Sunday, April 5, 2009
Dr Lee Wei Ling - Why I choose to remain single
Sun, Apr 05, 2009 - The Straits Times
My parents have a loving relationship, but I knew I could not live my life around a husband
By Lee Wei Ling
My father became prime minister in 1959, when I was just four years old. Inevitably, most people know me as Lee Kuan Yew's daughter.
My every move, every word, is scrutinised and sometimes subject to criticism. One friend said I lived in a glass house. After my father's recent comment on my lack of culinary skills, another observed: 'You live in a house without any walls.' Fortunately, I am not easily embarrassed.
As long as my conscience is clear, what other people say of me does not bother me. Indeed, I am open about my life since the more I try to conceal from the public, the wilder the speculation becomes.
My father said of my mother two weeks ago: 'My wife was...not a traditional wife. She was educated, a professional woman... We had Ah Mahs, reliable, professional, dependable. (My wife) came back every lunchtime to have lunch with the children.'
Actually, my mother was a traditional wife and mother. She was not traditional only in one respect: She was also a professional woman and, for many years, the family's main breadwinner.
One of my mother's proudest possessions is a gold pendant that my father commissioned for her. He had a calligrapher engrave on the pendant the following characters: 'xian qi liang mu' and 'nei xian wai de'.
The first four characters mean virtuous wife and caring mother. The second four mean wise in looking after the family, virtuous in behaviour towards the outside world.
My mother lived her life around my father and, while we were young, around her children. I remember my mother protesting gently once about something my father had asked her to do.
'It is a partnership, dear,' my father urged.
'But it is not an equal partnership,' my mother replied.
The partnership may not have been exactly equal at particular points in time. But over the years, especially after my mother's health deteriorated after she suffered a stroke, my father was the one who took care of her. She clearly indicated she preferred my father's care to that of the doctors', in itself a revelation of the quality of his care.
He remembers her complicated regime of medications. Because she cannot see on the left side of her visual field, he sits on her left during meals. He prompts her to eat the food on the left side of her plate and picks up whatever food her left hand drops on the table.
I have always admired my father for his dedication to Singapore, his determination to do what is right, his courage in standing up to foreigners who try to tell us how to run our country.
But my father was also the eldest son in a typical Peranakan family. He cannot even crack a soft-boiled egg - such things not being expected of men, especially eldest sons, in Peranakan families.
But when my mother's health deteriorated, he readily adjusted his lifestyle to accommodate her, took care of her medications and lived his life around her. I knew how much effort it took him to do all this, and I was surprised that he was able to make the effort.
If my parents have such a loving relationship, why then did I decide to remain single?
Firstly, my mother set the bar too high for me. I could not envisage being the kind of wife and mother she had been.
Secondly, I am temperamentally similar to my father. Indeed, he once said to me: 'You have all my traits - but to such an exaggerated degree that they become a disadvantage in you.'
When my father made that pendant for my mother, he also commissioned one for me. But the words he chose for me were very different from those he chose for my mother.
On one side of my pendant was engraved 'yang jing xu rui', which means to conserve energy and build up strength. On the other side was engraved 'chu lei ba cui', which means to stand out and excel.
The latter was added just for completion. His main message was in the first phrase, telling me, in effect, not to be so intense about so many things in life.
I knew I could not live my life around a husband; nor would I want a husband to live his life around me. Of course, there are any number of variations in marital relationships between those extremes. But there is always a need for spouses to change their behaviour or habits to suit each other. I have always been set in my ways and did not fancy changing my behaviour or lifestyle.
I had my first date when I was 21 years old. He was a doctor in the hospital ward I was posted to. We went out to a dinner party. I noted that the other guests were all rich socialites. I dropped him like a hot potato.
In 2005, while on an African safari with a small group of friends, one of them, Professor C.N. Lee, listed the men who had tried to woo me. There were three besides the first. Two were converted into friends and another, like the first, was dropped.
I am now 54 years old and happily single. In addition to my nuclear family, I have a close circle of friends. Most of my friends are men. But my reputation is such that their female partners would never consider me a threat.
More than 10 years ago, when there was still a slim chance I might have got married, my father told me: 'Your mother and I could be selfish and feel happy that you remain single and can look after us in our old age. But you will be lonely.'
I was not convinced. Better one person feeling lonely than two people miserable because they cannot adapt to each other, I figured.
I do not regret my choice. But I want to end with a warning to young men and women: What works for me may not work for others.
Many years ago, a young single woman asked me about training in neurology in a top US hospital. I advised her to 'grab the opportunity'.
She did and stayed away for eight years. She returned to Singapore in her late 30s and now worries that she may have missed her chance to get married.
Fertility in women drops dramatically with age, and older mothers run the risk of having offspring with congenital abnormalities.
Recent studies show also that advanced paternal age is associated with an increased risk of neurodevelopmental disorders in offspring, such as autism and schizophrenia, not to mention dyslexia and a subtle reduction in intelligence. Men can also suffer from diminished fertility with age although there is wide individual variation.
I would advise young men and women not to delay getting married and having children. I say this not to be politically correct. I say it in all sincerity because I have enjoyed a happy family life as a daughter and a sister, and I see both my brothers enjoying their own families.
Dr Lee Wei Ling
The writer is director of the National Neuroscience Institute.
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Can Singaporeans think?
SINGAPORE - It would not be surprising if such a question has been weighing on every Singaporean’s mind at one point of time or another. This is by no means an exhuastive topic, and it may not be possible to cover every inch of ground.
Singapore has always been governed using a top down approach. Put simply, the government decides every facet of a Singaporean’s life from the management of his national savings to the type of flat he is supposed to stay in. Ordinary Singaporeans have no part to play in the decision-making process. In a discussion on different types of citizenship participation and non-participation in a seminal piece titled “A Ladder of Citizen Participation”, Sherry Arnstein defined citizenship participation as a form of power re-distribution that enables under-privileged citizens who were excluded from the political and economic processes to be included. In a way, this will lead to the empowerment of such citizens.
Sadly in Singapore’s case, all ordinary citizens inclusive of under-privileged ones have no say in the decisions that concern them. And it is ironical when the government turns around and exhort citizens not to be reliant on it. The problem is that if citizens are not empowered through their participation within the decision-making process, when will they ever learn to be independent of the government?
That is not say Singaporeans cannot think in general. It is quite comforting to note that there are substantial number of Singaporeans who seek ways and means to highlight their concerns. In the past, it used to be sending forum letters to our mainstream media. The problem is that the chances of such letters getting published depends a lot on the political sensitivity of its contents and a huge dose of chance of course. Thus, the online media offers an attractive alternative. And it is pretty easy to set up an online interest group for individuals with a common interest to band together. In fact, the online media is fast becoming the collection vase for the thoughts of thinking Singaporeans.
Reverting back to the under-privileged citizens, their continued marginalization is further reinforced by a deeper malaise entrenched within our establishment - your credibility is determined by the strength of your educational certificates. The under-privileged citizens remain at the losing end because the latter cannot afford to upgrade themselves. This malaise of discriminating Singaporeans on the basis of educational certificates reared its ugly head when Mr Lee Kuan Yew compared the “O” level certificates of Mr Chiam See Tong and Mr Mah Bow Tan when the former competed with the latter at Potong Pasir constituency during the 1984 General Elections.
This condescending attitude of dismissing the thoughts of lesser qualified (in terms of paper) Singaporeans has to stop one way or another. Especially when there is a universal understanding that one cannot learn all the ropes of life in the classroom. The fact that Mr Mah lost to Mr Chiam despite having better “O” level results serves as a strong vindication of this understanding. Thus, there should be a general consciousness encouraging the appreciation of intellectual contributions by all Singaporeans regardless of educational status.
Now, we have an interesting question on our hands - can the ones who run Singapore think? My no-brainer answer would be “I don’t know”. I have never worked in the government sector (inclusive of government-linked companies) once in my life, having been in the private sector ever since I graduated. However, I did have an interesting encounter with an acquaintance of mine. Seemingly, her elder brother was doing some work for a government panel looking into improvements on different areas of concern to Singaporeans. Naturally, my conversation with her shifted to national issues. What happened was that I cited the post of a forumer at the Sammyboy Alfresco Coffeeshop forum. She excitedly called her brother on her cell phone and communicated to him the suggestions of this particular forummer. I was wondering aloud if this panel that her brother was working for was really bereft of ideas. I nearly wanted to give the weblink to Sammyboy Alfresco Coffeeshop to her brother.
An interesting area to look at is our government’s management of knowledge-based enterprises such as Research and Development programs. The results are very obvious - Singapore science obviously needs to pull up its socks. Although much criticisms have been raised about the use of scientific citations to gauge the quality of research, it is still the best form of measurement nonetheless. According to Thomson ISI, the average number of cites per science paper produced in Singapore for the last 10 years is 4.53, which places it at 92nd out of 145 countries. Undoubtedly, pro-government apologists might want to point to the fact that Singapore ranks 36th in terms of the number of papers produced. But more doesn’t mean better. A highly cited paper would be one that is considered important in that particular field, which possibly arise as a result of groundbreaking research.
Thus, the cause of Singapore’s poor performance as reflected by Thomson ISI can be attributed to the intertwining of Singapore research with our bureaucracy. Our bureacracy has a pragmatic approach to things. They want instant results, albeit in the commercial sense. Even in the tie-up between Johns Hopkins and A*STAR, the former has to fulfill a list of Key Performance Indicators. What happened was a subsequent divorce because Johns Hopkins couldn’t address all the KPIs, most of which included filing of new patented technologies. Try asking a hard-nosed pragmatic bureaucrat if he is willing to fund fundamental scientific research that may not have commercial implications. The odds of the latter saying yes is that of the sun rising from the west.
And of course, we cannot afford to miss out everyone’s favorite topic on our education system. The part about creative learning is a well-trodden one addressed by other experts. What really interests us is the role of teachers in facilitating thinking ,especially on issues of national interest. During my junior college days, I adopted a rather flippant attitude towards my studies. In short, I was the “all play no work” kind of student. I was admonished once by my form teacher, who pointed out that I have to assume more responsibilities during my upcoming NS days. I simply rebutted her that in NS, everyone just want to do the minimum and leave, and shirking responsibilities is the norm. She pressed me for my source of information. My reply was online forums and chat groups. She simply told me not to visit those sites and abstain from logging on into those chat groups. If she is reading this article of mine, she should try to answer this rhetorical question:”Do you think continued censorship will produce thinking students?”
Our education service has been criticized for being excessively robotic - the renowned 10 years series approach. My friend and I did an interesting experiment once. You see, this friend of mine took economics during his junior college days. He was asked to do an economics essay question for his assignment. It was coincidental that a third friend of ours had the same question for his economics 101 course in his undergrad institution . This third friend of ours scored an A+ for his essay, and it was graded by none other than his ivy league-trained economics professor. So we basically lifted our friend’s economics essay and he handed up his essay. We basically got a shock when my friend got back his essay - a measly 3 out of 20. The reason - the answer my friend gave was markedly different from the suggested answer scheme.
Of course, how can we ever forget our dear mainstream media? There is only dissemination of one school of thought by our ever present mainstream media - the one that toes the official line. Thus, the problem is the same one as my earlier encounter with my junior college form teacher. By boxing oneself from the multitude of other viewpoints, will one ever get to pick up essential critical thinking skills? Perhaps, my question should be made more specific by now - can Singaporeans think critically?
It is well-known that the Singapore system is governed by a plethora of rules and regulations. However, one group of Singaporeans impressed me - those who continually find ways to work around the system. Although initially disadvantaged by these rules, they managed to turn their position into an advantage. And this indicates that they have put on their thinking caps indeed. Instead of going brain dead when facing the deadly maze of the system, these chaps continue to seek creative means to churn out a pathway to their destination.
Can Singaporeans think? Yes of course. However, work must be done to create the fertile conditions for effective thinking to take place.
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Singapore's Shame 2 - A Culture of Fear
Singapore’s Shame (Chapter 2 - A Culture of Fear)
By Dr James Gomez, Author, Self-Censorship: Singapore’s Shame
Self-Censorship: Singapore’s Shame (2nd Edition) is an updated version of the original book written by Dr James Gomez in 1999. In James Gomez’s view, the time has come to re-look at the strategy of generating increased political advocacy in Singapore, and in this context, to ask what is the status of self-censorship in Singapore — has it decreased, or evolved into something else? Dr James Gomez is of the view that self-censorship remains alive in Singapore’s political landscape, in mainstream society, in academia, and even in certain Opposition parties. He is currently working on the 2nd Edition of his original book based on feedback and input, and will be pondering on what’s next for civil society and Opposition politics.
CHAPTER 2: A Culture of Fear
When it comes to discussions of political culture a commonly used phrase is the “culture of fear”. In Singapore, a culture of fear is seen as driving self-censorship. This culture of fear is something that has been constructed by the PAP government through its historical tightening of political controls in spite of its occasional rhetoric of openness. This deliberately manufactured fear is aimed at securing social and political control over citizens and foreign residents in Singapore. It is the reason why people become anxious about political participation and justify self-censorship because a culture of fear exisits. How has this fear been created in Singapore?
The culture of fear is related to political development in Singapore. Discussions on the political development in the city-state have been reviewed from a number of perspectives over the last three decades. One writer attributed this political conservatism to the ideological hegemony of the ruling party and to Asian values (Chua, 1996). While another argued that the economy of Singapore was used to as tool of social control and to nurture political conservatism in the republic (Tremewan, 1994).
Others have suggested that the character of the middle class has something to do with this state of affairs (Rodan, 1992; Jones and Brown, 1994). The tactics of the PAP and its authoritarian character have also been identified as having explanatory potential (Rodan, 1993). Much earlier, local political scientist Chan Heng Chee had explained conservatism as a result of “politics” being absorbed into the state bureaucracy (Chan, 1975).
Former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew’s political style, together with his use of legal action at the courts, have also been proffered as contributing to the state of political conservatism here (Haas, 1999; Seow, 1994 and 1998; Selvam, 1991; Minchin, 1986). However, the centrality of Lee’s role in Singapore politics is now being challenged on several fronts. For instance, one book that tries to map the contributions of his other colleagues (Lam and Tan, 1999) while others include political autobiographies such as that of Said Zahari (2001 and 2007) which collectively challenge the centrality of Lee Kuan Yew in Singapore`s political history.
The contemporary structures of changes in Singapore have also been identified as shaping political conservatism in Singapore. Analyses have focused on the strategies of the PAP, the institutional restrictions against independent political expression and the reforms that have taken place to “accommodate” the demand for greater political participation (Heng, 1997; Rodan, 1997; and Lam, 1997) as well as restrictions place over the internet, political films and public protests.
Issues concerning elections have also been considered relevant to the local political culture. One writer has provided an overall description of the Singapore electoral system and the accompanying changes over the years (Thio, 1997) while another has focused on the failure of the electoral system in representing alternative voices (Rodan, 1996). There are also several local academics have sought to explain the general and other elections in Singapore (Mutalib, 1992 and 1993; Singh, 1992; da Cunha, 1997). In my own PhD thesis on the impact of the internet on the electoral system, I concluded that political culture contributed in part to upholding the electoral system in Singapore that continuously returns the PAP into power (Gomez 2008).
Some works on civil society, mainly emanating from PAP government think-tanks, seek to make a distinction between civil and political society (Ooi and Goh, 1999). Others claim that civil society will be the site of future political contestation (Tay, 1998). Implicit in local discussions on civil society is that “neutral” or “non-partisan” political culture of such groups is the preferred choice.
There are only a few studies that have directly commented on political culture and behaviour in Singapore. Most works on the Republic’s political development, if they refer to political behaviour, use the term “political culture” (Soin Tan, 1993; Khong, 1995; Jeyaretnam, 1997), though it is not adequately explained, described or gauged. Often, it is mentioned in passing, without any depth of deliberation. Most discussions on self-censorship have often been used in relation to the media and local media in particular. The application of the concept self-censorship has only been used in a limited way to explain Singaporean political culture. Almost none discuss its role in a post-internet environment in Singapore.
Discussion on domestic political culture often go back to the features of traditional heritage, religion, political history of the region and ethnic origins of the migrant population in Singapore. Conventional explanations often state that the nature of political conservatism on the island can be attributed to ethnic culture. Understood in rigid ethnic categories, Singapore is made up of 75% Chinese, 14% Malay, 6% Indians and 5% Others. However, such categories are increasingly becoming irrelevant as more foreigners from non-traditional sources of immigration countries such as the Burma, Nepal, Philippines, Vietnam and elsewhere settle and work in Singapore.
One piece of work that attempted an ethnic explanation was an early study, which focused on the Chinese community (Clammer, 1985). The writer argued that their large numbers in Singapore sinicised the political culture of the Republic. Hence, the disdain that the Chinese hold for politics is reflected across the board in Singapore, he said. The writer pointed out that the majority Chinese, as opposed to the minorities, are politically conservative. He believed that this was one reason why political development in Singapore has largely mirrored the cultural conservatism of the ethnic majority. He offered as reasons, the social structure and attitudes of the Chinese community towards politics.
The PAP government has been able to manipulate and stretch this cultural argument to all ethnic communities in Singapore, in the 1990s, to sell the idea of an “Asian values” system, which tries to render democracy as a culturally Western-style alien concept. Modeled after Confucianism, Asian values instead are said to entail a belief in good government by honest men and includes a reverence for authority. As such, direct opposition is not to be encouraged; instead, consensus building is to be supported. While, arguments from ethnicity can hold some explanatory relevance, the uncritical use of ethnic explanations for political behaviour, needs to be guarded against. For instance, it is important to recognise that Singapore`s minority communities in the broad sense of the word are generally not involved in politics. In political parties, especially opposition parties, ethnic minority community participation is small, token or non-existent. Minority communities in Singapore have essentially abandoned politics and live their daily lives as a community unto themselves.
Often the plural ethno-religious make up of the city-state is used to pre-empt political change. Pictures of ethnic strife drawn from two early riots in the Republic’s history have been well utilised in government discourse to help the citizens and foreign residents to internalise risk aversive behaviour when it comes to politics. On the basis of frailties of statehood and a narrow range of policy instruments available for ethno-centered policies, the use of culture in this way aids the retention of the existing system. The argument from ethnic culture attempts to paint alternative views as dangerous, anti-establishment, unreflective of aspirations of the majority and as “fringe” interests. In this way, it perpetuates popular attempts to endanger and marginalise alternative views. For instance, demands for political space are often represented as the wants of minorities. The demand for political space is frequently depicted as a concern only of ethnic minorities, the English-educated, sexual minorities, academics and eccentric elements of society. Additionally, the push for liberal values and democracy is portrayed as the demand by a small group of people who use such ‘romantic’ notions as a strategy to gain political attention.
But the explanation via ethnicity does not clarify why political participation in other East Asian countries such as South Korea and Taiwan is large and highly impassioned. Further, it does not explain why a very disparately constituted group of Chinese-educated, blue-collared workers and the man in the street elbowed for political space some 40 years ago in the Republic. There is nothing inherent in Asian cultures that make self-censoring a necessary feature. Instead, much of the promotion of group solidarity and the rejection of self-assertion and individual rights are systemic of Asian one-party dominated regimes or military dictatorships such as in Burma, China, Laos, Vietnam and even Japan. Thus, there is a need to go beyond ethnic culture to look at structures to explain the political culture that is uniquely Singaporean, cutting across ethnic lines and affecting even those of other nationalities residing in the Republic. There is something deeper than ethnicity that explains the state of political culture and fear in Singapore.
Economics has also been used to explain local political behaviour. Linked to the presence of a patron-client relationship between the PAP and the majority of the voters, the economic success of the republic is said to have created gratitude, loyalty and dependency among citizens and foreigners residing in Singapore for the ruling party. The fact is the PAP government is literally the largest employer in terms of percentage of total jobs in the economy. This position as the lead employer includes the number of government jobs (not just civil service, but includes all quasi-government and non-government entities that receive government funds or come under some form of government control). Add to this the percentage of total value of the stock market under state control (through Temasek, Government Investment Corporation, etc) versus that which is in truly private hands (bearing in mind that a lot of ‘private’ owners are active participants in the patronage system). Work in also the size of small and medium enterprises versus the size of MNCs and PAP government controlled businesses (Singapore Airlines, SingTel, etc) and this shows the link between the level of self-censorship how much the PAP government controls the livelihood of its citizens and foreign workers. Most people are not willing to do something to jeopardize their career or livelihood. The connection of the Republic’s economic success to the PAP is manifested in the way individuals and groups preface remarks about politics, especially their desire for greater political participation, with accolades for the ruling party and its leaders that is at the same time coupled with expressions of gratitude and loyalty. It is a ritual that is clearly observable at local conferences, meetings and speeches at events.
The political behaviour of the middle-class is highly relevant in any study of the nation’s economic culture. Based on it; size, some commentators note that middle-class behaviour represents the political culture of Singaporean society. They argue that the republic’s large middle-class, whose material consumption is linked to the state, does not want to upset the status quo. This special dependency is in part supported by the people’s obsession with material gain. Since citizens and foreign workers alike in Singapore are motivated by the need to constantly gather material advantage and get ahead, a national trait referred to locally as kiasuism is seen as an intrinsic character of this middle class. The ruling party taps this deep-seated desire of the people for materialism and therefore continually plays the economic card for its political ends. Feelings of anxiety and uncertainty displayed by the economically dependent middle class’ whenever the ruling party raises the spectre of economic downfall have been linked to the slow rate of the democratisation process in Singapore (Jones and Brown, 1994).
Even though some have endeavoured to show that the middle class itself is complex (Chua and Tan, 1995), economic dependency has been accepted as one explanation why the Singapore middle-class does not initiate political change. One writer speaks in terms of an ideological consensus between the PAP government and the electorate that has been based on a shared interest in economic growth (Chua, 1998). In 2008 when the mini-bond issues broke out in Singapore following the collapse of the Lehman Brothers, the initial crowds that gathered at the Speakers Corner eventually dissipated without building on the momentum for mass political action.
But the similarity between the political culture of the elite class and the masses, arising out of a centralised and punitive political system, goes beyond economics and the citizenry. This phenomenon has also affected the behaviour of foreign residents in the Republic and other foreigners who have dealings with the country. Those who do not publicly subscribe to this larger political culture or have actively taken part in what is seen as antagonistic political activity have been deported or their resident, work or student permits terminated or not renewed. This larger impact of political culture reveals lacunae in theories of democratisation that expected a course of political action from the middle-class.
Another account of political conservatism in the Republic focuses on the popular fear that the PAP will persecute any independent political expression. This fear originates from the perception that the government takes punitive action against its political opponents. In Singapore, there have been numerous examples of individuals who have challenged the political leaders of the country and suffered from detention without trial or have had defamation, bankruptcy and tax evasion suits filed against them. The challengers’ names and characters have been subjected to negative campaigning through a compliant local press. Such examples of negative campaigning of civil society activists and various opposition politicians in the past and present stay vivid in the minds of the people and perpetuate the fear. Memories lead opposition figures subjected to negative campaigning include Chia Thye Poh, Tan Wah Piow, JB Jeyaretnam, Francis Seow, Chee Soon Juan, and in 2006 when I contested the general elections against the PAP, I joined the ranks of these figures.
Fear is also due to the presence of the Internal Security Department (ISD) and its surveillance of political activities. The ISD makes its surveillance activities fairly visible, especially during opposition party activities or when political figures meet members of foreign embassies, overseas opposition politicians and civil society actors. The surveillance also covers religious activities, academic, social and theatre gatherings. Tertiary institutions such as polytechnics and universities are also monitored by handlers through student and academic informers. The public can get a fairly detailed account of the workings of the ISD, and its detention and interrogation techniques from Francis Seow’s book To Catch a Tartor: Dissident in Lee Kuan Yew’s Prison (Seow, 1994), supplementary information can also be found in (Tan, Gomez, 1999) and ( Hong 2009; Tan, Teo and Koh 2009).
There is also an informal culture of curiosity over each others` perceived political activity and the accompanying rumour mongering that acts as a mass surveillance device that feeds the formal surveillance network. The fear against surveillance is so widespread that presence of the ISD is evoked even when lay people speak of politics, make telephone calls or send messages via the Internet or post articles on blogs. With the arrival of the internet, there is a perception and acceptance that internet content is constantly being monitored by the authorities. Further, online anonymity that features prominently in internet chat rooms and in the comment sections of blogs is accepted as non-existent. The belief is that the PAP government and its agents have the technical and financial means to track every single anonymous online entity and that “radical” bloggers are invited out for a chat by government agents and persuaded to moderate their stance! Adding to this, are revelations that a Singapore-based company has supplied sophisticated intelligence gathering equipment to Burma’s military-rulers that is capable of intercepting all sorts of telephone and fax messages as well as e-mail and radio communications aggravates the situation even further (2nd September, Far Eastern Economic Review 1999).
Fear has also been attributed to an underlying apprehension that the vote is not secret, that voting against the ruling party could have a negative impact on voters’ livelihood, or that any alternative political views that individuals may have might be held against them. This mind-set is prevalent among many civil servants, employees in government-linked companies, and those who see themselves as being in one way or another connected to the state for their livelihood in Singapore. Being the largest employer and financial patron on the island, the PAP government has a psychological influence over the way a significant number of the people vote during elections. In 1997, the direct threats to withhold funding for precincts voting against the PAP had an immediate influence on voter behaviour (da Cuhna, 1997). In the last two general elections in 2001 and 2006, the PAP has turned to giving cash incentives such as Singapore Shares and other cash rebates to appeal to voter materialism.
Perceptions of a whole network of informal pressures that pulsate through the state machinery also contribute to fear. This is believed to take the form of “advice” and “pressure” put on civil servants or those in employment outside the civil service but who are nonetheless susceptible to pressure in having their actions deterred or curtailed. A frequently cited example is that immediate superiors advise their junior workers on the wisdom of engaging in particular political activities or associating with certain individuals and their causes. Failing to adhere to such advice is viewed as courting risk in losing one’s job, being demoted, being passed over for promotion or transferred to lesser departments in the organisation.
It is easy to agree that fear caused by perceptions of the surveillance and intimidation activities of the ISD, the wrath of the service machinery plus informal government pressures can be a powerful deterrent to alternative political activity and thought. However, ethnicity, economics and fear offered as individual explanations of a typically Singaporean political culture are not satisfactory. They do not demonstrate clearly the relationship between the political structure and behaviour, and how the two are part of a complex interdependent and mutually constitutive relationship in a dominant one-party regime. More importantly they do not reveal the dynamics of political self-censorship and the act of censoring others that are central to how this political culture manifests itself in material form. Thus other perspectives and ideas are needed to complement present understandings of how the system is constantly reproduced.
Culture is often treated as an abstract value system but it has its physical manifestation in people’s behaviour. The structural determination of a dominant Singaporean political culture and its material manifestation are significant. Censorship should not be understood in negative terms as an “absence” or failure in political life, of what is not done, but as an active material behaviour that itself shapes events in the real world. Censorship impacts on political structure and participation and is in turn constituted by these. Simply put, the current system is responsible for facilitating the censorial behaviour one witnesses in Singapore and such behaviour in return helps keep same the structure and fear in place. Each is necessary for the other.
In such an environment how does one think of political development or reform? What is the way forward? What strategies should one adopt?
In the next chapter, Singapore’s political history is briefly surveyed to trace the emergence and character of this dominant culture of self-censorship and the act of censoring others. It shows that it is mainly in contemporary Singapore that such a censorial climate emerged - a consequence of a systematic attempt by the PAP to contain alternative political expression.
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Loss in popular votes is a failure for PAP, but success for Singapore
Loss in popular votes is a failure for PAP, but success for Singapore
In an article published titled “How will the PAP fare in a long recession“, Senior writer Chua Mui Hoong warned that the PAP may lose the popular vote in a prologed recession and it will be a ‘failure’ which both the party and Singapore have to contemplate. (read full article here)
Let me first correct the three factual inaccuracies in Ms Chua’s statement:
1. The PAP has never quite won the popular vote since the introduction of the GRC system which has seen nearly half or more of the constituencies being “won” by them without any contest.
In the last general election, only 56.6% of eligible voters were able to cast their votes. The PAP claimed it won 66.6% of the popular votes but this percentage is only a pathetic 29% of the total number of eligible voters.
2. The loss in popular vote will be a failure for the PAP, but a success for Singapore as this will usher in a new dawn in Singapore politics where voters are no longer held swayed by the “carrots” and “sticks” dangled at them by the PAP.
3. The PAP’s stranglehold on Singapore is what we have to contemplate instead: why can’t we kick it out of government after so many years?
We have to draw a clear demarcation between the party and the state. The PAP is a registered political party under the Registry of Societies. The government of Singapore is formed by the political party or a coalition of parties which won over half the popular vote in general elections held every 5 years as stipulated under the Constitution.
The PAP can fail, but not Singapore and Singapore will not fail in the event that the PAP does because I have confidence in our tiny, but highly educated population to produce another team of leaders to take over from the PAP.
The political party which is able to defeat the PAP at the polls will surely have sufficient talents in its ranks to form the government already.
It is high time the PAP fails to make way for a more deserving team of Singaporeans to run the country. In fact, it has already failed and failed miserably at that.
It failed when it decided to peg their salaries to the private sector while remaining oblivious to the plight of the lower income-group resulting in widespread disaffection and cyncism amongst the populace towaeds the government.
It failed when it chose the easy way out by opening the flood gates for foreigners to compete with the locals for jobs instead of doing more to develop our own human capital.
It failed when it turned a blind eye to the blatant blunders made by senior leaders instead of holding them accountable.
And most importantly, it failed when it gambled our future away recklessly. We are still kept in the dark on the amount of reserves remaining in our kitty.
These are just some of the PAP’s failures. The complete list is surely longer than what have been elucidated.
The PAP is an obsolete party living on past glories and achievements and has nothing to look forward to in the future other than preserving its own self-interests and legacy at the expense of Singapore.
Its obsession with controlling all facets of Singapore life has stifled creativity, impaired our competitiveness and created much resentment and frustration on the ground, especially in the young who are increasingly voting against them with their feet.
Why do young Singaporeans have no sense of belonging to their land of birth? Why do they yearn for greener pastures elsewhere? And why are they so apathetic towards current affairs of the state and averse to politics?
These are symptoms of a nanny state which is a reflection of the overbearing dominance of the party leading to a weak, divided and disillusioned citizenry.
The PAP must fail for the sake of Singapore. Either it reforms itself and expunges the dynastic pretences of a particular family to become a political party again to compete with others on a level-playing field or it continues down the slippery slope into oblivion and taking Singapore along with it.
As Dean of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy Kishore Mahbubani argued in a thought-provoking article in The Straits Times last Wednesday, contemplating the prospect of failure is one way to stave off failure.
Which matters more to the PAP - the prospects of its own failure or the demise of Singapore?
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Lim Boon Heng: 'Bonus' not a dirty word
By Nur Dianah Suhaimi | ||
| | Mr Lim said people should not mistake a bonus as 'somebody getting something extra and undeserved and out of line with the current economic situation'. -- ST PHOTO: ARTHUR LEE CH |
Speaking at the launch of this year's Singapore Kindness Month, he noted that public anger arose in the United States over large bonuses paid to executives of failed American corporations because of the economic downturn.
'Nowadays, the word 'bonus' is almost a dirty word,' he said in his speech. 'There has been great misunderstanding over what the word 'bonus' entails. You have to understand that in today's context, companies' bonuses are part and parcel of the overall wage package.'
'We now operate differently from the past. So, let us not get overexcited whenever we see the word 'bonus' being used,' he added.
He said the uproar over bonuses paid by troubled firms like AIG was because the American public perceived these to have come from government bailouts.
But Mr Lim said people should not mistake a bonus as 'somebody getting something extra and undeserved and out of line with the current economic situation'.
He stressed that, with the downturn, it is even more important for Singaporeans to be kind and considerate towards others.
He also called on Singaporeans to be kind to foreigners living here, such as students from overseas.
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North Korea rocket launch: A 'provocative act'
| | This undated photo released by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on March 26, 2009 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il (center) inspecting the construction site of the Huichon power station in Jagang province. -- PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE |
The missile launch is an early test for US President Barack Obama, who had joined other world leaders in urging the hardline communist state to drop plans to test a missile.
China quiet on NKorea rocket launch BEIJING- CHINA remained quiet for more than an hour after a rocket launch by North Korea Sunday, with state media quoting only South Korean and Japanese government sources and media when reporting the news. A Chinese foreign ministry spokesman refused to comment on the launch when contacted by AFP, and said he would be in contact 'as soon as possible' with information. Obama: NKorea launch violated UN resolution WASHINGTON - US President Barack Obama on Sunday called North Korea's rocket launch 'provocative' and a clear violation of UN Security Council rules. Here is the full text of Mr Obama's statement. |
'Certainly it threatens the whole safely and security of that region,' State Department spokesman Fred Lash said as he confirmed the launch late on Saturday Washington time.
'We look on this as a provocative act and certainly would - from the United States - take appropriate steps to let North Korea know that it can't threaten the safety and security of other countries with impunity and acts like these,' Mr Lash said.
He said that the test violated UN Security Council Resolution 1718, which was adopted after Pyongyang carried out a nuclear test in 2006.
That resolution had imposed sanctions on military goods and luxury products to North Korea and warned it not to carry out any further nuclear of ballistic missile tests.
Japan requested an emergency UN Security Council meeting shortly after the launch. The UN Security Council said it will hold consultations on the North Korean missile launch at 3pm EDT on Sunday (3am Singapore time on Monday), a UN diplomat said.
The consultations of the 15 Security Council members will take place behind closed doors.
Diplomats say Japan and the United States want the council to pass a resolution condemning the launch and calling for tougher enforcement of existing U.N. sanctions against North Korea.
'As you know, it's a violation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1718,' Mr Lash said. 'We know that for a fact. We certainly will take that under consideration in the next few days.' Congressman Howard Berman, who heads the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said that the UN Security Council should take action.
'The test is an unnecessary provocation that raises tensions in the region,' Mr Berman said in a statement.
Mr Berman called on China and Russia - which have diplomatic ties with Pyongyang - to join ranks with the United States and its allies Japan and South Korea in condemning the test.
The five countries are part of deadlocked negotiations on ending North Korea's nuclear programme. -- AFP, REUTERS
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North Korea's rocket passes over Japan
| | This satellite image provided by DigitalGlobe shows a missile on the launchpad at Musudan-ni, North Korea, formally known as Taepodong missile launch facility. The image was collected Sunday March 29, 2009. -- PHOTO: ASSOCIATED PRESS |
Washington said it would take steps to let the reclusive North know it could not threaten regional security. South Korea called the launch of the rocket, seen by many powers as a disguised missile test, a 'reckless' act.
SKorea calls emergency UN meeting UNITED NATIONS/TOKYO - JAPAN'S UN ambassador on Saturday requested an emergency meeting of the Security Council to discuss North Korea's rocket launch. No time for the meeting was announced, but it could take place as soon as Sunday. Security Council diplomats said arranging such a meeting usually takes at least half a day. No reports of debris falling SEOUL - SOUTH Korea's presidential office has confirmed North Korea's launch of a long-range rocket launch from its east coast base. The Blue House says liftoff took place at 11.30 am (10.30am Singapore time) Facts on NKorea's missile arsenal SEOUL - NORTH Korea, which fired a long-range rocket on Sunday, has for decades been developing missiles both for what it terms self-defence and as a lucrative export commodity. The hardline communist North said it was launching a communications satellite as part of a peaceful space programme, and the South Korean government said a satellite was aboard the rocket. |
'The launch by the North Koreans is seen as a provocative act and will prompt the United States to take appropriate steps to let North Korea know that it cannot threaten the safety and security of (other) countries with impunity,' State Department spokesman Fred Lash told reporters in a conference call.
Japan said it stopped monitoring the Taepodong-2 rocket after it had passed 2,100 km (1,305 miles) east of Tokyo, indicating the launch had been a success. In its only previous test flight, in July 2006, the rocket blew apart 40 seconds after launch.
South Korea's Yonhap news agency quoted a government official in Seoul as saying the rocket appeared to have carried a satellite, which Pyongyang had insisted was its plan.
The United States, South Korea and Japan had said the launch would actually be the test of the Taepodong-2, which is designed to carry a warhead as far as Alaska. It has an estimated range of 6,700 km (4,200 miles).
Sunday was the second day in the April 4-8 timeframe the secretive North, which tested a nuclear device in 2006, had set for the launch.
The first rocket booster stage appeared to drop into the Sea of Japan, an estimated 280 km (170 miles) west of the northern Japan coast, the prime minister's office said in a statement.
The second piece appeared to fall into the Pacific Ocean.
Stephen Bosworth, Washington's special envoy for North Korea, last week suggested the launch was a foregone conclusion and that he hoped to bring the North back to six-party talks on ending its nuclear programmes once the 'dust' had settled over the launch.
While saying the talks among the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the United States were central to efforts to get North Korea to give up its nuclear programme, he also said Washington was ready for direct contact with Pyongyang at any time.
The six-party talks stalled in December and Pyongyang has threatened to quit the dialogue if the United Nations imposes any punishment over its rocket launch. -- REUTERS
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North Korea's Rocket a test of nuke missile
Impoverished North Korea, which for years has used military threats to wring concessions from regional powers, has said it is putting a satellite into orbit as part of a peaceful space programme and threatened war if the rocket was intercepted.
Analysis HERE are some comments from analysts about North Korea's launch of a long-range missile on Sunday. Brian Myers, Professor at south Korea's Dongseo University 'Whether the launch is successful or not is not as important as foreign people think because Kim Jong-il will have scored an internal propaganda coup simply be defying the world with impunity. He will be seen as firing this missile off into a hostile world, heedless of everybody who is trying to stop him from firing it. Chronology of North Korean missile development THERE are key dates in Pyongyang's missile development: Late 1970s: Starts working on a version of the Soviet Scud-B (range 300 km or 187 miles). Test-fired in 1984 1987-92: Begins developing variant of Scud-C (500 km), Rodong-1 (1,300 km), Taepodong-1 (2,500 km), Musudan-1 (3,000 km) and Taepodong-2 (6,700 km) Aug 1998: Test-fires Taepodong-1 over Japan as part of failed satellite launch Sept 1999: Declares moratorium on long-range missile tests amid improving ties with US |
Analysts said the launch may help North Korean leader Kim Jong-il shore up support after a suspected stroke in August raised questions of his grip on power and bolster his hand in using military threats to win concessions from global powers.
The United States, Japan and South Korea see the launch as a violation of a UN Security Council resolution passed in 2006 after Pyongyang carried out the nuclear test and other missile tests.
That resolution, number 1718, demands North Korea 'suspend all activities related to its ballistic missile programme'.
UN Security Council diplomats have told Reuters on condition of anonymity that no country was considering imposing new sanctions but the starting point could be discussing a resolution for the stricter enforcement of earlier sanctions.
Both Russia and China, the latter the nearest the reclusive North has to a major ally, have made clear they would block new sanctions by the Council, where they have veto power.
Analysts say North Korea wants good film footage of a launch as part of plans to maximise its propaganda value.
The regime is seen as eager to give its people news of a technological triumph to bolster support at a time of lingering uncertainty over the health of leader Kim Jong-Il.
There are widespread reports Kim suffered a stroke last August. While apparently largely recovered, the incident has raised questions about who would succeed the 67-year-old.
North Korea is also seen as trying to strengthen its hand with Washington in future nuclear disarmament negotiations. The Taepodong-2 could reach Alaska or Hawaii at maximum range, but the North is not thought to have configured a warhead for it yet.
Pyongyang has said that even a debate about its launch in the UN Security Council - let alone any sanctions - would cause the breakdown of long-running six-nation nuclear disarmament talks. - REUTERS, AFP
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Why Lee Wei Ling chooses to remain Single?
An article written by Dr Lee Wei Ling, Director and Senior Consultant of the National Neurology Institute, who is better known to Singaporeans as the daughter of Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew appeared in “The Sunday Times” today. The article was titled “Why I choose to remain Single?” in which Dr Lee shared with readers the reasons for her choosing to remain single.
Dr Lee began her article describing the great love, care and bonding between her parents, especially during this period when her mother’s health is not as good as before. Few paragraphs later, she brought readers back to her reasons for choosing to remain single, though it was mentioned Dr Lee has suitors and dated before.
As gleaned from the article, the two reasons Dr Lee gave for choosing to remain single are:
“Firstly, my mother set the bar too high for me. I could not envisage being the kind of mother and mother she has been” … Statement 1
“Secondly, I am temperamentally similar to my father. Indeed, he once said to me: “You have all my traits-but to such an exaggerated degree that they become such a disadvantage to you.” ” … Statement 2
Dr Lee further mentioned in the article that:
“I knew I could not live my life around a husband; nor would I want a husband to live his life around me …” … Statement 3
“I have always been set in my ways and did not fancy changing my behaviour or lifestyle” … Statement 4
I believe the two reasons Dr Lee gave are something she could resolve. Firstly, Dr Lee needs not envisage being the kind of mother and mother her mother has been. Dr Lee could take some of the good attributes of her mother on being a good mother and wife and weaves into her (Dr Lee Wei Ling’s) very own style of being a wife and mother. She needs not envisage being 100% the kind of mother her mother has been. No one is identical in the world, Dr Lee could just carve out her own style of being a wife and mother, learning from and sharing with the senior Mrs Lee at times when needed.
Next on temperament, the second reason cited by Dr Lee. I do not know what her temperament or Mr Lee Kuan Yew’s temperament is as I do not really know them well except seeing them in the news and newspapers regularly. But such thing as temperament could be worked out by finding a partner who could accommodate one’s temperament and accept one for who he or she is.. this is Love. Lets face it, a couple, no matter how close they are, will always have each’s differences and weaknesses for which they will accommodate, assimilate between them and complement with the other’s strengths.
Analysing the entire article, I believe the main reasons for Dr Lee’s choice of singlehood stems from the third and fourth statement which I have outlined above, though in the article, these two latter reasons were brought in only subtly, the third and fourth statement read:
“I knew I could not live my life around a husband; nor would I want a husband to live his life around me …”
“I have always been set in my ways and did not fancy changing my behaviour or lifestyle”
Dr Lee has shared candidly with readers her two above-mentioned perspectives, which I believe are also reasons for a bulk of local women choosing to remain single for the rest of their life. But what I must emphasize is that it is not THE reason per se for women in Singapore remaining single. A clear distinction must be made when we talk about the reasons for singlehood of local women: some women crave for companionship but due to certain reasons or circumstances, they are not able to find partners or are divorced; the other half of the equation is women who CHOOSE to remain single. It is in the later context that I believe the third and fourth statements hold true for a number of local women who choose to remain single.
The whole issue of local women or women in general choosing to remain single boils down to her frame of mind: her preferences to remain single for certain reasons for which Dr Lee has given two (statement 3 and 4). Reading this article by Dr Lee Wei Ling, I found myself reading an article similar to that written by Ms Sumiko Tan, one of the editors in The Sunday Times, for which she dishes out her experiences of remaining single, choosing to be single or her experiences as a single regularly to readers.
Lets face the fact, everyone has just one life on this earth, and all of us have limited time, we have absolute control or choice on how we want to live. I believe one’s choice of remaining single or married is entirely his or hers… the most important thing is when making this choice of singlehood or marriagehood, one must be happy with this decision. For me, personally, I find it more meaningful to have a life partner, my Dear who will walk with me, our lives together and share in the fun and together tide over challenges that life will dish out to us at times.
I would like to salute Dr Lee when she concluded her article with an encouragement to all single Singaporeans to get hitched and procreate early when the ripe time comes as late parenthood may have implications in fertility or in the off-springs as she has so rightfully cautions. To conclude, this article, coming from what is often seen as the First Family in Singapore, would, I believe, touches the heart of many Singaporeans for Dr Lee Wei Ling, daughter of the distinguished Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew still shares the same common experiences of the some of the single average folks on the streets….of course, you may say Dr Lee Wei Ling, is after all still a human being, but what I must applaud Dr Lee is the fact that she dares to bare all her thoughts and experiences of a topic which may still seem taboo to many older single ladies in this modern era, in full public view.
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Impact of defamation suits on the nature of electoral politics
SINGAPORE - What do Dr Chee Soon Juan, the late Joshua Benjamin Jeyaratnam and Mr Tang Liang Hong have in common? No prizes for guessing the obvious answer - all of them were at the receiving end of ruinous defamatory suits and thrown into the abyss of bankruptcy. No one is ever a supporter of political parties resorting to legal recourse against their opponents. Such a move merely stifles political debates and is a definite invitation to criticisms.
Amid the critiques, little attention is paid to the impact of defamation suits on the nature of electoral politics. In fact, it can be ironically argued that defamation suits may end up being a positive selective pressure in improving the quality of political discourse. Why is this so? The reasoning is simple and really a matter of common sense. This will force the parties especially those from the opposition to focus on discussing pertinent issues.
The opposition definitely do not have any incentive to resort to character labelling of their rivals because that would open up the possibility of a ruinous defamation suit. Thus, sticking to discussion of national issues would be the safest bet. The PAP will also be forced back to the policy drawing board in addressing the opposition’s points. And the cut and thrust of an actual political debate will be played out for all to see, without all the taunting and colorful labelling.
This observation holds true in the case of Worker’s Party during the rallies of General Elections 2006. Mr Low Thia Kiang discussed the price increases for government-regulated services and the high costs of living. Miss Sylvia Lim brought up the issue of wards mean testing, asserting that its current implementation is not synchronous with the people’s concerns.
If one were to observe the typical Singapore electorate, a range of 10 - 20% of the voters are what you call diehard anti-PAP fans. These are the types who will vote for any entity who contests against the PAP. Thus, it is the remaining voters who will swing the outcome either side. And it is likely such voters would like to hear parties articulate on issues concerning them.
It is interesting to note that Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC has a high probability of seeing a contest after a long hiatus of walkovers. The key reason according to our mainsteam media is the escape of Mas Selamat Kastari under Mr Wong Kan Seng’s watch. The impression one gets from reading the mainstream media is that Mas Selamat’s escape might count against him, and that is why the opposition is targeting his GRC.
Our mainstream media may be a little narrow in its assessment. The topic of Mas Selamat’s escape is no longer a hot one. The first year anniversay of his escape has already passed. Yes, this may have cost Mr Wong Kan Seng some votes, but it is important not to be lulled into putting all the eggs into the Mas Selamat basket. At the end of the day, the majority of the voters at Bishan-Toa Payoh would like to hear the PAP and opposition debate on pertinent issues. Indeed, it would be interesting to hear Mr Wong, a Home Affairs minister, debate on other issues outside his security domain.
It seems likely that pertinent issues our nation is currently facing will be the focus of our next election. Debating real issues is the hallmark of political maturity, whilst missionary school boys interested in taunting their opponents should just be left at home!
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Don’t knock us, our rice bowls are not iron
Military and civil service high-fliers nearing or past their tenures struggle to keep up in corporate world
By Ho Ai Li & Susan Long
A WELL-KNOWN chief executive of a global company here tells how he receives persistent calls from former scholars who have graduated from Oxford, Cambridge and Imperial College.
Some are military officers about to hit 45. Others are from the Government’s elite administrative service, in their 50s and nearing the end of 10-year tenures.
Some are so desperate to ’sell’ themselves that they ask what time he will be in the gym so they can run on the treadmill next to him and make their pitch.
‘It’s very sad,’ observed the CEO, who spoke to The Straits Times on condition of anonymity. ‘In Singapore, above 45, you cannot be looking for a job. The job must be looking for you.’
Things are getting tougher for military or civil service high-fliers nearing or past their shelf life. Previously, most were absorbed by government-linked companies (GLCs) or statutory boards when it was time to leave.
But these days, GLCs - which are becoming more bottom-line-driven and moving from passive asset management to aggressive overseas expansion - prefer to hire those who can hit the ground running from Day One. These would be people with experience in global banking, financial services, mergers and acquisitions, leisure entertainment and customer relations.
Unfortunately, those leaving the military and civil service lack that global perspective and struggle to keep up, say corporate observers and recruiters.
According to human resources consultancy Hewitt Associates country head Na Boon Chong: ‘The challenge has moved from managing a large organisation to helping guide the company through significant industry changes. The latter requires depth of specific industry experience, which retiring civil servants or military officers often lack.’
Finding them a job in the private sector is also a problem. Singapore’s contract manufacturing industry is shrinking and the growth of home-grown companies with pockets deep enough to hire such high-calibre candidates is just not able to keep pace with the conveyor belt of government scholars today. Each year, the public sector gives out about 250 scholarships.
What aggravates matters, said executive headhunter Richard Hoon, is that former military men can be too used to the regimented life.
‘Maybe only one out of 100 can adapt to the corporate world. The rest have to work hard and undergo personal coaching to be ‘demilitarised’,’ he said.
‘They have a certain bravado, talk in a certain way and have a certain mindset that’s not attractive to employers. They used to be officers, always managing others. But stripped of their uniform, they’re just ordinary people with a difficult transition to make.’
Many also lack the soft skills so necessary in the business world.
Outplacement specialist Paul Heng said: ‘Stories are plentiful about ex-civil servants and army officers who behave as if they are still sitting in their ivory towers, giving orders to the troops. Some are downright patronising.
‘They need to inspire confidence in interviewers that, not only can they do the job, but they can also assimilate into the company culture and work well with others.’
The ‘cultural re-adaptation’ process can take months, even years. As such, this group now competes with the droves of other over-40, out-of-work managers looking for work.
Some complain that while the Government exhorts industry to hire older workers, it is not quite walking the talk itself.
In 1998, the career span of military officers was reduced from 27 to 23 years, meaning that those who joined after 1998 would retire at about 42, instead of about 45 previously.
Since 2000, the Administrative Service has ruled that those appointed to Public Service Leadership jobs will have only 10 years’ tenure for each position, such as permanent secretaries, deputy secretaries or chief executives of major statutory boards.
The rationale is to maintain a steady turnover, help the organisation avoid becoming too settled in its ways, and encourage young and capable officers to remain in service and strive for top posts.
What that means, a fast-rising administrative officer said, is that you have to actively work towards your next tenure during your current one.
‘If you get promoted to permanent secretary too early, or something goes wrong, you miss a step and can’t get to the next level. The conveyor belt of scholars relentlessly moves on and pushes you out. And there you are - yet another out-of-job older worker,’ said the officer, who is in his 30s.
His own exit plan? He is banking on regional demand for senior civil servants with deep policy expertise and operational experience.
At 37, another government scholar who is now doing well sometimes worries whether he will be able to survive on the outside in his mid-40s.
‘Honestly, a lot of us have no idea what we can do outside,’ he said. ‘Our rice bowl is not iron or as glamorous as people think it is.
‘I know people think we have it made and are so well-trained that we can easily be absorbed into industry. But it’s a misperception that needs to be corrected because there’s obviously a mismatch between what the public sees and what our potential employers see.’
With the clock ticking away, he has begun finding out how he can get into financial advisory work. He is also managing his expectations downwards and keeping his commitments spare, by not upgrading from his Housing Board flat.
Also cautious is a former government scholarship holder and Cambridge graduate now working as a researcher.
At 45, and having seen the corporate carnage that claimed some of his 40-something peers, he is considering starting a cafe or getting trained to be a masseur.
‘In your 40s and 50s, more than at any other time, you need financial stability. Yet, it’s the age when you’re the most vulnerable,’ he said. ‘There’s a heartless bottom-line economic calculation going on and companies are quite happy to cut you loose.
‘The slippery slope to unemployment can start suddenly. It can be one year, one bad move down the road. The tragedy for scholars is that they have always been on an ascending path. The thought of levelling off or falling down is scary.’
But there are stories of courageous and successful transitions too, like that of lieutenant-colonel-turned-entrepreneur Nicholas Koh, 46.
The former deputy head of naval logistics (platform systems) and navy scholar had the option of staying on till 47, but chose to ‘bite the bullet early’.
In 2002, at 42, he took a smaller gratuity package and left to join ST Engineering as vice-president of defence business.
‘I wanted to get out early and start gaining valuable corporate experience to build my future while I still had energy,’ said the father of two teenagers. ‘I didn’t want to get too used to a comfortable life.’
In 2003, he quit the job that paid around $150,000 a year, took a painful pay cut and set up Victory Knights Management Consultancy.
‘It was my baptism of fire. I decided to fight for it out there. No point looking for short-term havens,’ he said.
His firm administers a marine technology master’s programme offered by the University of Newcastle upon Tyne. Last year, it also ventured into Oman, where it helps to incubate environmental technology and property development companies.
‘Out there in the commercial world, it’s war. Generals and colonels who are able to fight a war should be able to fight for themselves. If they can’t, they don’t deserve their former rank and status,’ he declared.
‘Public funds have been used to groom them in the past, so they should come out into society and create new ways to contribute back to Singapore’s economy.’
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