Australian jailed in Singapore for sedition over website
Law student Ai Takagi was jailed for 10 month for the offence in strictly governed Singapore, which clamps down hard on any activity seen as promoting racial and class hatred.

An Australian woman whose website published made-up stories about foreigners that prosecutors said incited racial hatred was jailed in Singapore on Wednesday after falling foul of colonial-era sedition laws.
Law student Ai Takagi was jailed for 10 months, the stiffest sentence ever imposed for the offence in strictly governed Singapore, which clamps down hard on any activity seen as promoting racial and class hatred.
Takagi was the Australia-based editor and owner of “The Real Singapore” (TRS), which enjoyed huge popularity but was shut down after she and her Singaporean husband were arrested while visiting the island last year.
Prosecutors said Takagi, 23, posted fabricated stories to generate hundreds of thousands of dollars in online advertising revenues for her site.
Court documents said the TRS website had close to 13 million views a month while its Facebook page had more than 400,000 likes.