Tag: Dr Lee Wei Ling

  • PM Lee Hsien Loong Memohon Maaf Kepada Rakyat Singapura

    PM Lee Hsien Loong Memohon Maaf Kepada Rakyat Singapura

    Perdana Menteri Lee Hsien Loong meminta maaf kepada rakyat Singapura di atas pertikaian keluarga antara beliau dengan adik beradiknya, Dr. Lee Wei Ling dan Lee Hsien Yang, dan melahirkan rasa sangat kesal bahawa peristiwa itu menjejas reputasi Singapura dan keyakinan rakyat terhadap Pemerintah. PM Lee juga menyatakan, beliau mahu meyakinkan rakyat Singapura bahawa perkara ini tidak akan mengganggu beliau dan rakan-rakan Kabinetnya daripada tanggungjawab memerintah Singapura. Ini juga tambah beliau tidak akan mengganggu beliau dan Pemerintah dalam menghuraikan isu-isu nasional yang lebih penting, termasuk cabaran-cabaran ekonomi dan keselamatan yang sedang dihadapi Singapura.

    Semasa menyampaikan permohonan maaf kepada rakyat Singapura, PM Lee akur bahawa rakyat Singapura terganggu dan bingung dengan berita pertikaian antara beliau dengan adik beradiknya sejak seminggu lalu. PM Lee seterusnya menyatakan, beliau sudah melakukan segala yang terdaya untuk mengelakkan peristiwa tersebut. PM Lee menjelaskan, beliau cuba menghuraikan perasaan kurang senang mereka secara privet. Ini termasuklah menawarkan untuk memindahkan 38 Oxley Road kepada adiknya, Dr Lee Wei Ling, dengan harga nominal $1.

    PM Lee menyatakan, beliau berharap langkah-langkah tersebut akan memuaskan adik beradiknya itu dan seharusnya tiada lagi percakaran lanjut kerana beliau tidak lagi memiliki rumah tersebut, serta tidak mengambil bahagian dalam sebarang keputusan Pemerintah mengenai rumah tersebut. Perdana Menteri selanjutnya menyatakan, beliau mahu melupakan peristiwa ini. Namun tuduhan-tuduhan tersebut, yang disifatkannya sebagai tidak berasas terhadap Pemerintah, “tidak boleh dibiarkan tidak terjawab”. Sebagai kakitangan awam, tulisnya lagi, beliau dan para Menterinya akan terus melindungi integriti institusi-institusinya dan menegakkan piawai yang tinggi – iaitu membezakan antara ehwal privet daripada tugas-tugas awam.

     

    Source: Berita Mediacorp

  • Netizen: Lee Hsien Loong Needs To Be Answerable To Public On Accusations By Siblings

    Netizen: Lee Hsien Loong Needs To Be Answerable To Public On Accusations By Siblings

    No, Mr Lee Hsien Loong, we need answers/ specific clarifications (if possible, independent inquiry) into these allegations:

    1) that you used your position as prime minister to obtain documents (Deed of Gift) given to the ministry via Lawrence Wong. (abuse of powers)

    2) that your wife, Ho Ching, has ‘pervasive influence’ that ‘extends well beyond her job purview’ despite not being an elected official or govt official. (conflict of interest and overreach of power)

    3) that you made your personal lawyer, Lucien Wong, the Attorney-General in Jan 2017. (favouritism/ nepotism)

    4) that you monitored your two siblings so much that Lee Hsien Yang, your own brother, wants to leave the country. (threatening/ police state)

    re: https://goo.gl/G71SrX

     

    Source: Albert Tay

  • Home Of Former PM Lee Kuan Yew At 38 Oxley Road At Centre Of Dispute

    Home Of Former PM Lee Kuan Yew At 38 Oxley Road At Centre Of Dispute

    A long-running question over what to do with the home of the late former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew at 38, Oxley Road has come into focus again after two of the late Mr Lee’s children, Dr Lee Wei Ling and Mr Lee Hsien Yang, issued a statement on the matter on Wednesday (June 14).

    In their statement, they reiterated their father’s wish that the house be demolished upon his death.

    The two siblings, who are joint executors and trustees of their father’s estate, also said that their elder brother, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, and his wife Ho Ching had opposed this wish as “the preservation of the house would enhance his political capital”.

    The issue of 38, Oxley Road made the news back in 2015, several weeks after Mr Lee Kuan Yew died at the age of 91 on March 23 that year.

    In April 2015, Dr Lee and Mr Lee Hsien Yang stated publicly that the late Mr Lee had asked for his house to be demolished after his death, and asked Singaporeans to respect this wish.

    In his will, Mr Lee Kuan Yew said that the house should “be demolished immediately after my death or if my daughter, Wei Ling, would prefer to continue living in the original house, immediately after she moves out of the house”.

    If demolition is made impossible owing to changes in the law, rules or regulations, it was the late Mr Lee’s wish that the house should not be open to anyone except his children, their families and descendants.

    There had been calls after Mr Lee Kuan Yew’s death to turn the pre-war bungalow, which he had lived in since the 1940s, into a museum or heritage site.

    PM Lee told Parliament at a sitting on April 12, 2015, that Mr Lee Kuan Yew knew about calls from the public to turn his Oxley Road home into a museum and a memorial to him, but was adamant the house should be demolished after his death.

    Mr Lee Kuan Yew had written formally to the Cabinet at least twice to put his wishes on the record, PM Lee told Parliament.

    The first time was soon after his wife, Madam Kwa Geok Choo, died in October 2010, and the second time was after he stepped down from the Cabinet in May 2011.

    In his statement delivered in Parliament, PM Lee said that his father’s position on 38, Oxley Road was unwavering over the years, and added that Singaporeans should respect his wishes.

    PM Lee explained that his father was averse to the idea as he had seen too many houses of famous people “kept frozen in time… as a monument with people tramping in and out”, and they invariably “become shabby”.

    The prime minister also said that a decision on the fate of the house was not required as his sister, Dr Lee Wei Ling, continued to live there.

    In December 2015, PM Lee and his two siblings said in a joint statement that they hoped the State would honour their late father’s wishes regarding the house.

    The statement also announced that PM Lee and Mr Lee Hsien Yang had each agreed to donate half the value of Mr Lee Kuan Yew’s Oxley Road house to eight charities, in honour of their father.

    “Dr Lee Wei Ling and Mr Lee Hsien Yang would like to honour the wish of the late Mr Lee Kuan Yew that the house at 38, Oxley Road be demolished after Dr Lee Wei Ling ceases to live in it,” the statement said.

    “Mr Lee Hsien Loong has recused himself from all government decisions involving 38, Oxley Road and, in his personal capacity, would also like to see this wish honoured,” it added.

    A online poll released later in December 2015 by Hong Kong-based market research firm YouGov found that a majority of those surveyed supported demolishing the house. Of the 1,000 people it polled online, 77 per cent said they backed Mr Lee’s wish and 15 per cent of wanted the house preserved.

     

    Source: http://www.straitstimes.com

  • Dr Lee Wei Ling’s Eulogy To Lee Kuan Yew At The Mandai Crematorium

    Dr Lee Wei Ling’s Eulogy To Lee Kuan Yew At The Mandai Crematorium

    The late Mr Lee Kuan Yew had developed Parkinson’s disease three years ago which severely limited his mobility, said his only daughter Lee Wei Ling at the family’s private cremation service on Sunday evening.

    “He had great difficulty standing and walking. But he refused to use a wheelchair or even a walking stick. He would walk, aided by his SOs,” Dr Lee said at the Mandai Crematorium.

    He was also plagued by bouts of hiccups, and his ability to swallow both solids and liquids was impaired.

    Mr Lee, who died at the age of 91 on March 23, “searched the Internet and tried a wide variety of unorthodox hiccup therapies”.

    “For example, he once used rabbit skin and then chicken feathers to induce sneezing, so as to stop the hiccups. Although the sneezing sometimes stopped his hiccups, it did not do so consistently enough,” she told a gathering of family and people who had worked closely with Mr Lee.

    She said Mr Lee also tried reducing his food intake because he felt that eating too much could precipitate hiccups, “hence he lost a lot of weight, and appeared thin and gaunt”.

    She said her father was stubborn and determined. He would insist on walking down the steps at home, from the verandah to the porch where the car was parked.

    Mr Lee’s daughter-in-law Ho Ching had a lift installed so he need not negotiate those steps. But when he was aware and alert, he refused the lift though it was a struggle for him to walk down those steps even with three security officers (SOs) helping.

    “But the lift was not installed in vain,” she said. “On several occasions when he was ill and needed to be admitted to SGH, he did not protest when the SO guided him onto the lift. Still, even when ill, if he was asked if he wanted to use the lift, the answer would invariably be ‘no’.”

    Dr Lee devoted a part of her eulogy to thanking the SOs whom she said were an integral part of Mr Lee’s life, even more so in the last five years.

    “They looked after him with tender loving care, way beyond the call of duty. One doctor friend who came to help dress a wound Papa sustained when he fell, noticed this and said to me: ‘The SOs look after your father as though he is their own father.’”

    She said her father was also very considerate towards his SOs. During an official trip to Saudi Arabia, an SO came down with chicken pox. Rather than leave him behind in a hospital there as doctors suggested, he insisted the SO return to Singapore with the rest of the delegation.

    “He wasn’t going to leave any Singaporean behind, not least an SO.”

    Sensing he was special, all the SOs have been very kind to Mr Lee she said, adding: “On behalf of my family, I would like to thank all of them. I know each of them well, even the number of children they have. To me, they were not only staff whose job was to look after Papa, but also friends of the family. They helped me pull out the SIM card from my blackberry when it hung; they were friends for me to share food and goodies with whenever the opportunity arose.”

    She said that soon after her father died, one of the SOs, Yak, called to inform her of it.

    “After being in my room alone and unable to go back to sleep, I went downstairs to the SOs room, and sat with the two SOs on duty, watching black and white footage of Papa in his younger days. I needed the company of friends. Junji jichaou dan ru shui. There is a Chinese saying that the relationship between two honourable gentlemen is as understated as plain water. That was the relationship between the SOs and me,” she said.

    She also revealed that once, Mr Lee choked on a piece of meat. The quick-thinking SOs – Liang Chye, ASP Yak and Kelvin – managed to save him through the Heimlich manoeuvre.

    “They coordinated their pull, and after several attempts, the piece of meat was finally ejected. By this time, Papa had already turned purple. But within seconds of the meat being dislodged, he was mentally alert.”

    She gave special thanks to Liang Chye and Kelvin, and especially ASP Yak, whose presence of mind saved Mr Lee’s life, she said.

    “To all the SOs who have served Papa over the years, I thank you on behalf of my family,” she said.

    She also thanked all the nurses, doctors and specialists who had looked after Mr Lee over the years, especially those involved in the last five years of his life, when his medical problems multiplied and became more complicated.

    “I am grateful to each and every one of them for all the care they have provided to Papa,” she said. “Thank you all – doctors, nurses and physiotherapists – who have helped Papa be as comfortable as possible in his final days. My family is extremely grateful to all of you.”

    Dr Lee also thanked the staff of the Prime Minister’s Office who kept the office running smoothly in Mr Lee’s absence. “Thank you all for being with Papa and for helping to ease his suffering in the last five years of his life. Thank you for being here with us today, to bid farewell to Papa.”

    She spoke about the influence her father had on her, and how they were similar temperamentally, for example their determination to exercise.

    Mr Lee would complete his 12 minutes on the treadmill, even on days that he was tired, she said. “The SOs were amused because they knew I was equally fanatical about exercise. Today, I have run up and down my 20 metre corridor 800 times, making it to 16 km.”

    She also said: “Papa, I know you would have preferred if I had married and had children. But I have no regrets, no regrets I was able to look after you and Mama in your old age.”

    The most important lesson she learnt from her father, she said, was “never to push around anyone simply because he or she is weaker than me or in a socially inferior position”. Also, “never to let anyone bully someone else if I am in a position to stop such bullying.”

    She added on a poignant note: “This morning I noticed that the maid, in setting the dining table, had moved away Papa’s chair and placed it against the wall. It was a poignant reminder that this farewell is for ever. I have been controlling my feelings for this past week, but looking at this unexpected scene, I nearly broke down. But I can’t break down, I am a Hakka woman.

    “Farewell Papa. I will miss you. Rest in peace.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com