Tag: Singaporeans First

  • Fahmi Rais: I Was Adopted, My Biological Parents Are Chinese

    Fahmi Rais: I Was Adopted, My Biological Parents Are Chinese

    All his life, he thought he was the only child of his loving Malay parents.

    Even though everyone he met has assumed he is Chinese because he is fair-skinned, Mr Fahmi Rais never gave it much thought.

    This was until about two weeks ago, when a casual question posed to his 90-year-old grandmother during a monthly visit revealed a shocking, long-kept family secret.

    Mr Fahmi found out he had been adopted and that his biological parents are Chinese.

    The 47-year-old media consultant said: “I told her that people have been asking me for many years if I was adopted.

    “I expected her to tell me that I was being ridiculous. But when her expression changed and she was silent for a few seconds, I just knew it.”

    Mr Fahmi, a Malay community leader who was a SingFirst candidate in this year’s General Election, was so overwhelmed by the sudden revelation that he started crying.

    His grandmother, who was also reduced to tears, told him that his parents were a poor Chinese couple who lived in Segamat, Johor.

    She had no other details of his adoption – neither names nor the amount of money exchanged, if any.

    Already feeling lost, Mr Fahmi was crushed when he realised that his relatives had known about the adoption but hid it from him.

    His adoptive parents died more than 20 years ago, both from heart attacks.

    His maternal grandmother is his only surviving grandparent.

    He said: “Maybe my parents wanted to tell me one day, but never had the chance.”

    For the past two weeks, Mr Fahmi, a father of four children aged between six and 19, has been determinedly searching for his biological family.

    He wrote to The New Paper, hoping that by sharing his story, he would find them.

    His parents had managed to keep details of his adoption a mystery, even to his relatives.

    Mr Fahmi’s most credible lead is his birth certificate, which was issued 10 years after he was born.

    The names of his birth parents are not on the certificate, but there is one clue.

    It lists Kandang Kerbau Hospital (now known as KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital) as his place of birth.

    When he approached the hospital last week, he was told that there are no records of his birth and he was directed to the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority.

    They, too, told him they had no further information and asked him to approach the family court.

    He is now waiting for the adoption registry, located at the MND Complex, to check if there are records of his adoption, but he has not heard from them yet.

    ONLY CHILD?

    Growing up as an only child, Mr Fahmi said the possibility of having siblings has been the greatest motivation for his search.

    He believes his parents had many children and were forced to give a child away because of poverty.

    “The thought that my sister could be sitting next to me at a foodcourt, or that my brother could be one of my friends on Facebook (without realising it), has been unbearable,” he said.

    Mr Fahmi’s wife, Madam Sulaimah Abdul Kadir, 40, a consultant, was also there during Mr Fahmi’s conversation with his grandmother.

    She said she is moved by his sadness since he found out the truth about his adoption.

    “As a wife, I’ll support him in his search. But no matter what happens, we still love him for who he is,” she said.

    Mr Fahmi insists he is not overreacting and that he just hopes to find closure.

    The couple have an adopted daughter, Nur Natasya, 16, and Mr Fahmi admitted that he does blame his parents a little for withholding the truth from him.

    He said: “My wife and I never hid the fact from our daughter that she was adopted. It was my policy of love, I don’t think adoption should be a secret.

    “I wish my parents had the same level of transparency, but this does not reduce my love for them.

    “I was a late bloomer and only passed one subject at O levels. I disappointed them many times when I was younger, but they loved me all the same.”


    This adoption discovery came at the lowest point of my life. As if the seabed wasn’t ground deep enough, this experience (took) me on a slippery slope into the dark abyss. My wife and four children are the only people keeping me together. Not omitting my caring grandmother, without whom my entire life would have been a continuous lie.

    – Mr Fahmi Rais in a blog entry on Tuesday

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Singaporeans First Party Hold First Walkabout In Tanjong Pagar GRC

    Singaporeans First Party Hold First Walkabout In Tanjong Pagar GRC

    SINGAPORE – More than 20 members and supporters joined Singaporeans First (SingFirst) on Sunday morning as the new political party held its debut walkabout in Tanjong Pagar GRC, a stronghold of the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP).

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

    SingFirst also launched its website, http://singfirst.org, on Saturday as it gears up for the next general elections, which must be held by January 2017.

    Announced in May and officially registered in August, the party has received more than 100 applications from people keen to become members, Mr Tan said at a press conference held after the walkabout.

    He added that the party has plans to contest “maybe four” constituencies, and reiterated its intentions of working together with other parties to avoid splitting the opposition vote.

    “If they have a stronger team, we’ll make way for them,” said Mr Tan, an investment advisor who ran for the 2011 general elections under the Singapore Democratic Party’s banner.

    He added: “The whole idea is to win. We are all in favour of opposition unity. We will respect other parties. The real objective is to defeat the PAP.”

    SingFirst has spoken to the National Solidarity Party and the Democratic Progressive Party, Mr Tan said. The Singapore Democratic Party have waved away the need for a formal introduction, while the Singapore Malay National Organisation and the Singapore Democratic Alliance have said they need to hold internal discussions before agreeing to work together.

    The Reform Party, the Singapore People’s Party and the Workers’ Party – the only opposition party with elected MPs in Parliament – have not responded to SingFirst’s overtures, said Mr Tan.

    But he is not worried: “We still have time. No need to rush. Election is not around the corner so there’s still some time. We’ll work something out.”

    Dressed in royal blue shirts bearing the party’s red-and-white logo, SingFirst’s members and supporters visited areas around the Holland Drive Market and Food Centre for close to two hours, shaking hands and giving out pamphlets explaining the party’s objectives.

    Explaining why the party chose to visit Tanjong Pagar GRC, Mr Tan said residents in the constituency have not had the chance to vote for more than 20 years.

    The constituency has been won by the PAP in walkovers since it was created in 1991. In 2011, a group of independents led by businessman Ng Teck Siong – chairman of the Socialist Front – made a last-minute bid to contest the GRC, but was disqualified after submitting their nomination papers too late.

    SingFirst plans to visit various constituencies in the coming months to drum up awareness about the party – a strategic move as electoral boundaries have not been set in stone, said Mr Tan.

    The party’s chairman Dr Ang Yong Guan also added that SingFirst is hoping to make a shift away from “personality-based politics”, where political parties are associated with certain key people.

    “We want to move away from that and tell Singaporeans that political parties in Singapore need not be linked to any person. It needs to be for all. Anybody interested can come and join,” he said.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • LATEST: ‘Singaporeans First’ Is The Newest Political Party

    LATEST: ‘Singaporeans First’ Is The Newest Political Party

    Singapore First Party

    Dear fellow Singaporeans, friends and supporters,

    I am pleased to announce that SINGAPOREANS FIRST has been successfully registered as a society by the Registry of Societies. Following the registration, we submitted our proposed party symbol for approval. We expect the process to take a few weeks. Until it is approved, we cannot make use of the party logo.

    We can now conduct activities of an approved political party. We need members to help us. If you share our beliefs and values (as stated in our Manifesto here), please join us by filling up this SINGAPOREANS FIRST MEMBERSHIP FORM.

    In the months ahead, we will be planning a series of activities leading up to the next General Election. We welcome ideas from all Singaporeans. You can approach any of the members of the protem committee listed below :

    Chairman : Dr Ang Yong Guan,

    Vice chairman : Tan Peng Ann,

    Secretary-General : Tan Jee Say,

    Assistant-Secretary General : Loke Pak Hoe,

    Treasurer : Dr David Foo Ming Jin,

    Assistant Treasurer : Fatimah Akhtar,

    Members : Michael Chia, Fahmi Rais, Winston Lim, David Tan.

    We look forward to your support.

    Tan Jee Say

    Source: https://www.facebook.com/notes/tan-jee-say/breaking-news/697375350341743

     

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  • Two Successful Muslims Join Newest Political Party – Singaporeans First

     

     

    Singaporeans First PArty

    SingaporeanFirstParty_members

    [UPDATE on Sunday, 25 May, 11.00am: Adding details of party’s name, logo, manifesto and founding members]

    Former presidential candidate Tan Jee Say unveiled Singapore’s newest political party, Singaporeans First, on Sunday.

    The party’s manifesto — “Fair Society, Strong Families and Esteemed People” — was announced along with a list of 11 founding members, which include 60-year-old Tan himself as well as members of the medical profession, architects and company directors.

    They include Dr Ang Yong Guan, psychiatrist and former grassroots leader, who along with Tan ran under the Singapore Democratic Party banner at the 2011 elections; Michael Chia, retired engineer and volunteer social worker; Fahmi Rais, communications professional and former Young PAP member; Fatimah Akhtar, architect; Dr David Foo Ming Jin, chemist and former Young PAP member; Jamie Lee Swee Yan, IT professional; Winston Lim, architect; Loke Pak Hoe, company director; and Tan Peng Ann, retired army colonel and former PAP grassroots leader.

    Speaking at the party’s unveiling on Sunday at a media conference, Tan said discussions about forming a new party first began last year, and that joining a current opposition party instead of starting a new one was the “easy way out”.

    When asked if his new Singaporeans First party would dilute opposition votes further, Tan said it would depend on how the opposition would work together, adding that he was also open to forming coalitions. The next General Election is due to be held by 2016.

    On what the new party stood for, Tan said it aimed to remove the Goods and Services Tax, because it was especially unfair to lower and middle class Singaporeans. Another key policy it was aiming for was free education as it wanted to increase the fertility rate by making it affordable to raise children in Singapore. It also proposed unemployment insurance, old age pension and affordable healthcare.

    Tan added the party would begin walkabouts and preparing policy papers for public consultation after formally registering the party, which he estimated would take two months.

    A financial adviser and fund manager, party leader Tan was formerly the principal private secretary to then Deputy Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong. He and Dr Ang had previously ran for 2011 elections together under the SDP banner in the Holland-Bukit Timah GRC.

    Tan left the political party before announcing his candidacy for the 2011 presidential election. He garnered 25% of popular votes, losing out to Tan Cheng Bock and eventual President Tony Tan Keng Yam.

    After the elections, Tan had leased a three-storey building along Orchard Road to host weekly policy discussions. The venue, known as “Heart Beat”, had to be closed down following tenancy issues. The space was reportedly approved for restaurant and office use only.

    Source: Yahoo SG

    MORE ARTICLES ON SINGAPORE POLITICS HERE

     

     

    EDITOR’S NOTE

    Congratulations to Fahmi Rais and Fatimah Akhtar for embarking in their new challenging journeys – politics. Developing and exercising power require having both will and skill. It is the will that often seems to be missing for most people, and we hope it will not happen to any of our Malay and Muslim leaders. The Malay & Muslim community, and Rilek1Corner family are very happy and extremely proud to learn about their involvement. We wish the new leaders the best in this new political dispensation. We need a nation that will be filled with remarkable development. Towards a better future in Singapore. 

     

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