Tag: LKY

  • Vigil At SGH – Wait Until Security Guards Tell Us To Leave

    Vigil At SGH – Wait Until Security Guards Tell Us To Leave

    At Singapore General Hospital (SGH) on Wednesday night, the mood was understandably muted.

    A number of people had made their way down especially for one reason – to keep vigil for Singapore’s first Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew.

    Mr Lee has been warded at SGH since Feb 5 with severe pneumonia.

    On Tuesday, the Prime Minister’s Office said his condition had worsened due to an infection. On Wednesday, it was announced that he was still critically ill.

    The people at SGH waited and sat in small groups scattered around the Block 6 waiting area. They spoke in hushed tones, making no commotion, even as some of the lights were turned off.

    People like Ms Julie Minhat came to offer their prayers for Mr Lee.

    Yet when Ms Julie, and others like her, spoke to The New Paper, a sense of hope could be heard in their voices.

    When asked why she made the journey, Ms Julie, 50, who was accompanied by her sister and three other friends  said: “It’s better than getting updates on TV or social media.  (Being) here, at least I feel close to him (Mr Lee).”

    Ms Julie, a resident of Ang Mo Kio, said she was at the hospital since 8pm.

    In that time, she had seen a build-up of media personnel. Close to 10pm, an area was cordoned off for the press.

    For most of the well-wishers at the hospital, some posts on social media proved painful to read. PMO issued a statement that a police report was being lodged against the hoaxers.

    Said Ms Julie’s sister, who declined to give her name: “At a time like this, it is distasteful to poke fun. When a person is in such a state, we should show respect.”

    That sentiment was shared by three men who arrived at the hospital’s waiting area at about 10.30pm.

    The trio — all former school mates from North Vista Secondary School — came to show support.

    One of them, Mr  Jason Gan, 25, said: “I know some do not like Mr Lee because he is strong-willed. But I appreciate what he has done for the country. Had he been soft or lacked focus, I don’t think Singapore would be where it is today.”

    Mr Gan, together with his friends Anthony Tan and Herman Loh, said they were unsure how long they would stay at the hospital.

    Likewise, Ms Julie’s entourage said they would stay until “the security guards tell us to leave”.

    Added Ms Julie: “The rumours currently floating online will not tarnish the image and reputation of the Singapore that Mr Lee has built.

    “Nobody can take that away from him.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Be Grateful For Lee Kuan Yew

    Be Grateful For Lee Kuan Yew

    Mr. Lee Kuan Yew (LKY) is at the gun sight of his detractors and enemies again, taking in potshots from all directions in the social media, simply because he was in the news for being hospitalised. The criticisms, condemnations, curses and swearing is gathering storm again.  Even anyone who speaks up for him becomes the target. Who are these hateful ingrates? Mainly his political opponents, past and present. The social media has allowed them to amplify their hates. I will try to balance these with the good things that LKY has done for ordinary people. I will look at them from an ordinary, layman perspective.

    No fear of starvation. Food aplenty, in quantities and varieties. Clothing aplenty, in quantities, varieties, styles and fashions. Don’t have to sleep in the streets. Roof over my head which I can call my own. Good sanitation system. You flush the toilet and walk away without looking back, without worrying if it will work. Home has uninterrupted supplies of water, gas and electricity. The water can be drunk straight out of the tap. Can walk from a residential block to bus-stops, MRT stations, markets, other residential blocks, etc., rain or shine, because of sheltered walkways. Good waste disposal. No unsightly and stinking piles of rubbish lying around. Cleanliness. Few litters found on the ground, though this is changing for the worse as more foreigners come in. No unsightly sticky chewing gum in public places. No fear of stepping or sitting on one.

    Good education and training, leading to good jobs. Can continually upgrade. The limit is myself. Good quality and affordable health care. Public and private medical institutions aplenty. Infectious and communicable diseases are well under control. Good public sports facilities. Stadiums, swimming pools, exercise stations are available. Individual or group can exercise in the nature parks.

    Good transportation; land, sea and air. Public land transportation is well-integrated. Air-conditioned bus stations are built close-by to air-conditioned MRT station. The buses and MRT coaches are all air-conditioned. Its air-conditioned comfort all the way. Combine this with the sheltered walkways, it means you can start from your living quarter and travel to a destination without a drop of sweat or a drop of rain.

    Good communication system which enables the country to be well linked to the rest of the world with the latest in communication technology. Good physical environment. The rivers and reservoirs have clean water, The air quality is good, except when smog blows over from neighboring countries. The whole country is like a garden, with green grass, colorful flowers and tall healthy trees everywhere, all well maintained.

    Good financial control. Never heard of a run on a bank. No one has ever lost money because a bank has gone bust. The nation’s currency is one of the strongest in the world. Good internal security. Low crime rate. Can walk the streets safely at night. Can walk and jog safely in the parks at night. No gunfights on the streets. No school children ever get shot in schools.

    Strong defence backed by an advanced and well-equipped military. We have been able sleep soundly since the last external threat during the Confrontation. Good international diplomacy. We don’t make enemies, only friends. Good political stability. Govt does not change like I change shirt
    everyday. This allows big, long term projects to be realised from planning to completion.

    Good social order. No serious racial or religious conflicts despite being a multi-racial and multi-religious nation. Strong economy. Good quality foreign investments continue to flow in. Unemployment is low. Not satisfied with being good, things are continually being improved to make them better.

    If this is not paradise, what is? How does it come about? Strong government with sound values. And that’s the PAP, under LKY.

    begrateful

    Submitted by TRE reader.

     

    Source: www.tremeritus.com

  • Why Is Lee Kuan Yew’s Wish For A Quick Death Not Respected By His Doctors?

    Why Is Lee Kuan Yew’s Wish For A Quick Death Not Respected By His Doctors?

    Hello readers, apologies for the long hiatus. Too busy eking out a living to write as much as I liked. Hopefully in this New Year of the Goat, many things will change for the better. 😉

    A couple of days back, the Prime Minister’s Office announced that our founding father Lee Kuan Yew was hospitalized in SGH for severe pneumonia since 5 February.

    They revealed that he was lightly sedated, on mechanical ventilation and warded in the the Intensive Care Unit (ICU).

    But in a 2013 interview, Lee Kuan Yew mentioned that he feels weaker by the day and wants a quick death.

    To accomplish this, Lee Kuan Yew had an Advanced Medical Directive (AMD) done which specifies that if he had to be fed by a tube, and if it is unlikely that he would ever be able to recover and walk about, his doctors are to remove the tube and allow him to make a quick exit.

    Based on what we know now, he is on mechanical ventilation whereby anendotracheal tube is inserted into the trachea in order to provide air to the lung. This method is only used when the patient’s own breathing is inadequate to maintain life.

    In short, Lee Kuan Yew’s condition is severe and not looking good. Given his lightly sedated state and inability to breathe normally, how possible would it be for him to feed himself for basic nourishment? Chances are, he is now unable to feed himself and also relies on a feeding tube. If this is true, it would fulfill part one of Harry’s Advanced Medical Directive (of being fed by a tube).

    The second portion of the Advanced Medical Directive speaks about Lee Kuan Yew being unable to recover and walk about. Look at last year’s NDP parade and you can see the state in which Lee Kuan Yew is in. He is frail and unable to walk on his own and basic tasks like standing and sitting down is a problem.

    His bodyguards and minders are by his side 24/7 to help him with his mobility. Now that he is bed ridden, what are the chances of him making a full recovery and regaining his ability to walk pre-pneumonia? If this holds true, it would fulfill Lee’s Advanced Medical Directive authorizing his doctors to give him a swift exit.

    Why is the Advanced Medical Directive not taking effect in accordance to the old man’s wishes? Are the doctors very optimistic about Lee Kuan Yew’s full recovery or are there other hidden reasons behind Ah Gong’s current pitiful existence?

    Your guess is as good as mine.

     

    Source: http://theunseensingapore.blogspot.sg

  • Lee Kuan Yew Not The Visionary Leader Who Transformed Singapore

    Lee Kuan Yew Not The Visionary Leader Who Transformed Singapore

    Dear Professor Tan,

    I refer to the 5 Jun 2013 Straits Times report of your speech on the occasion of the conference of Doctor of Laws to Mr Lee Kuan Yew by NUS [1].

    Mr Lee wasn’t the visionary leader who brought success to the nation. Neither was he the man of imagination who pursued the unconventional. Instead, he pushed for import substitution, the conventional policy of developing nations then that eventually proved inferior to the less conventional policy of export industrialisation proposed by Dr Winsemius [2]. Luckily for us Mr Lee’s plans were scuttled with our expulsion from Malaysia and in the end; it was Dr Winsemius’ export industrialisation plans that ultimately brought success to our nation [2]. The qualities crucial to Singapore’s past success and big picture perspectives can thus be found in Dr Winsemius, not Mr Lee.

    Mr Lee did not lead Singapore from Third World to First for Singapore was already Upper Middle Income status according to World Bank’s classification of our 1960 per capita GNP [3]. At most, Singapore went from Next to First World to First World, led not by Mr Lee but by Dr Winsemius who was the leader behind Mr Lee.

    Mr Lee is thus not the global visionary you claim he is since the most important achievements associated with him actually belong to others. He may not be the best candidate to inspire the next generation for that might mean inspiring them to lock up opponents without trial, get more credit than they deserve and not fight for Singapore when Singapore is being invaded.

    All sense of hope and collective purpose is lost in Mr Lee’s leadership when he makes statements like these:
    • If Aljunied decides to go that way, well Aljunied has five years to live and repent.
    • If they choose the opposition, then I say, good luck to them. They have five years to ruminate and to regret what they did. And I have no doubts they will regret it.
    • If native Singaporeans are falling behind because the spurs are not stuck into the hide, that is their problem.
    • [our] women will become maids in other people’s countries, foreign workers

    Mr Lee isn’t quite the deep thinker you claim he is as he often cuts through complex issues wrongly or superficially. For example:
    • He theorised that high TFR in pre-world war 2 Germany led to war and expansion even though Germany in the mid-1960s had similar TFR levels but did not pursue war [4].
    • He claimed to be the long range radar looking for opportunities and threats but yet couldn’t see the impending collapse of the Global Financial markets in 2008 and the subsequent loss of billions by GIC and Temasek Holdings [5].
    • He claimed that we either embraced F1 and all the glitz of our globalised world today or we risk going out of business and running out of food [5] when the whole tourism industry constituted only 4% of our GDP (Singapore Tourism Board Annual Report 2011/2012 page 5).
    • He said New Zealand is green because it is the last stop on the bus line when similarly last-stop Easter Island and the Anasazi have become ruins over time [5].
    • He said English connected us to modern sciences [6] even as Japan, Taiwan, South Korea and Germany didn’t need English to be similarly connected to modern sciences.

    Lee was never a champion of education. For him, education always served the political purpose, not the other way round. When Singapore was to merge into Malaysia, Lee emphasised both Malay and English in schools but after our ejection from Malaysia, he emphasised English only [7].

    Similarly, Lee’s so-called transformation of Singapore education wasn’t for education’s sake but for politics sake. His closure of Chinese stream schools and Nanyang University and the undermining of the economic value of Chinese education were for the purpose of eradicating the political power of the Chinese educated masses [8].

    Finally, it was Lee Kong Chian, not Lee Kuan Yew, who first proposed bilingual policy in 1953 [9]. Lee Kong Chian even introduced bilingual education to the Chinese High School as early as 1949 [9] and many vernacular schools were already teaching English before that.

    Sources:

    [1] Straits Times, Top NUS accolade for Mr Lee Kuan Yew, 5 Jun 2013

    [2]
    • The Fraser Institute, Case Studies in the Relationship between Political, Economic and Civil Freedoms, page 155

    Lee Kuan Yew and the PAP proposed a political union with Malaysia, which would provide a good-sized domestic market for an industrial strategy of import substitution. Expulsion from the union with Malaysia in 1965, on political grounds by the government in Kuala Lumpur, destroyed the import-substitution strategy.

    • Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, Asia Competitiveness Institute, Remaking Singapore, Michael Porter and Christian Ketels and Neo Boon Siong and Susan Chung, July 2008

    During the federation period and immediately afterward, Lee’s government initially pursued an import substitution strategy … but the alienation from Malaysia, with its much larger market, rendered the strategy impractical.

    • Helen Hughes, The Dangers of export pessimism: developing countries and industrial markets, page 225

    Until 1965, the economic strategy of the country hinged on a merger with Malaya to establish the larger domestic market, deemed necessary for economic viability [5-3].

    • Jacques Charmes, In-service training: five Asian experiences, Bernard Salomé, Page 21

    Singapore at first adopted the industrialisation policy of import substitution, followed after 1966 by the export of labour intensive manufactured goods.

    • Robert Fitzgerald, The Competitive advantages of Far Eastern business, Page 55

    Singapore’s industrialisation strategy was originally dependent on policies of import substitution within the Malaysian common market, but the attainment of political independence in 1965 led to export industrialisation.

    • Eddie C. Y. Kuo / Chee Meng Loh / K. S. Raman, Information technology and Singapore society, Page 87

    Import substitution was adopted in the early 1960s in anticipation of the Malayan common market. However, Singapore separated from Malaysia in 1965 dashing the hopes of the common market, hence an export strategy was promoted instead.

    • Sikko Visscher, The business of politics and ethnicity: a history of the Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry, page 171

    Lee Kuan Yew, appearing in tears on television when announcing separation, was devastated. His feelings strongly contrasted with scenes in Chinatown where firecrackers were set off to celebrate liberation from rule by Malays from Kuala Lumpur. Most Singaporeans did not share the government’s dismay. Winsemius also did not share Lee’s dismay. He said in a 1981 interview: To my amazement, a discussion had started: can Singapore survive? That is the only time I got angry in Singapore. I said: ‘now you have your hands free – use them!’ It was the best thing that happened during the whole period from 1960 till today.

    • Tong Dow Ngiam, A Mandarin and the Making of Public Policy: Reflections, page 66

    Dr Winsemius and I.F. Tang in their heart of hearts never believed in a Malaysian Common Market.

    Dr Winsemius and I.F. Tang made extraordinary contributions to the economic development of Singapore as leader and secretary of the first UN Industrialisation Survey Team in 1961.

    • Philip Nalliah Pillai, State enterprise in Singapore: legal importation and development, Page 30

    With Singapore’s secession in 1965, the United Nations Proposed Industrialization Programme for the State of Singapore became the basis for Singapore’s industrialisation strategy.

    • Danny M Leipziger, Lessons from East Asia, Page 240

    The 1960-61 United Nations mission led by Albert Winsemius helped develop a blueprint for Singapore’s industrialisation and development plan and recommended the establishment of EDB.

    [3]

    World Bank classifies nations as follows:

    Category Criteria (based on 2011 per capita GNI)
    High Income US$12,476 or higher
    Upper Middle Income From US$4,036 to US$12,475
    Lower Middle Income From US$1,026 to US$4,035
    Low Income US$1,025 or below
    World Bank GNI figures only stretch back to 1980. So have to rely on Penn World Tables instead. Although Penn World Tables doesn’t have GNI figures, it has GNP to GDP ratios which can be used to obtain GNP figures from GDP figures. GNP figures are similar to GNI figures and they stretch all the way back to 1960 for Singapore. The figures, in 2005 PPP USD, are then converted to 2010 PPP USD to obtain US$4,794 which puts Singapore in the Upper Middle Income bracket. 2010 is the last year available in Penn World Tables and is as close to 2011 as one can get.

    This is further supported by Carl A. Trocki who wrote on page 166 of his book “Singapore: wealth, power and the culture of control”: Singapore had already attained a middle income status in 1960 with a per capita GDP of $1,330.

    [4] Straits Times, Declining populations make peaceful neighbours, 1 Mar 2013, Lee Kuan Yew

    [5] Straits Times, 6 Jan 2010, excerpts interview with Mark Jacobson of the National Geographic

    [6] Straits Times, Mr Lee on…. 6 Sept 2011

    [7] Christopher Tremewan, The political economy of social control in Singapore, page 80

    PAP emphasised both Malay and English to establish credentials for merger with Malaya but when ejected from Malaya subsequently, emphasized English only.

    [8]
    • Carl A. Trocki, Singapore: wealth, power and the culture of control”, page 150

    – PAP systematically undercut Chinese education as it saw the Chinese educated as both political and cultural threats
    – PAP set about neutralising Chinese schools, which were powerful auxiliaries to labour unions and the Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce which is the major funding and controlling body for Chinese education in a bid to control education
    – PAP, through government policies, strengthened social and economic forces that reduced the number of Chinese schools
    – PAP quite often levelled the charge of “chauvinism” on prominent businessmen of the SCCC to destroy them

    • Christopher Tremewan, The political economy of social control in Singapore

    – Page 81 – PAP sought to destroy Chinese education
    – Page 84 – Racial integration policy was a cover for an all-out attack on Chinese education
    – Page 85 – PAP undermined Chinese education autonomy while attempting to win Malay support by appearing to be multiracial
    – Page 89 – the 1969 bilingual policy, while appeasing Chinese public opinion, completed the demolition of the Chinese education system
    – Page 79 – The government being the largest employer in Singapore could have given better job opportunities to the Chinese educated but refused to.

    • Tong Chee Kiong, Identity and ethnic relations in Southeast Asia: racializing Chineseness, page 62
    – PAP promised equal treatment for all language streams but not equal employment opportunities for people from non-English streams

    • Stephan M. Haggard, Behind East Asian Growth – Political foundations of prosperity, business, politics and policy, page 89
    – The questionable political loyalty of local Chinese businesses was a possible reason why the PAP government favoured GLCs and MNCs over local entreprises then.

    [9] Singapore Infopedia: http://infopedia.nl.sg/articles/SIP_978_2006-06-16.html

    • In 1949, he convinced the principal to introduce bilingual education.
    • 1953: Proposed introducing bilingual and trilingual education, and equal treatment for schools of all language streams. His proposals were accepted by the colonial government and included in the White Paper on Education Policy that introduced a unified education system for Singapore.

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

  • The Future of Singapore Linked To Outcome of Electoral Battle At Tanjong Pagar GRC

    The Future of Singapore Linked To Outcome of Electoral Battle At Tanjong Pagar GRC

    Over the weekend, the new Singaporeans First Party (SFP) conducted a walkabout in the Tanjong Pagar group representation constituency (GRC).

    Among the more than 20 members and supporters were six of the party’s 10 founding members, including its secretary-general and former presidential candidate, Tan Jee Say.

    It is the SFP’s first foray as a political party into grassroots activities, and it is significant that it chose Tanjong Pagar to hold its first outreach event.

    singfirst

    Tanjong Pagar, of course, has been the constituency of Singapore’s former prime minister, Lee Kuan Yew, since he first won the parliamentary seat there in 1955.

    Straits Times, 1955
    Straits Times, 1955

    Mr Lee, however, is now 91-years old and is unlikely to be fielded in the next general elections, which must be called by January 2017.

    This would leave the Tanjong Pagar constituency – which has been uncontested for the last five elections, since it became a multi-seat constituency under the GRC system in 1991 – in the hands of a new minister.

    tpresults

    That new minister is Chan Chung Sing, the current minister for the Ministry of Social Development and Family (MSF).

    Mr Chan is the former Chief of Army from 2010 to 2011, before he went into politics in the 2011 general elections.

    Seen as one of the forerunners to succeed Lee Hsien Loong as Singapore’s fourth prime minister, Mr Chan’s inclusion in the People’s Action Party (PAP) Tanjong Pagar GRC team was thus no surprise.

    The GRC system has long been seen as an umbrella for the PAP to shelter its potential ministers from the vicissitudes of electoral politics, and pave an easier path for the candidates to win at the polls while tailcoating a more experienced senior minister.

    In 2006, then Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong said as much, when he commented on the GRC system:

    “Without some assurance of a good chance of winning at least their first election, many able and successful young Singaporeans may not risk their careers to join politics.”

    He added:

    “Why should they when they are on the way up in the civil service, the SAF, and in the professions or the corporate world?”

    In other words, an assured path must be paved for those headhunted by the PAP, even (and perhaps, especially) if that person is a general in the armed forces, as Mr Chan was.

    But if Mr Lee were to step down at the next elections, it would mean Mr Chan would have to helm the GRC, a daunting task given how Mr Lee has been a larger than life figure in the constituency for so long.

    Mr Chan would have, barring any movement to a new ministry, only handled one full portfolio, although he is also the second minister for Defence. This would not have been enough for the party to assess if he could indeed be the next prime minister, especially also when he has not helmed a heavyweight portfolio such as Defence or Finance.

    With the current prime minister saying he would like to step down when he is 70, which is a mere 8 years away, Mr Chan does not have much time to prove himself in other areas.

    Nonetheless, what is on his side is that the MSF allows him to be more popular than perhaps his colleagues. The ministry manages welfare programmes for the elderly, the sick, children, disabled and families.

    Still, the question remains: is Mr Chan ready? More importantly, will he be able to helm and win a GRC for the PAP? This second question is especially pertinent given that he did not go through the proverbial baptism of fire in his maiden election in 2011.

    So, 2016 (or 2017) will be his first electoral contest – if he remains in Tanjong Pagar GRC (which in all likelihood he will), or if the constituency is not absorbed into another.

    Whether Mr Chan leads his team to victory will be momentous.

    A win will not only signal a change at the helm in the PAP Tanjong Pagar team, it will also set the succession plans of the PAP in firmer footing.

    In short, the answer to who will become Singapore’s fourth prime minister (and also the next secretary general of the PAP) will then be clearer.

    However, if Mr Chan should fail to lead his team to victory, it would also be significant – Mr Lee’s constituency which he has helmed for 60 years finally is lost to the opposition, and more importantly, the PAP’s succession plans for Singapore’s political leadership will be in serious jeopardy.

    It may also signal that Singapore indeed will be well on its way to further changes in its political landscape.

    In a speech in June 2006, Mr Goh said that the PAP’s “ability to attract capable individuals and its practice of political self-renewal were key to Singapore’s success.”

    However, this self-renewal only works if older or more senior leaders make way for younger ones, and do so at an early enough time to allow these younger leaders to cut their own teeth, as it were.

    And this is also why the GRC system is flawed – that someone who would be our next prime minister needed to be sheltered in to Parliament.

    Mr Chan, if he indeed became Singapore’s fourth prime minister, would be the first one to enter politics through the GRC system, and also through an uncontested walkover.

    He thus has something to prove yet.

    For Mr Chan, working on an 8-year timeline to succession, he has a short period to hone his mettle in heavyweight ministries – that is, if he can win public support at the next elections first.

    This is why the walkabout by the SFP on Saturday is also significant – that for the first time since 1991, Tanjong Pagar may at last be contested by the opposition, and that it may also be a reasonably electable team to boot.

    History will be made, whichever box the ballot is ticked – unless Mr Lee chooses to run again.

    Barring that, Mr Lee’s final farewell to Tanjong Pagar residents, then, will be as significant as his victory there 60 years ago, whether the PAP wins in the constituency – or not – or not this time round.

    The above article was first published on Fresh Grads.

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com