Singapore legislation

Schedule 1

of Extradition Act 1968

Schedule 1

Description of returnable offences

FIRST SCHEDULESections 2(1), 14, 18 and 43Description of returnable offencesPart 11.Murder of any degree.2.Manslaughter or culpable homicide.3.An offence against the law relating to abortion.4.Maliciously or wilfully wounding or inflicting grievous bodily harm.5.Assault occasioning actual bodily harm.6.Rape.7.Unlawful sexual intercourse with a female.8.Indecent assault.9.Procuring, or trafficking in, women or young persons for immoral purposes.10.Bigamy.11.Kidnapping, abduction or false imprisonment, or dealing in slaves.12.Stealing, abandoning, exposing or unlawfully detaining a child.13.Bribery.14.Perjury or subornation of perjury or conspiring to defeat the course of justice.15.Arson.16.An offence concerning counterfeit currency.17.An offence against the law relating to forgery.18.Stealing, embezzlement, fraudulent conversion, fraudulent false accounting, obtaining property or credit by false pretences, receiving stolen property or any other offence in respect of property involving fraud.19.Burglary, housebreaking or any similar offence.20.Robbery.21.Blackmail or extortion by means of threats or by abuse of authority.22.An offence against bankruptcy law or company law.23.Malicious or wilful damage to property.24.Acts done with the intention of endangering vehicles, vessels or aircraft.25.An offence against the law relating to psychotropic substances, dangerous drugs or narcotics.26.An offence against the law relating to benefits derived from corruption, drug trafficking and other serious crimes.27.Piracy.28.Revolt against the authority of the master of a ship or the commander of an aircraft.29.Contravention of import or export prohibitions relating to precious stones, gold and other precious metals.30.Hijacking and other acts endangering safety of aircraft and acts endangering safety of an international airport.31.The recruitment, transport, transfer, harbouring or receipt, for the purpose of exploitation —

(a)

of any individual below the age of 18 years; or

(b)

of any other individual, by means of the threat or use of force (or any other form of coercion), abduction, fraud, deception, the abuse of power, the abuse of the position of vulnerability of the individual, or the giving or receipt of money or other benefits to secure the consent of a person having control over that individual.32.An offence against the law giving effect to the International Convention for the Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism done in New York on 13 April 2005.33.An offence against the law relating to the securing of computer material against unauthorised access or modification.34.An offence of absconding while on bail or personal bond.Part 2Aiding and abetting, or counselling or procuring the commission of, or being an accessory before or after the fact to, or attempting or conspiring to commit, any of the offences listed in Part 1.Part 31. Abetment of a serious crime, where the serious crime is transnational in nature and involves an organised criminal group.

2. Criminal conspiracy to commit a serious crime, where the serious crime is transnational in nature and involves an organised criminal group.Note: The expressions “serious crime”, “organised criminal group” and “transnational” have the meanings given to those expressions in the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organised Crime, done at New York on 15 November 2000.[S 476/2007; S 612/2015; S 488/2017; S 48/2018; S 18/2019]