Tag: Singaporean

  • Malay and Muslim Organisations Pay Tribute To Lee Kuan Yew

    Malay and Muslim Organisations Pay Tribute To Lee Kuan Yew

    The Malay and Muslim community came together on Thursday to honour Mr Lee Kuan Yew.

    Yayasan Mendaki was joined by other Malay and Muslim organisations such as the Singapore Muslim Women’s Association or PPIS, and Singapore Kadayanallur Muslim League (SKML) in paying tribute to Singapore’s first Prime Minister at Telok Ayer Hong Lim Green Community Centre.

    Ms Rahayu Mohamad, president of PPIS, read a poem titled A Great Man, which described Mr Lee’s dedication to building Singapore as a tribute to him.

    She said Mr Lee’s firmness educated Singaporeans to be pragmatic and to focus on development, which she thinks the younger generation has to continue to learn to ensure stability and progress.

    Dr Yaacob Ibrahim, Minister-in-charge of Muslim Affairs, who started the tribute session, said it is a difficult moment for everyone, especially for him as he had worked closely with Mr Lee.

    “We are indeed very lucky to have someone like Mr Lee who was always on the lookout for things that he could do to help improve the state of the Malay and Muslim community and I think we can point to many of his contributions,” he said.

    “He may have been misunderstood at times; I think that is inevitable. But at the end of the day, I think we have to look at the good of what a man has done.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Death Of Lee Kuan Yew A Personal Clarion Call For Singapore

    Death Of Lee Kuan Yew A Personal Clarion Call For Singapore

    I understand how some feel about the tributes to Mr Lee Kuan Yew being overwhelming and maybe even overbearing. Speaking for myself, 95% of my newsfeed on Facebook is filled with news of his bereavement, eulogies, and almost “real time” coverage of his body lying in state in Parliament building.

    However, the thing is this. An event like this doesn’t happen often. To me, Mr Lee’s passing is a turning point of sorts – not in the way foreign media or political pundits may paint it to be, but as a kind of communal yet personal clarion call for Singapore.

    This is perhaps best reflected by 5 Rs…

    1) Reflection – Mr Lee’s demise compels us to reflect upon many things. How much Singapore has changed over the past 50 years since its founding. What we have done well – and not so well – and what lessons do we bring into the future? This applies not just for us collectively but individually too (yes, I’ve done a fair amount of soul-searching).

    2) Reminiscence – Reading on Singapore’s history and LKY’s role in it brings forth a deep sense of nostalgia. There are so many chapters in our nation’s story that are deeply intertwined with our daily lives. This is a time to sit back and re-live those times. To me, it is the real ‪#‎SG50‬ event.

    3) Resolution – I don’t know about you, but watching the old videos of how LKY turned around Singapore and looking at the long winding queues of people waiting hours to pay their respects ignited something fierce in me. Somehow, the problems and issues I face pale in comparison to what is being stirred inside.

    4) Revolution – No, I am not talking about a political revolution more so than a national one. Love him or loathe him, Mr Lee’s death has sparked something in many of us. For the first time in like forever, the silent majority have made their feelings felt everywhere – online and offline. We are not emotionless and passionless. We care and we show it when the occasion calls for it.

    5) Reunification – I am not sure about you, but I feel that there is a certain coming together of Singaporeans with this event. People from all walks of life, young and old, educated and less educated, rich and poor, all united in one spirit to offer their respects. The process of queuing and waiting, the generous giving of drinks and snacks, the willingness to extend the opening hours – from 10 am to 8 pm, then till midnight, and then 24 hours – binds us together like nothing I’ve seen here in a long time.

    Let us put aside our ideological differences temporarily, at least for 4 more days this week, and spend our time ‪#‎RememberingLeeKuanYew‬.

    There will always be time enough to resume our battles and pit our wits later.‪#‎ThankYouLKY‬ ‪#‎RIPLKY‬

    Source: Walter Lim

  • Lee Kuan Yew: Judge Him By The Prosperity We Enjoy

    Lee Kuan Yew: Judge Him By The Prosperity We Enjoy

    Probably no Singaporean besides Lee Kuan Yew has ever been loved, and hated to such a degree.

    For every comment we’ve seen praising Old Lee, there’s bound to be another wishing he’d burn in hell.

    We’ve heard of how Old Lee crafted Singapore into the nation it is today, building a propsrous city despite the odds stacked against us ever making it.

    We’ve also heard tales of his ruthless streak, and alleged human rights abuses such as the unfair detention of supposed dissidents using the Internal Security Act as a guise.

    The biggest question when looking back at the life of this man and his contributions remains: Would Singapore be better without Lee Kuan Yew at the helm?

    We can speculate, but we’ll never know for sure.

    What we can answer is this: “Has Singapore prospered under its first ever Prime Minister?”

     

    (1) Housing

    redwire-singapore-lee-kuan-yew-legacy-2
    As Prime Minister, Lee Kuan Yew assembled a great team of leaders in their own right, people with brilliant ideas.

    He gave them the rein to develop those ideas, so long as they were practical, and stood up to reason and feasibility.

    One of those that changed our landscape forever – HDB flats.

    redwire singapore hdb flats 1960s
    Despite the West criticising how such high-rise monsters would stain our landscape, the issue at hand was, “how can the government house the expected boom in Singapore’s population, affordably?”

    Deputy Prime Minister Goh Keng Swee spearheaded this development.

    Against all opposition, especially the poor sould who had to be evicted for flats to be built, it was done.

    Generations of Singaporeans 40 years down the road have a place to call their own.

    (2) Transport

    redwire-singapore-lee-kuan-yew-legacy-5
    Planning started in 1967, and took place throughout the 1960s.

    Foreign specialists were brought in to assist state boards in the planning of what would be the most ambitious transport project in Singapore’s history.

    The first train line was launched in 1987.

    redwire singapore first mrt
    In 28 years, we’ve a public transport network that can rival the best in the world.

    We can sneer at Singapore’s MRT network, compared to say, the London subway.

    The tube opened in 1890.

    This was Singapore in 1890.

    redwire singapore victoria dock
    The MRT is still a work in development, as we can see from the many breakdowns it continues to suffer.

    But we can take pride in how quickly work progressed.

    Guess who started the ball rolling.

    (3) Education

    redwire-singapore-lee-kuan-yew-legacy-3
    In 1966, Lee mandated that all students learn a “mother tongue” – the language associated with their ethnicity.

    This, besides the English language.

    This came at a time when most former colonies were trying to strengthen their own national identity by falling back on their ethnicity.

    “If we were monolingual in our mother tongues, we would not make a living. Becoming monolingual in English would have been a setback,” he wrote in his memoirs. “We would have lost our cultural identity, that quiet confidence about ourselves and our place in the world.”

    Today, we can deal with the West, our most prominent neighbours, Malaysia and Indonesia, and the rising global power – China.

    At that time, Lee Kuan Yew spoke English and Malay.

    He would go on to learn Mandarin and other dialects well into his thirties just so he could communicate when the time came for it.

    The man lived as an example of adaptibility, and forced us to be versatile as well – for our own benefit down the road.

    (4) Society

    redwire-singapore-lee-kuan-yew-legacy-6
    The greatest criticism of Lee Kuan Yew has to be his iron-fisted rule, and his ruthlessness when it came to clamping down on people who opposed his policies.

    As theories go – Lee played the Malaysia card to get Singapore out of British rule, then he antagonised the Malaysians so Singapore would get the boot and forced to become independent, giving him a free rein to sculpt this nation according to his vision.

    That’s pretty damn well-played!

    1950s Singapore was marked by the Maria Hertogh riots, Hock Lee bus riots, and the Chinese Middle School riots.

    The 1960s – the Prophet Muhammad Birthday riots and Konfrontasi, which was essentially an Indonesia-Malaysia issue, which led to insugencies spilling over to Singapore.

    That culminated in the MacDonald House bombing

    redwire singapore macdonald house bombing
    This was the climate in which Lee Kuan Yew had to forge a nation.

    Would anything besides an iron-fisted approach work?

    A united China came about only because of a ruthless Qin ruler.

    The next united China was built on the back of another single-minded leader, Mao Zedong.

    These legendary men brought China out of civil war, forged stability out of destruction, and enabled China to prosper today.

    The same goes for Singapore, albeit on a less dramatic scale.

    Leadership must adapt to the times, and Singapore in its infant phase as a nation demanded stability and unity.

    Lee Kuan Yew got that done.

    In Sum

    redwire-singapore-lee-kuan-yew-legacy-1
    Look around you.

    50 years – that’s what it took to build all this.

    Some overseas might still mistake Singapore for a part of China, but on the whole, our nation is globally recognised and respected.

    We have prospered – on the domestic front, and on the foreign front.

    That was what Lee Kuan Yew wanted, that is what he set out to build, and that’s what we enjoy now.

    50 years.

    Times have changed, and Lee’s methods might not work today.

    But they did then.

    It’s time to push forward, to adapt to a new world order, and to better Singapore.

    All this, while respecting the band of men who brought us this far.

    Lee was the leader of that band.

     

    Source: http://redwiretimes.com

  • What The World Has Learnt From Lee Kuan Yew

    What The World Has Learnt From Lee Kuan Yew

    Commentary writers from around the world have penned tributes for Mr Lee Kuan Yew, covering a range of topics including Mr Lee’s unique style of leadership, strategic vision and the strengths of the Singapore model that has become the cornerstone of the country’s relevance to the wider international community. The writers talk about their personal encounters with Mr Lee and give a glimpse of Mr Lee’s forward-looking thinking and straight-talking personality.

    THE STRATEGIC VISIONARY

    Jon Huntsman, chairman of the Atlantic Council, former Utah governor and former US ambassador to Singapore remembered how he had regularly consulted Mr Lee along with generations of other American policy-makers. “I always benefited from his keen insight — insight which the world has now lost”, Mr Huntsman wrote.

    Mr Huntsman said that he had learned “three core lessons” based on his interactions with Mr Lee:

    First, Mr Lee was keenly aware of the power of culture in shaping policy. “Lee Kuan Yew was eloquent in helping American policymakers and leaders understand that culture plays a very central role in the worldviews of those in many of the countries with whom we were trying to forge relationships,” wrote Mr Huntsman.

    “Second, Mr Lee was a strategic thinker who looked around the bend, stressing to his leadership team the importance of planning for the next lap of development.

    “Third, Mr Lee had an understanding of the critical balance between security and economic development. Mr Lee stressed the need for the presence of the US, its forward-deployed Seventh Fleet and indispensable role in fostering regional prosperity and growth.”

    THE SINGAPORE MODEL

    Steve Forbes, the Editor-in-chief for Forbes magazine, described how Mr Lee made Singapore an economic powerhouse, demonstrating that natural resources are not necessary for prosperity and that the key is creating an environment in which human ingenuity can thrive.

    “He had zero tolerance for corruption and to eliminate the temptation and attract capable people, Mr Lee paid government officials high salaries,” Mr Forbes wrote.

    Mr Lee simultaneously demonstrated that sound finance can coexist with soundly thought out social programs.

    “He pursued a vigorous housing program that enabled people who didn’t earn high incomes to buy their homes; his was a model for how subsidies need not lead to the housing-related disasters that have plagued the US,” noted Mr Forbes.

    STRAIGHT TALK

    Mr Jeff Bader, senior director for Asian affairs on the National Security Council under President Barack Obama, shared his insights of Mr Lee at work, and how he would always speak his mind and not shy from controversy.

    Recounting Mr Lee’s attendance at one Bo’ao Forum for Asia conference on China’s Hainan island, he pointed out that the older generation of Chinese understood the Confucian values of modesty and humility, but he feared the new generation did not.

    “He criticised the destruction of Japanese property and facilities in response to the visit of Japanese Prime Minister Koizumi to the Yasukuni Shrine,” Mr Bader wrote. “He complained that masses of Chinese Internet users had insulted his son, then Singapore’s deputy prime minister, for visiting Taiwan, referring to ‘Big China’ and ‘Little Singapore.’ He said these actions sent a profoundly disturbing message to China’s neighbours.

    “As if this wasn’t enough to rattle his Chinese hosts,” Mr Bader wrote, “Mr Lee said he wanted to add one more point. He said he had heard many Chinese talking about the 21st century being China’s century, and that America’s time was past. ‘Well,’ Mr Lee said, ‘I have news for you. The 21st century will be America’s century too. Americans have an extraordinary capacity to reinvent themselves, to learn from their mistakes, and to innovate. Don’t underestimate them,” he closed.

    “The senior Chinese officials, smiles still frozen on their faces but in semi-shock, applauded dutifully.”

    INVESTING IN THE FUTURE

    Dr Ong Kian Ming, a Malaysian MP for Serdang, was an Asean scholar at Raffles Institution from 1991 to 1992 and in Raffles Junior College from 1993 to 1994. He wrote about Mr Lee’s strategy of investing in the future of society.

    “Looking back, I cannot help but feel (Mr Lee’s) imprint in my own education experience,” Mr Ong wrote. “Being placed in the best class in one of the best secondary schools in Singapore … the intense competition, the high standards in English, Mathematics and the Sciences, the exacting teachers and the spanking new facilities in a new campus came as a culture shock to me.

    “While I acclimatised myself to my new surroundings, I also began to realise that the elitist culture around me was also highly meritocratic. Among my classmates was a son of the then education minister, who is now himself a member of Parliament in Singapore, and the son of a kuay teow seller who later on graduated from MIT.

    “The willingness to invest in training high quality teachers and physical infrastructure in schools … the implementation of a vigorous and challenging syllabus and tough exam standards, the creation of a highly elitist and meritocratic education system and the foresight of offering scholarships to foreign students at a relatively young age, are all classic hallmarks” of Mr Lee, Mr Ong wrote.

    Mr Ong said that he gained political consciousness during his time in Singapore, which left him wondering whether Singapore’s policies were right.

    He cited the ban of chewing gum and the caning of American Michael Fay for vandalism left him as examples. “Did a country as successful and orderly as Singapore really need to resort to these extreme measures in order to maintain law and order, I thought to myself,” he wrote, adding that he also became curious about critics of Mr Lee, including former Solicitor-General Francis Seow, now a political dissident living in the United States and academic Christopher Lingle.

    He noted how Singapore now faces new challenges that were not present when he studied here in the 1990s, including questions being asked over whether the education system has evolved to favour students from more well-to-do backgrounds as well as the transportation system coming under strain from a rapidly growing population.

    “The rise of social media and of a generation of voters who are not used to being muzzled and not easily scared by yesteryear stories of political bogeymen are already posing some interesting challenges to the PAP regime. How will all of this play out in the next general election in Singapore, which is due in 2016?” wondered Mr Ong.

    Reflecting on his time in Singapore, the member of parliament quipped that it helped him to better appreciate life in his own country.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Lee Kuan Yew, The Benevolent Dictator

    Lee Kuan Yew, The Benevolent Dictator

    KUALA LUMPUR, March 23 — The world can finally judge Lee Kuan Yew and determine if Singapore’s glittering skyscrapers were worth the price of democracy and chewing gum, although he wouldn’t have cared for such assessments anyway as it was he, and only he, who decided what was right for Singapore. Never mind what the people thought.

    Lee, who transformed Singapore from a backwater to one of Asia’s richest nations in three decades of what some called dictatorial rule, died today at 91 in Singapore.

    The first prime minister of Singapore, who was in office from 1959 to 1990, died in the Singapore General Hospital at 3.18am after being admitted for severe pneumonia.

    When Singapore was expelled from Malaysia in 1965, two years after the federation was formed, Lee was left with a tiny city-state of migrants without a common language, culture or destiny, with no natural resources, surrounded by powerful neighbours like Indonesia and China.

    “The basis of a nation just was not there,” Lee told the International Herald Tribune(IHT) in 2007.

    He also had to contend with high unemployment, corruption and a housing shortage when he assumed office earlier in 1959.

    At the helm of a nation-state in its infancy, Lee built Singapore after his own image – stern, disciplined and no-nonsense. He brooked no dissent and did not tolerate corruption. He focused on running an efficient, pragmatic and meritocratic administration. Corporal punishment was used for even minor infractions like vandalism.

    The People’s Action Party (PAP) government under Lee’s leadership industrialised Singapore, turned it into an exporter of finished goods and brought in foreign investment. A low-cost public housing programme was implemented and Lee introduced serious measures to tackle graft by creating an enforcement agency that reported directly to him, besides revising government service salaries periodically and increasing the standard of living for workers.

    Lee expanded education and made English the working language in Singapore, although the majority in the multi-racial country spoke Mandarin. While he worried of the racial turmoil that could come with a monolingual policy favouring the majority Chinese community, it was his practical concerns that guided his decision since Singapore was trying to attract multinational corporations as a manufacturing hub.

    “I’m a pragmatist and you can’t make a living with the Chinese language in Singapore,” Lee told National Geographic in 2009 after shutting down Chinese education.

    He also boosted Singapore’s defence force and implemented an Israeli model of national service, where all 18-year-old men are required to train in the programme for two years.

    Singapore spends a quarter of its annual budget on defence and is the fifth-largest importer of military hardware, according to an Al-Jazeera report last March.

    Lee described himself as a street fighter. A knuckle duster who took on communists with “killer squads” and “Malay ultras” when Singapore was in Malaysia for two years. A tough and unyielding man feared by citizens.

    Lee was the longest-serving head of government in Asia and remained in government even after stepping down as prime minister in 1990. Although he had resigned as prime minister in 1990, he had remained in government for another two decades: first serving as senior minister and later as minister mentor.

    He only fully retired from the Cabinet in 2011 after PAP’s worst electoral showing since independence.

    Seth Mydans of the New York Times (NYT) told Lee in 2010 that a taxi driver had said, upon learning that he would interview Lee, it was safer not to ask Lee anything because someone would “follow” him.

    Yet, despite Singapore’s success as a “first world oasis in a third world region”, Lee believed that the country was still fighting for survival and that everything could come undone very quickly. He had a paranoid fear of nebulous threats and constantly reminded his people about the country’s vulnerabilities and to be vigilant.

    “Where are we? Are we in the Caribbean? Are we next to America like the Bahamas? Are we in the Mediterranean, like Malta, next to Italy? Are we like Hong Kong, next to China and therefore, will become part of China? We are in Southeast Asia, in the midst of a turbulent, volatile, unsettled region. Singapore is a superstructure built on what? On 700 square kilometres and a lot of smart ideas that have worked so far,” Lee said in a 2007 interview with US columnist Tom Plate and new-media expert Jeffrey Cole.

    Crying at Singapore’s separation from Malaysia

    The one time when the man known for his strictness and unsentimentality lost his composure in public was when Malaysia ejected Singapore.

    In a press conference on August 9, 1965, where he announced Singapore’s independence and separation from the federation, a tearful Lee described it as a “moment of anguish”, his voice choked with emotion, pausing a few times as he spoke before finally asking for the recording to be stopped temporarily.

    “For me, it is a moment of anguish because all my life… you see, the whole of my adult life… I have believed in Malaysian merger and the unity of these two territories. You know, it’s a people, connected by geography, economics, and ties of kinship… Would you mind if we stop for a while?” he had said.

    Singapore joined Malaya, Sabah and Sarawak in 1963 to form Malaysia. At that time, the federation wanted to prevent the communist insurgency from taking root in Singapore.

    Political and economical disputes between Singapore and the Malaysian government, however, soon arose. Tunku Abdul Rahman’s Alliance Party took part in Singapore’s 1963 general election but failed to win any seats. PAP retaliated by participating in Malaysia’s 1964 general election, in which it won one out of nine federal seats contested.

    Tensions flared between the Alliance and the PAP that Lee co-founded. Umno called on the Malays in Singapore to demand for special rights, special occupancy in government housing projects and job quotas, as what was done in the peninsula.

    Two bloody race riots broke out later in Singapore in July and September 1964 between the Malays and the Chinese, killing dozens of people.

    In May 1965, Lee mobilised Malaysian opposition parties, including those from the peninsula and Borneo, to call for a “Malaysian Malaysia” that sought for equality between the Malays and non-Malays.

    “The special and legitimate interests of different communities must be secured and promoted within the framework of the collective rights, interests and responsibilities of all races,” Lee was quoted saying by Dr Cheah Boon Kheng, retired history professor from Universiti Sains Malaysia, in local daily The Sun.

    Umno leaders demanded Lee’s arrest for his criticism of Malay dominance in Malaysia, eventually leading to Tunku’s conclusion that Singapore could no longer remain in the federation for the sake of national security.

    Malaysia and Singapore signed a separation agreement on August 7, 1965, and Lee wept two days later on national television.

    Lee focused on building a meritocracy in multi-racial Singapore and strove for equality to harness talent that was the city-state’s only resource. He disagreed with the way Malaysia managed its multi-cultural, Malay-majority society through affirmative action policies.

    “Our Malays are English-educated, they’re no longer like the Malays in Malaysia and you can see there are some still wearing headscarves but very modern looking,” he told NYT in 2010.

    Lee said Malaysians saw Malaysia as a “Malay country” and was critical of how the Bumiputeras dominated Malaysia.

    “So the Sultans, the Chief Justice and judges, generals, police commissioner, the whole hierarchy is Malay. All the big contracts for Malays. Malay is the language of the schools although it does not get them into modern knowledge. So the Chinese build and find their own independent schools to teach Chinese, the Tamils create their own Tamil schools, which do not get them jobs. It’s a most unhappy situation,” he said in the 2010 NYT interview.

    He even said much of what was achieved in Singapore would be achieved in Malaysia if Tunku had kept Singapore in Malaysia and if Malaysia had accepted multiculturalism like Singapore.

    A dictator?

    Lee’s critics have often accused him of suppressing civil liberties and using libel suits to intimidate his political opponents into not running against him. The opposition boycotted Parliament from 1966 onwards, leaving a Parliament completely dominated by the PAP until the ruling party lost a parliamentary seat in a 1981 by-election. The watershed 2011 general election later saw the opposition Workers’ Party winning six parliamentary seats.

    Lee believed that democracy was secondary to discipline, development and good governance.

    “What are our priorities? First, the welfare, the survival of the people. Then, democratic norms and processes which from time to time we have to suspend,” Lee said at a 1986 National Day Rally.

    He shied away from Western-style democracy, saying he had to amend the British system for multi-racial Singapore.

    “Supposing I’d run their system here, Malays would vote for Muslims, Indians would vote for Indians, Chinese would vote for Chinese. I would have a constant clash in my Parliament which cannot be resolved because the Chinese majority would always overrule them,” Lee told German magazine Spiegel in 2005.

    He laughed off a journalist who called him a dictator, saying, with a touch of arrogance, that he did not have to be a dictator when he could win “hands down.”

    “I can get a free vote and win. And there’s a long history why that is so. Because I have produced results, and the people know that I mean what I say and I have produced results,” Lee told NYT’s William Safire in 1999.

    A different side

    Lee, an agnostic, was indifferent to homosexuality. He was fine with gay people, but frowned on pride parades because he wanted to maintain social order.

    “China has already allowed and recognised gays, so have Hong Kong and Taiwan. It’s a matter of time. But we have a part Muslim population, another part conservative older Chinese and Indians. So, let’s go slowly. It’s a pragmatic approach to maintain social cohesion,” he said.

    Lee’s cold pragmatism, in line with his ambivalence about the divine, was devoid of romanticism and ideology. His Confucian values of obedience to authority and respect for social order underlined his policies on discipline above individual rights.

    Yet, for all of Lee’s clinical logic, his favourite book was Don Quixote, a Spanish classic about the adventures of a man bent on chivalry and romanticism in pursuing unrealistic ideals.

    He also practised meditation, in which he repeated a Catholic mantra “Ma Ra Na Ta” for 20 minutes, which means “Come to me oh Lord Jesus”, though he was an agnostic.

    When his wife Kwa Geok Choo was bedridden in 2008 from a stroke for two years before her death, he used to read her favourite poems to her and tell her about his day.

    Besides keeping fit through swimming and cycling, Lee stopped drinking tea because his doctors told him it was a diuretic. Since he didn’t like coffee as it gave him a “sour stomach”, he turned to warm water. Cold water reduces one’s resistance to colds and coughs, he told NYT in 2010.

    Lee remained a fighter to the end. He didn’t care what his critics thought of him. The final verdict would not be in his obituaries, he said.

    He admitted that not everything he did was right; he had to do “nasty things” like detaining people without trial, but it was all for the greater good, he insisted.

    Lee had built the foundation for a thriving Singapore from nothing and turned the country into Asia’s financial centre, a developed country in a Third World region. But he also realised that his time of fighting communists and extremists had passed and that it was a new world now. He called for a “fresh clean slate” when he retired from Cabinet in 2011.

    Younger voters who grew up in Singapore’s concrete jungle now worry about the cost of living amid a widening income gap and resent the country’s liberal immigration policy that PAP had long introduced to support its flourishing economy.

    The government could no longer quell dissent due to the growth of social media, unlike Lee’s days when information was tightly controlled in a muzzled press. It remains to be seen whether his successors can adapt to Singapore’s new age, free from Lee’s prevailing influence over the past 50 years.

    “Even from my sick bed, even if you are going to lower me into the grave and I feel something is going wrong, I will get up,” Lee once said in 1988.

     

    Source: www.themalaymailonline.com