Written Answer to Unanswered Oral Question

Review of Animals and Birds Act, and Recommendations in White Paper on Strengthening Protections for Animal Welfare

Speakers

Summary

This question concerns Mr Abdul Muhaimin Abdul Malik’s inquiry into whether the Ministry of National Development will implement the 15 recommendations from the 2025 White Paper and the timeline for these reforms. Minister Chee Hong Tat stated that the National Parks Board (NParks) is reviewing the Animals and Birds Act 1965 to strengthen enforcement powers and penalty frameworks for animal cruelty. Minister of State Alvin Tan has engaged with animal welfare groups to evaluate the recommendations, though some are excluded from the current review due to implementation trade-offs and policy limitations. NParks is currently consulting stakeholders, including veterinarians and pet business owners, and aims to start a public consultation on the draft Bill by late 2026. Ongoing efforts include the Cat Management Framework and rigorous investigations into animal cruelty feedback to ensure firm enforcement action is taken when necessary.

Transcript

96 Mr Abdul Muhaimin Abdul Malik asked the Minister for National Development (a) whether the Ministry will consider the 15 recommendations in the 2025 White Paper on Strengthening Protections for Animal Welfare jointly submitted by ACRES and SPCA; and (b) if so, what is the expected timeline for reviewing and implementing the recommendations across the four key areas of animal welfare education, legislation and policies, companion animal protection and wildlife protection.

Mr Chee Hong Tat: The Animals and Birds Act 1965 (ABA) safeguards against animal cruelty and abuse. Under the current ABA, the maximum penalty for a cruelty offence is higher than that for a welfare offence. Repeat offenders are also liable for enhanced punishment. Where acts of cruelty are particularly aggravated, the prosecution will highlight this to the Courts to take into account for sentencing.

National Parks Board (NParks) has started a comprehensive review to ensure ABA remains effective in deterring acts of animal cruelty and abuse. This includes reviewing the penalty framework, such as imprisonment terms, fines and disqualification orders, for animal welfare offences and enforcement powers for better animal welfare and management.

The review currently does not include proposals to prevent the posting of animal abuse content online or increase collaboration on enforcement with animal welfare groups. To reduce disamenities caused by irresponsible pet ownership, NParks has launched initiatives, such as cat licensing, under the Cat Management Framework and the pet ownership course.

We will continue to take a collaborative approach in this review. For instance, Minister of State Alvin Tan had engaged Animal Concerns Research and Education Society (ACRES) and Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) in July on their White Paper on Strengthening Protections for Animal Welfare. We agreed that while some recommendations will be challenging to implement due to the trade-offs, we could adopt some recommendations as part of the ABA review and further evaluate others with partners. NParks will continue to engage stakeholders, such as animal welfare groups, pet business owners and vets, to ensure that all views are considered. NParks aims to start public consultation on the draft Bill by around end-2026.

NParks will continue to investigate feedback on animal welfare and cruelty thoroughly. For instance, in the recent cases involving community cats in Yishun and Punggol, NParks interviewed key witnesses, reviewed CCTV footage and carried out post-mortem examination for the Yishun community cat and found that the cases were likely the result of vehicular accidents.

NParks will take firm enforcement action, considering factors, such as severity of the offence and whether it is a repeat offender. In line with its enforcement efforts, NParks also works with animal welfare group partners to increase education and outreach efforts to raise awareness of responsible pet ownership and the consequences of animal cruelty.