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With asylum grant, did the US just reward hate speech?

The decision to grant asylum to an atheist blogger who spoke crudely of Muslims is sure to anger many, but it may also confirm that an important escape route for political dissidents is still open.

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Wong Maye-E/AP/File
Singapore blogger Amos Yee speaks to reporters after being released on bail in Singapore, May 12, 2015. Federal immigration judge Samuel Cole issued a 13-page decision on Friday, March 24, saying that Yee has suffered political persecution because of his political opinion and could remain in the US.

When Singapore鈥檚 first prime minister, Lee Kuan Yew, passed away in 2015, 16-year-old Amos Yee made an obscenity-filled YouTube video denouncing the late leader as a 鈥渢yrant.鈥 That and other postings earned him a four-week jail sentence for 鈥渨ounding religious feelings and obscenity.鈥 Not long after, he earned another six-week sentence for derogatory comments on Islam and 海角大神ity.

On Friday, US Immigration Judge Samuel B. Cole granted asylum to Mr. Yee, now 18, who flew to Chicago in December. 鈥淗is prosecution, detention, and general maltreatment at the hands of the Singapore authorities constitute persecution,鈥 . 鈥淵ee is a young political dissident, and his request for asylum is granted.鈥

Singapore鈥檚 Ministry of Home Affairs was none too pleased, , 鈥淢any more such people around the world, who deliberately engage in hate speech, ... will no doubt take note of the US approach and consider applying for asylum in the US.鈥

With 鈥渉ate speech鈥 and 鈥渉ate crimes鈥 becoming a major US concern, the decision to admit an atheist blogger who spoke crudely of Muslims is sure to draw criticism. But it may also confirm that an important escape route for political dissidents is still open.

Cases like Amos鈥檚 are 鈥渁ctually quite common,鈥 explains attorney Sandra Grossman, who represented Yee. 鈥淒ifferent countries ... prosecute speech that is considered critical of the government, and that's exactly what happened in Amos's case.鈥

While the letter of the law may deal with offensiveness, 鈥渢he intent is to silence the person that's making the speech,鈥 she said.

鈥淎mos's speech was offensive, and actually extremely vulgar,鈥 Ms. Grossman tells 海角大神 over the phone. 鈥淏ut in no way did he incite violence against any other group. I think if we're going to be looking at speech ... that's where we can begin to draw limits.鈥

It鈥檚 not surprising that Singapore disagrees with the US over the acceptable bounds of speech. In the 1960s, between the island鈥檚 Chinese and Malay populations. Deliberate racial provocateurs were later blamed for weeks of violence that resulted in 36 deaths and hundreds of injuries.

Rapid economic growth has since transformed the tiny city-state into one of the world鈥檚 wealthiest countries, but the island鈥檚 leaders remain on guard against possible unrest. 鈥淪ingapore is a multicultural society,鈥 explains Min Zhou, professor of sociology and Asian American studies at UCLA, 鈥渁nd the state will not tolerate any speech that would harm race relations.鈥 聽

But Grossman says that all too often, laws that ostensibly target offense get re-purposed for persecution.

As the managing partner of Grossman Law, LLC 鈥 a small, Bethesda, Maryland-based firm that specializes in immigration 鈥 she has helped secure asylum for clients like , who once co-owned Venezuela鈥檚 only independent television network, and Ecuadorian journalist , whose criticism of the government earned him a three-year prison sentence and a multimillion-dollar fine under the country鈥檚 defamation laws.

Mr. Palacio, she remembers, 鈥渨as accused in Ecuador of hate speech, where really what he was doing was criticizing his government.鈥

Singapore, too, has faced charges that its laws go well beyond protecting civility. Freedom House as 鈥減artly free鈥 and its press as 鈥渘ot free.鈥

It鈥檚 not just slurs that can incur a tough penalty: In 2014, Singapore鈥檚 prime minister, Lee Hsien Loong, sued blogger Roy Ngerng Yi Ling for defamation, winning S$150,000 鈥 currently about US$107,000 鈥 in damages. His offense? Writing a blog post that accused Mr. Lee of misappropriating state funds.

At the same time, those who use more heated language can get away with it, if they have the right connections. Grossman pointed to the case of , a former youth leader in the country鈥檚 ruling party who likened Muslim Malays to terrorists. 鈥淗e was kind of warned, but he was never prosecuted.,鈥 she said.聽

, Judge Cole cited Mr. Neo鈥檚 treatment as evidence that 鈥減eople who made disparaging remarks about religions but who were not similarly critical of the Singapore regime avoided prosecution.鈥

As long as foreign governments use the law to silence their critics, Grossman says, America needs to remain a place of refuge. 鈥淵ou have people who are persecuted in their own country, under these laws of general applicability, and then they're able to find protection in the United States.鈥

When the New York-based Human Rights Foundation asked her to take up Amos鈥檚 case, she saw it as a means to point out the importance of this process.

鈥淲e try to handpick the cases that we think will make an impact and that are relevant, considering some of the larger immigration issues and policy issues that are going on,鈥 she said. She considers Yee's case 鈥渆mblematic鈥 of the larger debates over immigration and free speech taking place today.

It may also reveal how the playing field has tilted against asylum seekers. At the time of her interview on Saturday afternoon, Grossman was still waiting to receive word that Yee had been released from Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody, where he has been held since arriving in the US in December.

President Trump鈥檚 exempted 鈥渁ny foreign national who has been granted asylum鈥 鈥 and, in any case, it聽was put on hold by a federal judge March 15th.

But Grossman says this case has been handled differently than her previous ones. 鈥淚've never heard of another case where someone has been granted asylum and has not been released, even if the government appeals" the court鈥檚 ruling 鈥 a right that ICE had not yet exercised or waived, she says.

Yee's situation presents 鈥渁 test case for the new Trump executive orders,鈥 she says.

If聽and when Yee is released,聽he says that he plans to continue speaking out and even write a book about his experiences. In doing so, he could also test American society鈥檚 patience for off-color commentators.

Grossman made clear that she hopes we pass. 鈥淚 think that we are a country that is known around the world for our First Amendment protections. And if we start to draw lines and limit what people can say based on what's offensive to some, there's not going to be any way to control that.鈥

UCLA's Professor Zhou, whose research focuses on Asian immigration, suggests that accepting him won't just be a win for free speech. "Yee is still very young," she points out. "With proper education and mentorship, he may be able to turn his talent and energy toward a more productive career and make [a] positive contribution, like other immigrants, to enrich the US society."

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