Tag: SG50

  • Revised Registers Of Electors Certified, Open For Public Inspection

    Revised Registers Of Electors Certified, Open For Public Inspection

    The revised registers of electors have been certified and are now open for public inspection.

    In a statement today, the Elections Department revealed that there are a total of 2,460,484 voters on the rolls.

    Eligible voters may check their particulars at the Elections Department or at community centres with their NRIC or passport, or online at the Elections Department website.

    Those overseas can also check their particulars at the 10 overseas missions that serve as overseas registration centres.

    People whose names were removed from the voter rolls because they failed to vote at a previous election may continue to apply to have their names restored, the Elections Department said.

    Meanwhile, eligible voters who are overseas, and who have resided in Singapore for at least 30 days between Feb 1, 2012 and Jan 31, 2015, may register as overseas electors to vote at a designated overseas polling station.

    With the revision to the rolls, Singaporeans overseas who had previously registered as overseas voters will also need to re-register.

    The Elections Department added that those applying to restore their names to the rolls or to register as an overseas voter should do so early, as applications will close when the Writ of Election is issued.

     

    Source: http://news.asiaone.com

  • More Booking Tours On Long National Day Weekend

    More Booking Tours On Long National Day Weekend

    Following the announcement of a long National Day weekend from Aug 7 to 10, tour agencies said they are seeing a spike in bookings.

    According to some agencies, there has been a 30 per cent increase in tour bookings for the extended National Day weekend, with some saying trips to nearby countries such as Thailand and Hong Kong are almost fully booked.

    Numbers are expected to increase further, said the agencies, and companies have also approached the agencies for corporate bookings to reward staff.

    BOOKINGS IN LOCAL HOTELS UP

    However, not all are heading overseas, with local hotels reporting an increase in bookings for the weekend. Some hotels said that about 90 per cent of their rooms with a view of the parade have already been reserved, while others have introduced special packages to celebrate the nation’s Golden Jubilee.

    “If they have done a 3-day booking, we’re obviously going to contact them again and offer the package over the four days because it is not fair that they didn’t know, so this is the government generosity of adding an extra day, which is terrific,” said Antoine Chahwan, Regional Vice President, Four Seasons Hotel. “To celebrate Singapore’s 50, I’m sure a lot of people will stay in Singapore to be part of this great celebrations.”

    Previously, Speaker of Parliament Halimah Yacob urged Singaporeans to remain in the country during the long weekend to celebrate the nation’s 50th birthday instead of travelling overseas.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • The Rehabilitation Of Lee Kuan Yew – A National Mourning And A Personal Journey

    The Rehabilitation Of Lee Kuan Yew – A National Mourning And A Personal Journey

    7.19pm, 29 March 2015 – playground – HDB estate – Choa Chu Kang.

    My son, 8 years old, is playing with his friends.

    My mind is elsewhere – Mandai crematorium.  LKY.  His life ended a week ago. By now, his flesh and bones would largely be ash. (Having gone to collect my mother-in-law’s ashes slightly over a year ago, I realise that not all of the bones turn to ash.)

    What an extraordinary life.

    The first Prime Minister of Singapore, one member of the extremely talented group of men, has made his final journey.  Lee Kuan Yew is no more.

    8.49pm, 29 March 2015 – back in my flat

    It has been a pretty exhausting day.  Soaked with emotion.  I can’t fully understand the feeling.   Some 12 days have passed since the announcement made by the Prime Minister’s Office on 17 March 2015 about LKY’s critical condition and 7 days since the announcement of his death.   I’ve been having mixed feelings about him and his death.   On 23 March 2015, when I woke up at 6am and looked at my phone, I discovered via Facebook posts that LKY had passed away.  A strange quiet feeling filled my mind.  It had not yet sunk in.

    How did I react?  Nothing.  No feeling.  The moment had arrived and I had no emotion to record.

    Just a few days earlier on Wednesday, 18th March 2015, I was asked via Facebook as to how I would react if LKY passed away.   This was my response:

    “Twenty to thirty years ago, there were a whole bunch of my friends that used to talk about opening table for just such an event.  And I would have gladly joined them in celebration even if it was just to drink coke.”

    To be precise, when I was pursuing my law degree, I remember having a CONVERSATION with some friends about local politics and one of them remarked about how we would react if LKY passed away.  All of us agreed, at that time (1993/1994), we would throw a party.  The image of Lee Kuan Yew that I had in my mind at that time was of a tyrant, a dictator and a person that had caused great anguish to the families of many Singaporeans for the sake of consolidating his own power.

    Many of my friends (who are in their late 40s now) felt a deep resentment for LKY at that time.  (Bearing in mind that most of my friends were my fellow law undergraduates, we were not a proper sample of the broader society. )

    We were not a generation that had experienced either the Japanese Occupation or British Rule.  We didn’t experience the merger in 1963 or the separation in 1965.  My generation was born soon after independence.   Perhaps the most significant political event experienced by us when we were politically conscious was Operation Spectrum in 1987.  I was 19.  Many of my friends were skeptical of the government’s story about the Marxist conspiracy.  Some things just did not gel.  I had a sense that this was either a case of over-reaction to the activities of social workers or a deliberate frame up to scare a new generation of voters that were beginning to swing towards the opposition.

    Starting from the 1981 Anson by-election, the voting pattern in Singapore started shifting.  The Worker’s Party led by JB Jeyaretnam and the Singapore Democratic Party led by Chiam See Tong were making inroads into the minds of the electorate.  I remember that Lee Kuan Yew had some words of scorn for younger voters that, according to him, did not understand how fast things can fall apart in Singapore.  At that time, the impression that I had was that Operation Spectrum was intended to instill a fresh sense of fear in the minds of Singaporeans.  It was a sense of fear that was beginning to disappear and the PAP was in danger of losing more seats.  (1980 GE – PAP’s popular vote = 77.77% with all seats to PAP,  1984 GE – PAP’s popular vote = 64.8% with WP and SDP capturing 2 seats.)

    To this day, the real motivations behind the 1987 arrests are unclear.  The last arrest and detention under the ISA was in 1979 and the 1987 arrests arrived after a 8 year non-use of the ISA.  To put it into perspective, from 1963 to 1979, there were arrests under the ISA every single year.  My parents were not very interested in politics and they had been PAP voters all the while.  Nevertheless, they would say on and off that I shouldn’t speak too much about politics because I will get arrested.  It was something that the general population had grown to expect.  Say something wrong about the PAP and you will get arrested. )

    I went to primary school in the 1970s and to secondary school from 1981.  During my school years, we didn’t learn about Hock Lee bus riots, racial riots, etc. that is so much a part of the curriculum these days.  The Singapore history that we read about included Sang Nila Utama and the founding of Singapore by Stamford Raffles and the growth of the sea port.  During those days, there was no active attempt at spelling out a national narrative through the education system.  We were, however, brought up to fear the authorities.

    Nevertheless, the general prosperity and stability and the relatively long disuse of the ISA was beginning to embolden more youths.  The 1987 arrests may well have been intended to put the brakes on the opposition’s ability to organize and the increasing support for the opposition.  (Despite the 1987 arrests, the downward TREND of the PAP’s popular vote continued in the 1988 and 1991 elections with the PAP hitting a low of 61% of the vote.  I suspect that the arrests actually made it worse for the PAP in terms of popularity.   New batches of voters were less afraid and more defiant when threatened.)

    I remember being very angry with LKY and his Cabinet ministers for what I perceived to be unjust imprisonment on trumped up charges.  Unlike today, PAP in those days wasn’t in an overdrive mode trying to educate people about the 1950s and the 1960s.  I wasn’t aware of Operation Coldstore, the Communist treat of the 1950s or the circumstances of the merger.  All I saw was the imprisonment of students, Catholic Church activists and lawyers.   False accusations, detentions without trial, total surveillance – we were living in an Orwellian nightmare.  (Over the years, reading and researching on the detentions, I have become more convinced that these were not Marxists conspirators.   Tharman Shanmugaratnam has gone on record and expressed doubts about the arrests and it appears the Dhanabalan’s Cabinet resignation was, in part, due to his disagreement over the arrests.  Ex-President Devan Nair also expressed his doubts about the Marxist conspiracy arrests. )

    The LKY that I grew to hate in the 1990s was a power-hungry man that maneuvered his old-guard leaders out of the way and arrested and detained political opponents and activists.   As CV Devan Nair had written in the forward to Francis Seow’s “To Catch a Tartar” in 1994:

    “Today every member of that superb team has been eased out of power and influence in the name of political self-renewal, while Lee himself has ensured that he presides, as Secretary-General of the ruling party, not as he once did, over equals who had elected him, but over a government cabinet and a judiciary made up entirely of his appointees or nominees.  In relation to old guard leaders, Lee had been no more than primus inter pares.  He had perforce to deal with equals, and they were fully capable of speaking their minds.”

    “To Catch a Tartar” is banned in Singapore.  The beauty of BOOKSbanned in Singapore is that they are easily available across the border in Malaysia.  I got to read Francis Seow’s ACCOUNT of the events surrounding the detentions in 1987 and 1988 as well as Francis Seow’s own detention.  Francis Seow was once the Solicitor General and at the time of his arrest and detention he was the President of the Law Society.  He stood for elections under the Workers’ Party banner and eventually escaped from Singapore when charges were brought against him for alleged Tax evasion.

    Whilst the Straits Times always presented the official narrative, there were ample opportunities to get hold of alternative sources of information if one tried hard enough.  Books that come to mind now include Christopher Tremevan’s “Political Economy of Social Control in Singapore”,  Seow’s “Media Enthralled”  and “Lee’s Lieutenants” which was a compilation of academic writings on the contributions of the old guard.

    And that’s the other matter.  Censorship: the banning of BOOKS, the restriction of the circulation of books and the defamation suits.  As a law student in the 1990s, what I was witnessing was totally at odds with the Constitutional values that I was learning about.  I encountered incidents of censorship of the arts.  Playwrights often came under the radar of the authorities because of the theme of their plays.  I used to follow the local arts scene closely in the 1990s and the heavy hand of the authorities was evident.

    I witnessed, first hand, the sleight of hand practiced by the media in the way they reported.  Some events that I attended at the SCWO and Substation were reported with a different slant from the actual event.  I understand fully what is meant by the phrase “nation-building” press.   Of course, as I came to fully understand the legislative framework under which the press operates, it was obvious as to how the state maintained that total control.

    Gerrymandering was another issue that really irked me.  The redrawing of electoral boundaries, the introduction of the GRCs and the political use of Town Councils as well as upgrading projects caused me to be a really angry young man.  I had nothing but hate for the PAP and, of course, LKY.  It was impossible to imagine that anybody else could have masterminded this.

    My mind is filled with impressions of injustice during the LKY years:  Hounding JBJ with lawsuits, convicting him and getting him disbarred and eventually removing appeals to the Privy Council after that Court produced a scathing judgment against the Singapore authorities in JBJ’s case.

    Between 1963 (Operation Coldstore) and 1987/88 (Operation Spectrum) there were 485 publicly verifiable arrests made under the Internal Security Act.  The Communist boogeyman was so effective in drumming up support for these arrests that the government was doing it with impunity.

    I was comfortable in using the word ‘dictator’ to refer to LKY.  Whilst these decisions would have been Cabinet decisions, somehow LKY always loomed large and I had the sense that he was probably the sole or main decision maker when it came to these arrests and detentions.

    Not many Singaporeans had the empathy to put themselves into the shoes of those wrongfully detained and to understand the suffering of the families of the detainees.  How does it feel to have your father imprisoned when you are very young and not to see him for a decade or two?  How do we wipe off the tears of the spouses?  How do we compensate for the lost years of those detainees’ lives?

    In deifying LKY after his death, many Singaporeans have gone overboard in painting a picture of the man beyond what he is.  I read one facebook post that referred to him as a Nelson Mandela.  If Mandela was a Singaporean, he would have arguably languished in prison longer than he did in South Africa.  In fact, we hold the record for having the longest serving political detainee in the world.

    I could go on and on about different aspects of the ‘LKY way’ that disturbed me, riled me up and caused me to hate the man.  It is safe to say that the word ‘hate’ can be used.  Would I have hastily compared him to a Hitler or a Stalin?  No.  His most extreme weapon was detention without trial.  There have been no reports of extra-judicial killings or disappearances in Singapore politics.  This dictator was also delivering the goods on the economic front.  He wasn’t focused on amassing wealth for himself at the expense of all others.  He was committed to the betterment of the overall society.  The term benevolent dictator has come to be used to refer to him.

    As LKY slowly went into the background as Minister Mentor, I started having less of that hatred against the man but, he still remained the symbol of repression.

    Over the last 7 days, some Singaporeans have expressed negative views against LKY and they have been taken to task as ‘ingrates’.  There was a letter written to the forum page urging Singaporeans to take negative commentators to task.  Police reports have been filed.   While I understand the need to be respectful at times like these, I can also understand the reason for the strong feelings held by LKY’s detractors.

    Strangely, despite all the hatred I had for the man in the 1990s, I found myself searching for a reaction  on that Monday morning when I woke up to the news of his death.  There was no emotion.  Not sad.  Not happy or rejoicing.  Neutral. Just neutral.

    THE REHABILITATION

    Over the years, as part of a personal, spiritual journey, I have come to value forgiveness.  In my personal life, being at the receiving end of a cheating wife in my first marriage, I experienced emotions bordering on depression.  In the end, forgiving her turned out to be the most healing experience.  I have, since then, made it a regular practice to let go of negative emotions that I may have had against particular individuals in my life.  Reconciliation through forgiveness heals the mind in a way that is difficult to explain.

    That forgiving attitude has made it easier for me to not hold a person’s past misdeeds against him.  When the PMO’s office announced on 17 March that LKY was critically ill, I started pondering about the man.  I wasn’t feeling anything in particular.  He’s already 91.  There was nothing that I had personally to really hold against him.  I was, in fact, somewhat disturbed by the fact that his family may be delaying the decision to take him off life support.  (He had made an Advanced Medical Directive and didn’t wish to be on life support.)  There was a little irony, I felt, in him being held captive in his body against his wish.  (To be fair, given the scarcity of information surrounding his condition, we are not sure when he was taken off life support.)

    On the morning of 21 March 2015, whilst meditating I got distracted by thoughts of him.  I found myself praying for him to have a quick painless death.  I was surprised at my own action.  I did It again on Sunday morning (22 March 2015).  I found myself rationalizing that whatever he may have done, I don’t need to hold It against him.  That’s his journey and his karma.  My position as a fellow travelling soul is to pray for and transfer merits to all souls.

    On 23 March, it finally happened.  In the morning, PM Lee addressed the nation and I watched it on Channel News Asia.  I felt sad for the first time.  It was clearly because I put myself in Lee Hsien Loong’s shoes and imagined how difficult it must be to announce the death of your own father to the world.  He had the burden of making the announcement as the Prime Minister of this country but he is also a son who had lost his father.  He was fighting back his tears as he spoke.  I felt myself getting a little teary-eyed.

    That night, I was contemplating on the bodily prison and the man-made prison.  LKY came to be trapped in his body in his final days.  Those that he imprisoned were trapped within concrete walls.  They are both prisons.  I posted this on Facebook:

    What does a prison look like?

    There are walls?

    Metal? Steel? Concrete?

    Bones? Flesh? Skin?

     

    Does it hurt to be locked in

    Behind bars?

    For words, thoughts and views?

    For age and ill health?

     

    How do loved ones weep

    For the ones imprisoned

    By the firm claws

    Of laws and death?

    A 7-day mourning period was announced on the morning of his passing and Channel News Asia went on overdrive.  Round the clock, non-stop special features in memory of LKY.  It went on and on and on ad nauseam.  By midweek, it was taking a toll on me.  Some of the documentaries were obviously part of a propaganda effort to whitewash history and to build an early electoral advantage for the party.

    Myths were now being created.  Singapore’s development was being presented as a one man show.  That fishing village to modern metropolis storyline was being peddled incessantly.  Whilst I did not rejoice at his death and even felt a little sad, I found the deification of LKY rather horrifying.

    Last week, if you consumed information through Channel News Asia and the Straits Times, you would have been presented with no alternative but to think that LKY single handedly introduced a housing policy, education policy, economic policy, etc.  The term Founding Father has been used.  I suspect that it will get stuck.

    This myth-making prompted me use the hashtag #notmyfather when I made some comments on facebook.  It wasn’t a popular thing to do last week.  Some (not most) people can be pretty aggressive when they are grieving.

    If, as a nation, we are going to use the term “Founding Father”, I believe that we would truly be ingrates not to include men like Goh Keng Swee, Toh Chin Chye, Lim Kim San, Rajaratnam, Ong Pang Boon, Ahmad Ibrahim, Othman Wok, EW Barker and Lee Khoon Chye.  I am sure that I am leaving out others.  But, these men stand out.  When it comes to the economy, one man stands out as a towering figure and it is not LKY.  It is Goh Keng Swee.  How about housing the nation?  Lim Kim San stands out.

    LKY has himself acknowledged that it wasn’t a one-man show:

    “How can we say who contributed more?  Without Dr Toh holding the fort in the PAP, we might never have held the Party together.  Without Lim Kim San putting up the buildings, the whole Party could have been smashed up and been washed out in September 1963.”

    LKY has also CREDITED Rajaratnam for being a strong proponent of multiculturalism and the PAP’s positioning on racial harmony was done largely through the writings and speeches of this man.  The first Cabinet of independent Singapore created a vision for Singapore on a collegiate basis.  This was not a Cabinet that operated in a fashion where there was Prime Ministerial dominance.

    If we are going to give an accolade to LKY as the founding father, it is important that this should be a SHARED honour with the other team members.

    Deva Nair:  “Lee Kuan Yew, let me acknowledge with pride, was the superb captain of a superb team, but like all the best captains at the end of the game, they come to believe that they have scored all the goals themselves.”

    What has happened is that last week’s myth making has taken it one step further.  LKY did not only score all the goals.  He was the only player on field.  That is clearly not true.  It is important that history is not adulterated like this simply because we want to give an over-the-top tribute to the man.

    Nobody should take away the CREDIT from the government of the 1960s to 1980s in improving Singapore economically.  However, we have to stop peddling the myth that Singapore was a fishing village in 1965.

    The nauseating propaganda was putting me off.

    And then the queues happened.  On Wednesday, I witnessed the crowds queuing up outside parliament with the line snaking all over the place.  Starting from Parliament House the queue stretched back over Cavenagh Bridge running along Circular Road and back over the Elgin Bridge and back under the bridge towards Clarke Quay, going over Coleman bridge and stretching back New Bridge road all the way up to Hong Lim Park.  It was overwhelming.  I was walking from my office at New Bridge road to Funan and was emotionally overwhelmed by the queue.  Walking along this mass of grieving Singaporeans suddenly stirred something in me.  This is not about LKY the man.  This is about LKY the idea.

    My countrymen were coming out to say their farewell to a man that in many ways had come to represent the Singapore story.  The rise of Singapore as an economic powerhouse in a short time frame after independence occurred through the sound leadership of some exceptional men assisted by able and efficient civil servants and supported by an army of citizens.  The hardworking men and women of Singapore that came to be ranked as the most productive workforce on the planet have always been the unsung heroes of the Singapore miracle.  These dedicated and uncompromisingly hardworking people had in LKY a symbol of themselves.  Somehow, I felt that what really drew most of us inexorably towards Parliament House last week was that our supreme symbol of ourselves had passed away.  An era in our National psyche has ended.  We have now moved into the truly post-LKY era.

    His death has provided us with a moment of catharsis.

    For sure, lifelong supporters of the PAP would have paid their respect to him and that should come as no surprise.  However, many of my friends that have been voting routinely for the opposition and even despised him in the 1990s have gone to Parliament House to pay their last respects.  This is bigger than LKY the man.  This is about a nation recognizing its identity.

    In Parliament, on 20 Aug 2009, LKY asked this rhetorical question:  “Are we a nation?”  He answered it himself:  “In transition”.

    Singaporeans in their hundreds of thousands have come out to express their grief, respect or gratitude.  The elderly, the young, the handicapped, the able bodied, Chinese, Malays, Indians, new citizens, businessmen, government officials, civil servants, office workers, blue collar workers – they have all come.  They seem to have answered that question.  Are we a nation? Yes we are!

    1.2 million people have paid their tribute.  A population that is usually averse to public displays of emotion was out in force.

    Singaporeans have often debated about our national identity.  We have often wondered what makes us Singaporean.  We end up picking up on trivial externalities like our love for food and our kiasu mentality.  Well, what really makes us special?  How about some things that LKY is himself lionized for? Efficient, incorrupt, hardworking, disciplined.

    Perhaps, the man does, to a large extent, represent who we are collectively (warts and all).

    On Friday, 27 March, I was feeling heavy-hearted and beginning to feel somewhat exhausted.  I had been voraciously consuming all the news on LKY’s passing: the outpouring of grief, the response of foreign dignitaries, the reports and opinion pieces of local and foreign journalists, pictures and online postings of facebook friends, etc.

    I was feeling conflicted.  I don’t do tears for dictators.

    Am I an ingrate for not expressing gratitude for the things we have as a nation today?  Have I not forgiven the man for the things that he had done to his political adversaries?

    I had a long CONVERSATION with my wife on the night of 27thMarch.  She had similar conflicts in her mind.  We clarified our emotions and I came to better understand myself.

    I don’t need to compromise my sense of what is morally right and wrong.  If I expressed some gratitude to the man, it doesn’t have to mean that I have agreed that nothing wrong has happened in our politics.  I can forgive a person and still insist today on higher moral standards in our politics.

    GRATITUDE

    What is there to be grateful about?

    Firstly, let me clarify that my gratitude here is not to one person but to the collective.  The first Cabinet, the Civil Servants and external advisers of that time and the hardworking people.  LKY, being the leader of that generation, represents more than just himself as a person.  My gratitude is to that collective as represented by and now symbolized by him.

    The most important thing that I have benefitted from in this country is education.  My father moved to Singapore in the 1950s.  His brother, my uncle, still lives in India.  I have first cousins that are pretty intelligent but don’t have a proper education beyond 8thstandard to 10th standard.  I am thankful to my parents for having decided to live in Singapore and thankful to God for the privilege of having been born in post-independence Singapore.

    After I got my PSLE results and did well enough to qualify for Raffles Institution, my parents were delighted.  My father was a school watchman.  There are not many post-colonial nations that provide for an educational system based entirely on merit.  Most of my friends at RI were not from RICH families.  There were, of course, some.  Predominantly, these were sons of cleaners, hawkers, road sweepers, junior civil servants and other low income parents.  It really did not matter.  We were received based on merit and not affiliation or donations.

    At the 188th Founder’s day celebration of RI, Lee Kuan Yew was the Guest-of-Honour.  He said the following:

    “188 years ago, Sir Stamford Raffles established RI to provide a sound education for the FUTURE leaders of the land. The school’s mission has not changed. RI has produced generations of leaders at all levels: in politics and government, the professions, academia, business, sports and the arts. Rafflesians must give back to the community, do their best for their own personal advancement and for the wider public good.

    RI must always remain a school that admits students on the basis of merit, and not on their parents’ status or wealth. They must be able, whatever their race or social backgrounds. RI also attracts bright students from other countries. This makes RI the leading school in Singapore. The ideals of Singaporeans and Rafflesians are meritocracy and multiculturalism, regardless of their race, religion or mother tongue.

    I am a beneficiary of that meritocratic system. Some of my fellow students came in big cars, like descendants of the Eu Tong Sen family; some in unpressed clothes from Chinatown on buses and bicycles. But our goal was to achieve excellence. From RI, I went on to Raffles College and, subsequently after the war, to Cambridge. But my formative years were from 1936 to 1940 at RI.”

    I can say quite safely that I too am a beneficiary of that meritocratic system.  (I’m aware that our brand of meritocracy has led to its own set of problems of elitism. That’s for us to remedy as we go along.)

    In developing Singapore’s post-independence education strategy, the Cabinet decided on nurturing that meritocracy.  I am thankful for that for I benefitted from it.

    When I doing my Bar in London, I remember being asked by a doctor from India whether my father was a lawyer.  My answer was, “He is a cleaner and I am proud of it.”  As a Singaporean, such a question was irrelevant to me.  Yet, I realized that for an Indian from India it was not easy to appreciate that a society could come without the kind of stratifications that exist in India.

    True it is that Singapore is not the only country that allows someone from a low-income family to get a good education and make something of himself.  But, this is where I have been born.  This is where I got the opportunities.  I am grateful to those that were responsible for laying a sound infrastructural foundation for me to get a good education.

    In my mind, I took some time to say:  Thank You.

    On 28th March 2015, I reached Choa Chu Kang after WORK.  I walked towards the LKY Tribute Centre.

    I lit a candle.  I bowed 3 times in front of his picture. I wrote a short thank you note addressed to the First Cabinet.

    I came back home with a sense of relief.

    THE STATE FUNERAL

    I watched the whole funeral ‘live’ on TV.

    The procession made it’s way from parliament house to The university cultural Centre at NUS. It passed key landmarks in Singapore. Memories of his mixed legacy flooded my mind.

    The eulogies were, at times touching and at other times veered towards propaganda.

    The Last Post – Never before did it have so much meaning for me. It was not just about letting a leader have his final rest. It was about laying the past to rest.

    This man has been too much a part of my system. My political consciousness has been, over the years, dominated by the things that happened in the LKY era.  That era is now over.

    It’s our turn now.  To build a FUTURE as we imagine it. We can build a gentler, kinder and more caring society. We can build a more open and transparent system of government.  We can build a more free society on our own terms.  We can move towards a society that is more tolerant of differing ideas and is able to debate vigorously and yet honour and respect each person’s individuality.

    The pledge was recited.

    We haven’t always lived up to it.  It is time we did.

    “We, the citizens of Singapore, pledge ourselves as one united people, regardless of race, language or religion, to build a democratic society based on justice and equality so as to achieve happiness, prosperity and progress for our nation.”

    The Anthem was played.

    I haven’t been much of a fan of patriotism but I can relate to the idea of a community that I’m part of and to which I have responsibilities.

    I cried.  I looked at my wife and she was crying.

    My son looked puzzle.  He asked why we were crying and pointed out that LKY was not family.

    We didn’t answer.

    I guess, we are All one family of humans.

    After all the elaborate drama of Living is done we go back to the elements.

    There’s a Tamil saying:

    Even a King that wears a glorious crown will in the end be no more than a fist of ash.

    I write to rehabilitate a memory.  I write to heal.

    It is time to move on.

     

    Source: https://article14blog.wordpress.com/

  • The Rainbow After The Rain

    The Rainbow After The Rain

    A eulogy has strange powers. It brings the dead back to life as we listen, enthralled by captivating stories about what he did, who he was, and what he aspired towards. For as long as we listened, Mr Lee Kuan Yew lived; time was suspended and we re-lived his life as the founder of a nation, as a statesman, and as a father and husband. But just as surely as all eulogies must end, so must our moment of fantasy.

    At the end of each eulogy, there is a farewell and an expression of hope for the future. We say our last goodbyes, for the last time, and dedicate ourselves to honouring the memory of the deceased. And with a finality we cannot express, we acknowledge that it is indeed the end. It is the end.

    Mr Lee passed away on Monday, at 3.18am. But yesterday was the day we put him to rest. This time it is final. This time, he really is no more. The rain ceases and the rainbow shines.

    Mr Lee is truly gone now, but his legacy lives on, and oh what a legacy it is. For seven days, we were serenaded with stories of his determination, his integrity, his kindness, his steadfastness. We heard the Singapore Story retold, again and again—the story of how one man took a tiny, vulnerable, island-state from the precipice of economic ruin to the heights of prosperity; how he quelled the unruly unions with a firm hand, bringing peace and stability; how he turned ethnic strife into racial harmony; how he gave everyone the opportunity to achieve their ambitions; and how he established an incorruptible government and imbued it with his personal values of frugality and integrity.

    Mr Lee was a remarkable visionary, an extraordinary leader, a charming statesman, a wise mentor, a loving husband, and a strict father. And he was also a gardener, a great boss and a fun person to interview. But he was not an icon of modern Singapore and he did not belong in the history books. However, as we close this chapter, a new one is opened. Mr Lee becomes Singapore; now he is a legend.

    And so, as with all legends, and like the stuff of history books, Mr Lee’s life will be subjected to scrutiny. The academics will poke and prod, ask who he really was, what he really believed in, and whether he really was who he said he was; and undoubtedly, the ivory-tower priests will carry with them their own intellectual prejudices. The hagiographers will retell his story, replete with the best anecdotes, and without the inconvenient details; and undoubtedly, many a reader will welcome the fascinating story. The revisionists will tinkle with the narratives, question established wisdoms, and keep us all on our toes.

    And the politicians will not be left behind. They will fight to reclaim Mr Lee’s story as their own and make him the champion of what they stand for.

    The PAP will have a field day using Mr Lee’s story to merge the three narratives: of the nation, of the man and of the party he left behind. The nation will be Mr Lee, and Mr Lee will be the PAP. Just as no nation votes against itself, no nation will vote against the PAP. Thus, the PAP will extol the virtues of Mr Lee’s ideals and point to his accomplishments as evidence; then they will emphasise how much they too stand for those virtues; and then they will make every vote for the PAP, a vote for Mr Lee Kuan Yew. Now, Mr Lee will not be bound to Tanjong Pagar, he will stand for election on the national stage, and he will win a victory for his son.

    The opposition will struggle as they contest the truth of Mr Lee’s story. They will have to battle the relentless mainstream media juggernaut as they question the dominant narrative that focuses on Mr Lee’s success and ignores the sacrifices. Ask whether the Barisan Socialis was really going to turn Singapore upside down in 1963, and the headlines will splash back with cries of dirty, sneaky, historical revisionism. Ask whether the PAP should hold fast to Mr Lee’s myth of meritocracy and face charges of foolish, idealistic socialism.

    But the opposition will contest the story nonetheless, and they will pit Mr Lee’s own virtues against the new PAP’s leadership. They will say: Mr Lee was a man of the people, but his son has lost touch with the ground. Mr Lee was a true socialist, but his son has left us at the mercy of the rich. Mr Lee picked capable successors on the basis of merit, but his son has filled his Cabinet with his army buddies.

    As a result of all this, the pessimist will throw his hands up in the air and call everyone a liar and a revisionist. There is only one Mr Lee, he says. He is either the benevolent founding father or he is the ruthless tyrant; there is no two ways about it. But what if Mr Lee was both? What if it was his ruthlessness and his authoritarian tactics that allowed him to make Singapore what it is today? What if it was precisely because he wanted the best for Singapore that he mistakenly repressed those he saw as enemies of Singapore’s good?

    I submit that we cannot fully understand Mr Lee if we do not acknowledge that he was a benevolent dictator, whose benevolence made him a dictator, and who used authoritarian policies to benefit Singapore.

    Inherent in this legend, then, is a story of compromise and of sacrifice—sacrifices which Mr Lee himself acknowledged, and said were necessary. And more than that, this is also a story of an imperfect man—a man who was not above making mistakes. Mr Lee said much the same of himself; we would be foolish to deny it.

    So we may now start to ask the questions that we have withheld for the past week: Did Mr Lee, in his benevolence make a mistake by being unnecessarily authoritarian? And did Mr Lee, in his authoritarianism make a mistake by not being truly benevolent? Was the benevolent dictator at times merely a dictator? And was he at times capable of being benevolent without being a dictator?

    The rain has ceased and we may now look at the rainbow—the man of many colours.

     

    Source: http://asiancorrespondent.com

  • Lee Kuan Yew’s Political Legacy – A Matter Of Trust

    Lee Kuan Yew’s Political Legacy – A Matter Of Trust

    As Singaporeans mourn their charismatic leader Lee Kuan Yew (LKY), whose political acumen, drive and ideas defined the young nation and played a major role in its successful development, attention turns to assessment. Moments of transition always bring reflection, and this is especially the case with the passing of the man who both personified and defined Singapore. The fact that LKY has passed on in the pivotal year of the nation celebrating the country’s 50th anniversary only serves to reinforce the need for review.

    There is good reason to acknowledge the accolades of a man who has been labeled as one of Asia’s most influential leaders. Most of the media, especially in the government-linked media of Singapore, lay out these reasons well. LKY was a force to be reckoned with, a complex man who made no excuses in his views and was direct in stating his opinions. He trusted few, but chose to collaborate with those who shared his hard work ethic with talent and ideas to develop the busy port of Singapore into a safe dynamic cosmopolitan city-state. He will rightly be remembered for not only putting Singapore on the world map, but as a model that is admired and respected by many the world over.

    LKY was a man who was respected, but importantly not loved by all. He used fear to stay in power. From the inception of Singapore’s independence – when it was expelled from Malaysia – the ideas of ‘vulnerability’ and ‘survival’ were used to justify decisions. He promoted the idea that Singapore had to have a strong armed forces, requiring national service in 1967, to protect itself as a nation surrounded by the perceived threat of its Malay neighbors. The enemies outside were matched by those inside, who had to be displaced and in some cases detained.  Among the most controversial were the arrests of men labeled as communists in Operation Coldstore of 1963 and Operation Spectrum of 1987 (a.k.a. the ‘Marxist Conspiracy’) that targeted social activists who promoted greater social equality and were seen as challenging LKY’s People’s Action Party’s (PAP) authority. Two other round-ups occurred with Operation Pecah (Split) in 1966, which coincided with the year of the arrest of Dr. Chia Thye Poh who was held under detention and restriction until 1997, and the arrests of the ‘Eurocommunists’ in 1976-77. Many others from opposition politics, business to academia faced the wrath for challenging and questioning LKY, his PAP and the politicized decisions of its institutions, castigated in the government controlled media, removed from position, forced to live in exile and, in some cases, sued and bankrupted. In the relatively small city state, it did not take much to instill a political culture of fear by making a few examples.

    A main point of contention goes that LKY sparred with Western critics over democracy and human rights, with LKY dismissing these ideas as not part of ‘Asia’s values.’ The debate was never about differences in values, but the justification of holding power in the hands of a few for nearly five decades. Singapore’s political model is at its foundation about the elites, with Lee, his family and loyalists at the core. In recent years, reports in Singapore have highlighted a growing trust deficit in the PAP government that LKY founded. The real deficit that defined LKY and became embedded within the party he molded is that he never fundamentally trusted his people.

    The group that received the special focus of LKY’s distrust was the Malay population, who now comprise over 10% of the country’s population. Even as LKY matured as a politician, he continued to reinforce negative stereotypes of this community that rioted over their grievances in 1950, 1964 and 1969 when LKY was in his early years in power, and with whom he expressed hard judgments about their religion, Islam. This distrust was shaped in part by a worldview that was not only shaped by his early experiences in political life but had sharp racial cleavages, drew from eugenics and believed in a clear social order. Part of LKY’s outlook prioritized women as homemakers and disparaged single women who opted not to marry or follow a career – another group similar to Malays that faced discrimination within LKY’s Singapore.

    In the heyday of Singapore’s economic miracle, the 1970s through the 1990s, the LKY PAP government worked to win over the trust of its people. It did so by providing for the basic welfare of its citizens, with an impressive housing program, affordable food prices, a living wage, job security, safety, education and opportunity. This involved hard work of LKY’s founding team of PAP cadre, as well as the sacrifice of ordinary Singaporeans. It also reflected the wise realization of LKY that fear was not enough to stay in power. There needed to be a healthy balance of deliverables. The LKY decades of economic growth translated into real rewards – at least through the 1980s.

    Singapore’s trajectory of sharing the benefits of development has followed a pattern of diminishing returns, as the country now boasts the highest per capita of millionaires and is the world’s most expensive city, with a large number its citizens unable to save and afford the lifestyle promised in the nation’s early narrative. As much as LKY deserves credit for Singapore’s success, he also should be seen to be part of today’s shortcomings. Elitism has breed arrogance, and a distance between those in power and those governed. Most of the new leaders of the PAP have come from subsequent wealthy generations that do not fully understand the sacrifices of the country’s working poor – shocking in number – and the obstacles elderly and young people face in an era of high costs. Years of following the LKY’s example and being told that the PAP is made up of the ‘best and brightest’ has imbued a mindset of superiority, a lack of empathy, and frequent dismissal of difference in engagement with the public.

    While LKY’s son Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong has worked to win over support, he has suffered consecutive drops of support in the two elections he has led since he assumed office, failing to match the 75% popular vote height of the predecessor Goh Chok Tong in 2001. Unlike in the information controlled era of his father, Lee Hsien Loong is not able to effectively censor and limit public discussions in today’s wired and connected Singapore.  His recent expansion of social services and incentive packages that provide small sums for pensioners, modest support for health and childcare and tax reductions for the middle class are a drop in the bucket for the growing grievances and costs faced by ordinary citizens.

    This has to do in part with the challenge Lee Hsien Loong faces in dealing with his father’s legacy. In 2007 LKY claimed that he governed without ideology. This was not quite true. The ideological foundation of LKY’s pragmatic tenure was materialism. This obsession with money, saving it and forcing the public to save it in rigid regulated ways, assuring that government funds were only given to those ‘worthy’ and loyal and defining the value of the performance of his government ministers by pegging their salaries to growth numbers comprised the lifeblood of LKY’s state. With annual ‘bonuses’ to perform, there is a focus on short-term gains rather than long-term investments. The irony is that it is not even clear how much money the government of Singapore and its linked companies actually have. Singapore is one of the few countries in the world that does not follow the International Monetary Fund guidelines on its budget reporting. It also does not transparently report losses in many of the financial accounts of the government linked companies (GLCs). Lee Hsien Loong has had to tackle head-on the ingrained pattern of limited government spending on social welfare and services, as he attempts to move away from his father’s restrictive parsimony and secretive mindset that originated from a lack of trust in people.

    Lee Hsien Loong also has to address the problems of a government dominated economy. Singapore Inc. emerged out of the political economy LKY put in place, with the government and its linked companies controlling over half the country’s economy and undercutting almost all domestic business. LKY did not trust local capital, and did not want to strengthen an alternative power center to his own. As such, Singapore’s economy is not a genuinely competitive one. It favors big business, especially property developers, and those allied with government rather than independent entrepreneurs. Those in the system have apparently disproportionately benefited from it, although the exact amounts and assets remain unknown. The accumulated assets of individuals remain hidden as the estate tax was removed in 2008. What is known is that workers have limited rights in the LKY-shaped political economy. A recent example is the sexual harassment bill passed in parliament that excludes employer liability. The harsh response to the bus driver strike in 2012 is another. Much is made about the limited corruption of Singapore, but few appreciate that the country ranks high on theEconomist crony-capitalism index, an important outgrowth of the government dominance of the economy. The ties between companies and government are close, at times with government and family members on their boards and a revolving door that never really closes.

    Singapore’s economy also favors foreigners. LKY was to start this trend, with the appeal to outsiders for capital rather than a focus on domestic business. Foreigners may have been easier to engage, as they could always be kicked out. Foreign investment has been extremely important in Singapore’s growth numbers initially in manufacturing and later in services. To maintain global competitiveness, keep wages low and maintain high growth numbers, Singapore also turned to foreign labor – cheap workers to staff their construction sectors and to work as domestic help and foreign talent to bring in ideas and the occasional sports medal. This prioritization of outsiders has fostered resentment. When LKY assumed office he worked to force a nation, but with his passing many in Singapore feel the government he left behind is working for others and undermining the fabric of the nation. The crowded trains, strain on services and displacement of Singaporeans in the job market and advancement have angered many, who now see LKY’s legacy as one that in fact left many Singaporeans vulnerable and worried about survival.

    No one can take away LKY’s contributions. He lived a long meaningful life, and shaped the lives of all Singaporeans. This does not mean that there is agreement on what he left behind. Singapore now faces the challenge of moving beyond LKY’s ideas and shaping a more promising future for all of its citizens. An integral part of this dynamic will be moving away from fear, promoting more effective policies for inclusion in the economy and society and building trust. It starts with placing more trust in Singaporeans.

    It is arguably the latter that is the hardest. LKY lived in an era where societies trusted their leaders. He was given the benefit of the doubt. The PAP remains a relatively closed institution, with the distrust of those not inside deeply embedded. Today in the age of social media and instant messaging there is not as much leeway to work behind closed doors. There is an urgent need to forge genuine dialogue, connectivity and understanding that moves beyond materialism, and reignites the sense of belonging that LKY forged in his early years.

    Singapore today has become a more politically divided nation, with those who strongly defend LKY’s incumbent government, die-hard opponents and the majority in the middle. As the country marks its 50th year it moves toward a different narrative, the task at hand is to forge a new Singapore story, one in which LKY is a valued part of its past, but not a constraint on the dreams and aspirations of Singaporeans’ future.

    Bridget Welsh is a Senior Research Associate of the Center for East Asia Democratic Studies of the National Taiwan University where she conducts research on democracy and politics in Southeast Asia.

     

    Source: http://asiapacific.anu.edu.au