Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. The sale of chewing gum in Singapore has been illegal since 1992. Some motivations for the ban included stopping the placement of used chewing gum in inappropriate and costly places, such as the sensors of subway doors, inside lock cylinders, and on elevator buttons.

  2. Mar 28, 2015 · Lee Kuan Yew, who died on Monday at the age of 91, is famed as the man who turned Singapore from a small port into a global trading hub. But he also insisted on tidiness and good behaviour - and...

  3. Jun 26, 2018 · Singapores ban on the sale of chewing gum is possibly the most internationally well-known law in the world. When it first came to light in the early 1990s, it was one of the main things that Western journalists focused on when writing about the city-state.

  4. Jul 21, 2021 · Chewing gum has been banned in Singapore since 1992, when the former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew created a series of laws designed to make Singapore a "first-world oasis in a third-world region" after its independence in 1965 (via BBC).

  5. In 1992, Singapore implemented a strict ban on importing, selling, and manufacturing chewing gum, including bubble gum. The main reason behind this decision was to maintain cleanliness and prevent gum-related vandalism in the country.

  6. Chewing gum is banned in Singapore under the Regulation of Imports and Exports (Chewing Gum) Regulations. [1] The ban, which includes all gum substances of vegetable or synthetic origin such as bubble gum and dental chewing gum, carries a hefty fine and possible jail term for those caught importing, selling or manufacturing chewing gum.

  7. Aug 6, 2023 · Singapore banned chewing gum in 1992 after vandals caused disruptions by sticking gum on the MRT trains. Reactions were mixed, with some seeing the ban as authoritarian while others welcomed it to reduce littering.

  8. Apr 25, 2017 · Chewing Gum . One of the most highly talked about laws in Singapore, is the “Chewing Gum Law”. In 1992, after years of vandalism in elevators, mailboxes, and on sidewalks, the government of Singapore decreed all gum illegal to stem the amount of sticky stuff on elevator buttons and on stair railings.

  9. A ban on the sale, import and manufacture of chewing gum in Singapore took effect on 3 January 1992, four days after the ban was announced in The Straits Times. 1 The ban encompassed all substances made from the “gum base of vegetable or synthetic origin”, such as “bubble gum or dental chewing gum”.

  10. Singapore has a strict ban on the sale and import of chewing gum. The ban was put in place to keep the countrys streets clean and prevent damage to public property. While the ban is still in place today, there are a few exceptions to the rule. History and Implementation of the Gum Ban