Tag: Lee Kuan Yew

  • Black Nights Could Not Peform Missing Man Formation During State Funeral

    Black Nights Could Not Peform Missing Man Formation During State Funeral

    The “Missing Man” formation by the Republic of Singapore Air Force’s Black Knights, one of the most anticipated elements of the State Funeral procession for Mr Lee Kuan Yew, was not performed on Sunday.

    Four Black Knights F-16C aircraft were to fly the Missing Man formation to honour the late Mr Lee as the funeral cortege drove pass Esplanade Bridge.

    The Straits Times understands that the jets did an aerial flypast above cloud cover, but could not do the formation due to rainy weather and low visibility.

    The planes were likely not visible to the crowds who lined the bridge despite the downpour.

    A video of Black Knight aircraft doing a Missing Man formation had gone viral on Sunday, but it was recorded at the rehearsal on Saturday, and not at the State Funeral procession.

    The 28-second video, which was uploaded on Facebook, received almost 2,000 likes and was shared almost 4,000 times.

    Mr Lee embarked on his final journey at 12.30pm from Parliament House to the University Cultural Centre where the State Funeral service was held.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Meet The Malaysian Man Named After Lee Kuan Yew

    Meet The Malaysian Man Named After Lee Kuan Yew

    He may not be a Singaporean but his father named him after Mr Lee Kuan Yew because of his admiration for the late founding father of Singapore.

    “My father is an admirer of Lee Kuan Yew and even though I’m Malaysian, I was named after him…When I was a kid, I went to Singapore and I passed through the immigration. An official said ‘wah, you’re Lee Kuan Yew! Hopefully you would be as successful as him’,” Malaysian Jason Ting Kuan Yew, 32, told The Straits Times on Sunday at the Singapore embassy where a live telecast of the funeral procession of Mr Lee was held.

    “As a way to respect him, we feel that it’s good for us to be here and to be together with the Singaporeans here. We feel touched and moved by the ceremony and all.”

    Mr Ting was with his Indonesian wife Dewiani Muljadi and his son. His wife had studied and worked in Singapore.

    Madam Dewiani said: “We respect Lee Kuan Yew a lot even though we are not Singaporean. He leaves behind a great legacy… We think that he is one of the role models for the Indonesian leaders to follow.”

    Some 70 people were at the embassy to watch the live telecast. The funeral procession was also shown live on Jakarta-based Berita Satu TV station.

    “‘I think even if many Singaporeans and other friends are not here, I’m very sure they are watching the proceedings from home because they told us that’s what they intend to do this afternoon,” Singapore’s Ambassador to Indonesia Anil Kumar Nayar told The Straits Times.

    “Since we opened the condolence book on Monday, we have had a large number of people coming forward to offer their condolences. Not just Singaporeans living in Indonesia, not just political office holders in Indonesia, but also even ordinary Indonesians, Malaysians, other foreigners,” he said.

    “Some of them have lived in Singapore before, but many of them have not. They were just so impressed with … how he has transformed Singapore.”

    Mr Peter Chao, 66, was among the Singaporeans who attended the live telecast of the funeral. He is the business development director of Indonesian Modern Group which deals with mining and property. He lives in South Jakarta, 45 minutes from the Singapore embassy.

    “We feel very sad for the sudden demise of him and we feel that he was a great leader of wisdom,” said Mr Chao.

    “His candid views have put many countries together. It’s a loss to our nation. We feel that he actually committed his whole life to build Singapore and to serve the people. We feel that he deserves all our adoration and compassion.

    “When he became Prime Minister, I was a student. He was 35, I was 11. So I’m totally aware of what he did for Singapore. It’s a great job. He made Singapore what is Singapore today – from a tiny fishing village to a modern metropolitan, one of the world’s most advanced countries,” he added.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • How Other Countries Marked Lee Kuan Yew’s State Funeral

    How Other Countries Marked Lee Kuan Yew’s State Funeral

    SINGAPORE: Countries including India and New Zealand have announced that they would be flying their National Flags at half-mast on Sunday, to mark the State Funeral for Singapore’s founding Prime Minister Mr Lee Kuan Yew.

    NEW ZEALAND

    A Channel NewsAsia viewer who wanted to remain unnamed sent us this photo of the New Zealand Flag flying at half-mast at the country’s Parliament House.

    HONG KONG

    More than 500 people turned up to watch the live telecast of the state funeral of Mr Lee Kuan Yew in Hong Kong.

    People started streaming in to the venue before noontime ahead of the telecast with many dressed in black to mourn the death of Singapore’s founding prime minister.

    The Consulate-General of Singapore in Hong Kong, the Singapore Association of Hong Kong and the Singapore Chamber of Commerce, Hong Kong, had organised the event at Central Plaza on Hong Kong island.

    “The biggest tribute you can have for Mr Lee is to uphold his ideals and his principles. Let us all work together to build an even better and more prosperous Singapore,” said Jacky Foo, Singapore Consul-General to Hong Kong.

    SOUTH KOREA

    Singaporeans living in South Korea gathered in Seoul to watch the State Funeral of Mr Lee Kuan Yew.

     

    CHINA

    In Beijing, more than 300 people gathered at a hotel ballroom to watch the live broadcast of Mr Lee Kuan Yew’s State Funeral.

    The event was organised by the Singapore Chamber of Commerce and Industry in China. People turned up in droves, dressed mostly in black and white. Some went alone while others went with families and friends.

    Loretta Perera, a Singaporean living in Beijing, said: “I wish that I was home. Still, I’m glad that there’s an event like this, where I feel a bit closer to home.”

    Steven Toh, a Singaporean on holiday in Beijing, said: “I felt quite welled up as I saw his cortege pass by our people lining the streets and as they shouted “Mr Lee Kuan Yew, Mr Lee Kuan Yew”. I actually cried. I wished I was there, with the people and with him.”

    MALAYSIA

    More than 100 people gathered at the Singapore High Commission in Kuala Lumpur to watch the State Funeral of Mr Lee Kuan Yew. Some were moved to tears after listening to a eulogy by Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong to his father during the funeral.

    Singaporeans and members of the public also took time to sign the condolence book at the High Commission during the event.

    Catherine Winifred, a Singaporean living in Malaysia, said: “It does make me feel really proud because I don’t think there are many world leaders who can have a whole nation mourn for them when they go.”

    Cheah Tuck Wing, a Malaysian national, said: “I do not know him personally. But after watching and reading about him, not only myself, I believe a lot of Malaysians felt the big loss.”

    At the end of the State Funeral, Singaporeans in Kuala Lumpur recited the National Pledge.

    BHUTAN

    Bhutan lowered its national flag to half mast as a mark of respect for the State Funeral of Mr Lee Kuan Yew.

     

    MYANMAR

    Singapore Embassy and the Singapore Association of Myanmar organised a memorial event in Yangon to mark the death of Singapore’s first Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew Singaporeans 300 Singaporeans living in Myanmar attended the event.

    Also there to pay his respects wasthe speaker of the Lower House of Parliament. Thura Shwe Mann said Mr Lee wished for Myanmar to become like Singapore – to achieve global status in areas of economic and social development.

    He also commended Mr Lee on his courage to make tough decisions that were important for Singapore and helped it to become the successful country it is today.

    “His value lies in how he benefited his community,” said Thura Shwe Mann. “Even though Mr Lee is gone, his achievements remain forever.”

    PHILIPPINES

    Singaporeans, including families and businessmen, as well as Filipinos gathered at the Singapore Embassy to watch the State Funeral of Mr Lee Kuan Yew.

    As tributes and anecdotes were shared in Singapore, tears stained the faces of many, while laughter at certain stories lifted the mood.

    At the event, Mr Peter Tay, head of the Singapore Philippines Association, said: “It is a way for us to show our last respects for a person who created Singapore… He will be remembered for his achievements. He did a lot for Singapore. Singapore in the world map is only a red dot, but I think around the world everybody knows him.”

    JAPAN

    Around 100 people were at the Singapore Embassy in Tokyo for the screening of Mr Lee Kuan Yew’s State Funeral.

    Japanese Justice Minister Yoko Kamikawa, speaking to Channel NewsAsia at the memorial event, said she believes Mr Lee contributed to the building of deep ties between Japan and Singapore. She was speaking on behalf of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe who was in Singapore to attend Mr Lee’s State Funeral.

    Over 1,500 people, including 90 VIPs, have signed the book of condolence at the Singapore Embassy in Tokyo since Mr Lee died on Monday.

    For one woman, it was her third time visiting the embassy to pay tribute to Mr Lee. She said: “I’m in Japan for 18 years. I’m a permanent resident in Japan. But I love him (Mr Lee) for he’s done so much for Singapore. He lived for Singapore and died for Singapore.”

    THAILAND

    More than 200 people were at the Singapore Embassy in Bangkok to watch the State Funeral. Among the audience were those who had travelled in to the Thai capital just to watch the telecast.

    “We’ve had Singaporeans taking a nine hour bus ride from Chiang Mai to come and sign book,” said Singapore Ambassador to Thailand Chua Siew San. “People flew in from other provinces also – all unanimously said this was the least they could do for what Mr Lee has given us.”

    “Among us Singaporeans here, we do feel the loss and that’s why today we are gathered here and we share the mood here and of course this is the last journey for our great founding Prime Minister Mr Lee,” said Dannis Lee, a businessman.

    Andrzej Przemyslaw Kusnierczak, a lecturer at Suan Sunandha Rajabhat University, said: “My country of origin is Poland and Poland had a lot of wars before and now we have a problem because of Russian aggression in Ukraine. Actually the world really needs leaders like Mr Lee – leaders with vision, with ambition and with unlimited motivation.”

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Amos Yee Arrested

    Amos Yee Arrested

    The 17-year-old teenager who last week posted a YouTube video in which he celebrated Mr Lee Kuan Yew’s death and criticised his political career was arrested on Sunday. In the video, he challenged Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong to sue him and also made insensitive remarks about Christianity.

    At least 20 police reports have been lodged against Amos Yee since Mar 27, when he was believed to have uploaded the eight-minute video.

    On Sunday, one reader alerted The Straits Times to yet another police report lodged against the teenager, but this time it was regarding his posting of obscene material on his blog. The video, which has been slammed by netizens, in no longer available on his YouTube channel. The blogpost has also been taken down.

     

    Source: 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