNA.

63. Annual Report on the Organization and Administration of the Straits Settlements Police and on the State of Crime, 1936, CO275/143, TNA.

64. Annual Report on the Organization and Administration of the Straits Settlements Police and on the State of Crime, 1937, CO275/149, TNA.

65. Minute of Executive Council Meeting, May 18, 1938, CO275/134, TNA.

66. “What Dictionaries Have Ignored,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, July 27, 1939, 7.

67. Lawrence Basapa, “Junks Off Singapore were Used as Brothels,” The Straits Times, April 12, 1970, 4.

68. Eskridge, William N. Jr., “Law and the Construction of the Closet: American Regulation of Same-Sex Intimacy, 1880–1946,” Iowa Law Review 82 (1997): 1033Google Scholar.

69. Attorney-General, Report on an Ordinance to Amend the Penal Code (Chapter 20 of the Revised Edition), June 21, 1938, CO273/646/2, TNA.

70. Yang Heng-ye 楊恆業, “Feiyisuosi zhi fenghuaan: tingwaiji,” 匪夷所思之風化案:刑庭外記 [Bizarre Cases Involving Public Morality – Notes from the Court], Nanyang siang pau 南洋商報, March 25, 1941, 31; and “Mouyingshang you duanxiupi suicheng rubufuchu bushengqirao kong qiaozhi minyu lesuo,” 某英商有断袖癖遂成入不敷出不 勝其 擾控 橋治民裕勒索 [A Certain European Businessman Had ‘Fetish of the Broken Sleeve,’ Leading his Expenses to Exceed his Income], Nanyang siang pau 南洋商報, March 1, 1941, 12.

71. Proceedings of Legislative Council, June 13 1938, CO275/145, TNA.

72. Memorandum from S.E. Nicoll-Jones to Inspector-General of Police, November 5, 1940, Mss. Ind. Ocn. 27, WL.

73. See, for example, Chauncey, Gay New York, 14.

74. “A Third Sex!” The Straits Times, February 22, 1922, 2.

75. “‘Obscene’ Literature,” The Straits Times, November 9, 1928, 8.

76. “This Should Be Banned,” The Straits Times, June 25, 1933, 12.

77. “Literary Notes,” Malaya Tribune, March 22, 1932, 14.

78. Cecil Glesson, “The Psychology of the Criminal,” The Straits Times, January 2, 1936, 10.

79. Kang, Wenqing, Obsession: Male Same-Sex Relations in China, 1900–1950 (Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2009), 4142CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

80. “Xiamen zhi renyao tongxingai: juran yi aifuaiqi xiangcheng xingdong bei jianshi hou qingshu wangfan qinghua chanmian qie yu yingquguomen baishouxiangju: shushu ganshe naochu yichang jiufen,” 廈門之人妖同性戀愛:居然以愛夫愛妻相稱行動被監視後情書往返情話纏綿且欲迎娶過門白首相聚:叔叔干涉鬧出一塲糾紛 [The transvestites of Xiamen Homosexual romance: Calling each other man and wife; Used love letters to communicate after actions were monitored; Wanted to get married and grow old together; Uncle's intervention leads to dispute], Nanyang siang pau 南洋商報, July 16, 1936, 23; and “Dingling zhi tongxinglianai: jiewen zhisheng bei ren wuwei haozidou,” 丁玲之同性戀愛:接吻之聲被人誤爲耗子呌 [Ding Ling's Homosexual Kisses Mistaken as the Squeals of Mice], Nanyang siang pau 南洋商報, July 3, 1936, 23.

81. Jin Yu 瑾瑜, “Tan tongxingai,” 談同性愛 [On Homosexual Love], Nanyang siang pau 南洋商報, April 14, 1936, 24.

82. “Tongxingai,” 同性愛 [Homosexual Love], Nanyang siang pau 南洋商報, August 17, 1938, 29.

83. Minute of Executive Council Meeting, May 18, 1938, CO275/134, TNA.

84. Purcell, Victor, The Memoirs of a Malayan Official (London: Cassell, 1965), 250Google Scholar.

85. Allen, Charles, ed., Tales from the South China Seas: Images of the British in Southeast-Asia in the Twentieth Century (London: André Deutsch, 1983), 134Google Scholar.

86. Annual Report on the Organization and Administration of the Straits Settlements Police and on the State of Crime, 1937, CO275/149, TNA.

87. Philippa Levine, Prostitution, Race and Politics: Policing Venereal Disease in the British Empire (New York & London: Routledge, 2003), 295.

88. See, for example, Aldrich, Colonialism and Homosexuality, 194–97; and Butcher, The British in Malaya, 1880–1941: The Social History of a European Community in Colonial South-East Asia, 194.

89. Item 5 Prosecutions: The Malayan “Sexual Perversion” Cases, CO850/171/1, TNA.

90. Letter to W. G. A. Ormsby-Gore, March 24, 1938, CO850/123/4. To preserve the privacy of individuals accused of same-sex activity, I have used their first and last initials instead of their full names in both the main text and footnotes. My hope is to exercise ethical sensitivity while ensuring that future historians can track down my sources without difficulty.

91. Statement of Mr. D. W. Macintosh, Assistant Superintendent of Police, Straits Settlements, January 24, 1938, CO/850/123/4, TNA. Emphasis added.

92. H. G. to the High Commissioner of the Federated Malay States, March 6, 1938, CO850/123/2, TNA. Emphasis added.

93. H. G., Statement of Facts, March 6, 1938, CO850/123/2, TNA.

94. H. G. to the High Commissioner of the Federated Malay States, March 6, 1938, CO850/123/2, TNA.

95. Penal Code (Amendment) Ordinance, no 12 of 1938, CO273/646/2, TNA.

96. Other scholars have previously noted the racialized character of prosecutions under Section 377A. See Radics, George, “Decolonizing Singapore's Sex Laws: Tracing Section 377a of Singapore's Penal Code,” Columbia Human Rights Reviw 45 (2013): 76Google Scholar; and Radics, George, “Singapore: A ‘Fine’ City: British Colonial Sentencing Policies and Its Lasting Effects on the Singaporean Corporal State,” Santa Clara Journal of International Law 12 (2014): 76Google Scholar.

97. See, by way of comparison to the Pacific Northwest, Shah, Stranger Intimacy: Contesting Race, Sexuality and the Law in the American West, 67.

98. These figures are based on press reports and should be regarded with caution. Some cases might not have been reported in the press, and police and court records are not readily available.

99. “European Acquitted on Indecency Charge,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, March 28, 1941, 9; and “European's Alledged Act of Indecency,” The Straits Times, March 27, 1941, 12.

100. “Officer of Military Police Charged,” The Straits Times, April 16, 1941, 12; “Acquittal Ordered in Police Court Case,” Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, April 17, 1941, 9; “Indecency Charge Dropped,” Malaya Tribune, July 30, 1941, 3; and Rex v. Captain D.M., Malayan Law Journal 77 (1946).

101. “Soldier Conviceted on Indecency Charge,” The Straits Times, March 7, 1939, 14; and “Soldier Accused of Indecency,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, March 3, 1939, 9.

102. “Gross Indecency Charge,” The Straits Times, June 5, 1939, 12; and “Warning to Seamen by Judge,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, June 6, 1939, 9.

103. See, for example, Wiener, Martin J., An Empire on Trial: Race, Murder, and Justice under British Rule, 1870–1935 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012)Google Scholar, Introduction.

104. Rex V. Captain D.M.

105. Yang Heng-ye, Feiyi shuoshi zhifeng huaan—xingtingwaiji 匪夷所思之風化案——刑庭外記 [A Bizzare Case Involving Public Morality—Notes from Court], Nanyang siang pau 南洋商報, March 25, 1941, 31; and “Alleged Extortion of Money from European,” The Straits Times, July 30, 1941, 11.

106. “Magistrate Imposes Maximum Sentence: Negri Sembilan Malay Who Blackmailed European,” The Straits Times, March 4, 1941, 12.

107. “Whipping and Imprisonment: Tamil Who Posed as ‘Police Informer,’” The Straits Times, March 6, 1941, 12.

108. “Alleged Extortion of Money from European,” The Straits Times, July 30, 1941, 11; and “Blackmailer Sentenced: ‘Vilest of Offences,’ Says Judge,” The Straits Times, July 31, 1940, 11.

109. “Eurasian Sentenced for Blackmailing European ‘Had a Very Bad Criminal Record,’ Says Police,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, March 5, 1941, 7.

110. “Realize I am Willing to Face Anything: Letters of Chinese to European Read During Blackmail Case,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, March 14, 1941, 7

111. “Eurasian Sentenced for Attempted Blackmailing: European Gave $1000 Monthly under Threats,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, March 5, 1941, 7.

112. “Magistrate Imposes Maximum Sentence: Negri Sembilan Malay Who Blackmailed European.”

113. “Paid Out Money to Avoid Exposure: Blackmailed European Gives Evidence Against Tamil,” The Straits Times, March 4, 1941, 11.

114. “Chinese Faces Blackmail Charge at Assizes,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, June 10, 1940, 7.

115. “European's Evidence in Blackmail Case,” The Straits Times, March 1, 1941, 11.

116. “Eurasian Sentenced for Attempted Blackmailing: European Gave $1000 Monthly under Threats.”

117. “Blackmailer Sentenced: ‘Vilest of Offences,’ Says Judge.”

118. “Magistrate Imposes Maximum Sentence: Negri Sembilan Malay Who Blackmailed European.”

119. “Paid Out Money to Avoid Exposure: Blackmailed European Gives Evidence Against Tamil.”

120. See, by way of comparison to England and the United States, McLaren, Angus, Sexual Blackmail: A Modern History (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2002), 144Google Scholar.

121. “Warning to Seamen by Judge,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, June 6, 1939, 9.

122. Rickshaw drivers knew the location of sly brothels and served as an intermediary with potential clients. Warren, James Francis, Rickshaw Coolie: A People's History of Singapore, 1880–1940 (Singapore: National University of Singapore Press, 2003), 164Google Scholar. It appears that their knowledge extended to male as well as female prostitution: in a 1941 case, a rickshaw driver was charged with procuring an act of gross indecency for a British soldier. “Revolting and Disgusting Practices in Singapore,” Malaya Tribune, March 28, 1941, 3.

123. “Vice ‘Problem’ Among Singapore Troops,” Malaya Triune, April 16, 1941, 2.

124. “Officer of Military Police Charged,” The Straits Times, April 16, 1941, 12.

125. “Officer Acquitted in District Court Case,” The Straits Times, April 17, 1941, 12.

126. “Fifteen Months Imprisonment for Gunner,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, May 1, 1941, 7.

127. Other historians have discussed the link between homosexuality and the specter of espionage during the Cold War era, but the Singapore case suggests that this also was a concern in the years preceding World War II. See, for example, Johnson, David K., The Lavender Scare: The Cold War Persecution of Gays and Lesbians in the Federal Government (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004), ch. 5Google Scholar.

128. “Soldier Arrests Indian Youth,” The Straits Times, April 10, 1941, 11.

129. “Indian Gaoled for Indecency Attempt,” Malaya Tribune, April 10, 1941, 3.

130. “Revolting and Disgusting Practices in Singapore,” Malaya Tribune, March 28, 1941, 3.

131. “‘Abominable Type of Vice’ Rife in Singapore,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, March 28, 1941, 7.

132. “Wu qingnian yaliminya moyu yingbing zuo yongxingai beibu hou pan fakulan liugeyue” 巫青年亞利敏亞墨與英兵作同性愛被捕後判罰苦籃六個月[Malay youth Ali bin Ahmad (translated) had homosexual love with British soldier: Sentenced to six months imprisonment after arrest], Nanyang siang pau 南洋商報, Nanyang siang pau 南洋商報, June 26, 1941, 1

133. “‘Abominable Type of Vice’ Rife in Singapore,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, March 28, 1941, 7; and “Officer Acquitted in District Court Case,” The Straits Times, April 17, 1941, 12.

134. Emma Vickers, Queen and Country: Same-Sex Desire in the British Armed Forces, 1939-45 (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2013), 108-15.

135. District Courts Martial: Register, Home and Abroad, Army, 1938–1940, WO86/97, TNA.

136. Judge Advocate General's Office: General courts martial registers, abroad, 1917–1943, WO90/9, TNA.

137. Dudley Scott Cave, interview by Lyn E. Smith, July 2, 1996, Reel 2, Audio Recording, Oral History Interviews, Imperial War Museum.

138. Memo by K.W. Blackburne, May 30, 1940, CO850/171/1, TNA.

139. Item 5 Prosecutions: The Malayan “Sexual Perversion” Cases, CO850/171/1, TNA.

140. Letter to W. G. A. Ormsby-Gore, March 24, 1938, CO850/123/2, TNA.

141. Item 5 Prosecutions: The Malayan “Sexual Perversion” Cases, CO850/171/1, TNA; and T. K. Lylod to K. W. Blackburne, May 17, 1940, CO850/171/1, TNA.

142. Memo to Lord Dufferin, March 20, 1939, CO850/123/2, TNA.

143. H.G. to the High Commissioner of the Federated Malay States, March 6, 1938, CO850/123/2, TNA. Emphasis added.

144. Item 5 Prosecutions: The Malayan “Sexual Perversion” Cases, CO850/171/1, TNA.

145. Ibid.

146. Ibid.

147. As one theorist has speculated about Section 377 in colonial India, “It is unclear if, and in what form, the jurisdiction of Section 377 extended (even in theory) to European subjects.” Arondekar, For the Record, 82.

148. Annual Report on the Organization and Administration of the Straits Settlements Police and on the State of Crime, 1937, CO275/149, TNA.

149. Herbert A. McKnight, “Prostitutes in Local Cafes: A Singapore Problem,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, June 6, 1938, 7.

150. Letter from Alison Neilans to S. E. Nicoll Jones, September 24, 1940, Straits Settlements Correspondence, 3AMS/D/40/03, TWL. The Association was founded in the early nineteenth century to promote the abolition of prostitution. Like other social hygiene groups, it focused on female prostitution to the exclusion of male same-sex activity.

151. Letter from S. E. Nicoll Jones to Alison Neilans, November 29, 1940, Straits Settlements Correspondence, 3AMS/D/40/03, TWL.

152. “Allegedly Harboured ‘Wanted’ Man,” The Straits Times, April 29, 1941, 12.

153. “Prison for Indecency,” Malaya Tribune, April 2, 1941, 3.

154. “Tamil Gaoled on Indecency Charged,” Sunday Tribune (Singapore), June 22, 1941, 2.

155. “Eurasian Fined $200 for Indecency,” Malaya Tribune, April 17, 1941, 3.

156. “Indian's Appeal Allowed,” Morning Tribune, September 6, 1940, 6.

157. “Criminal Procedure Code Changes,” The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser, November 29, 1941, 5.

158. In 1913, for example, the chief justice of Bermuda declared that “any criminal case in camera [was] contrary to the principles governing the administration of justice in the British Empire,” after the governor and attorney-general proposed conducting trials for unnatural offences in camera, following several widely publicized cases. Percy Musgrave Cresswell Sheriff to George M. Bullock, January 16, 1913, CO37/252/3, TNA.

159. Lim Meng Suang and Another v. Attorney General, 1 Singapore Law Reports 26 (2015).

160. Ibid.

161. Chauncey, George, “‘What Gay Studies Taught the Court’: The Historians’ Amicus Brief in Lawrence V. Texas,” GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 10 (2004): 509–10CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and “How History Mattered: Sodomy Law and Marriage Reform in the United States,” Public Culture 20 (2008): 27–29.

162. Roy Tan, “Section 377a of the Singapore Penal Code,” The Singapore LGBT Encyclopaedia, http://the-singapore-lgbt-encyclopaedia.wikia.com/wiki/Section_377A_of_the_Singapore_Penal_Code (July 24, 2016); and P. J. Thum and Jun Zubillaga-Pow, “A Short History of Sexuality in Singapore,” The History of Singapore, podcast audio, June 3, 2016, http://thehistoryofsingapore.com/2016/06/03/279/ (last accessed October 18, 2019).