Friday, April 10, 2009

JBJ's son in Reform Party

April 10, 2009
JBJ's son in Reform Party

Opposition party member open to contesting next GE

By Kor Kian Beng & Jeremy Au Yong
Mr Jeyaretnam, a fund manager, sees a need for a 'real economist' on the political scene. -- TNP FILE PHOTO
MR KENNETH Jeyaretnam, the elder son of late opposition leader J.B. Jeyaretnam, has joined the opposition ranks and is not ruling out contesting the next general election.

Three weeks ago, he joined the Reform Party, which was set up by his father a few months before he died last September.

The 50-year-old hedge fund manager was co-opted into the party's 13-man central executive committee (CEC) a week later.

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MM Lee: Malaysia and Singapore take different paths

MM Lee says Malaysia and Singapore to continue to collaborate
By Hasnita Majid, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 09 April 2009 2157 hrs

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Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew

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Singapore's foreign policy must remain relevant to ensure its survival

SINGAPORE: Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew has said Singapore and Malaysia will continue to collaborate on areas of mutual interest such as security and terrorism.

But he sees both countries taking different paths in future because of differences in fundamental views.

He was speaking during the question and answer session of the S Rajaratnam Lecture.

Mr Lee spoke of Singapore and Malaysia sharing a common history. But he sees a different future for both countries.

He said that while Singapore is a multi-racial meritocracy, its neighbours organise their societies on the supremacy of the indigenous population, such as Bumiputras in Malaysia and Pribumis in Indonesia.

As for Singapore, he added that although it is becoming an integrated society, the jury is still out whether it can remain cohesive under extreme circumstances.

He said: "I'm not sure if we're put through a stress test, if famine breaks out and you've got to share your rice, will you share with your family and your clan or will you share it with your neighbour who may not be of the same race? I am not sure what the end result will be because we have not been put through that extreme test which is the final test."

Mr Lee noted that in its pursuit of improving its competitiveness, Singapore is always raising the benchmark in areas such as cleanliness and efficiency.

While it may make some countries uncomfortable, it is ultimately good for the region.

He said: "We started greening, Malaysia started greening, Thailand started greening, Indonesia started greening. China studied our system, went down to parks and trees and looked at our administrative arrangements and they can go to Shenzhen, Shanghai and the place is green! So I think that we should set the benchmark, raise the standard. They may feel uncomfortable but it's good for everybody."

Mr Lee also said that countries that do not adapt quickly to technological changes will lag behind and pay the price.

But Singapore has no intention of doing so.

"I don't know what changes that will come, but I know that we have to stay ahead and be part of it," he said.

- CNA/ir

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MM Lee: Singapore's foreign policy must remain relevant to ensure its survival

Singapore's foreign policy must remain relevant to ensure its survival
By Hasnita Majid, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 09 April 2009 2036 hrs

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Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew

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MM Lee says Malaysia and Singapore to continue to collaborate
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Singapore's foreign policy must remain relevant to ensure its survival

SINGAPORE: Singapore has to remain relevant so that other countries have an interest in its continued survival.

Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew said this at the S Rajaratnam Lecture.

Mr Lee spoke at length about Singapore's foreign policy and the economic imperative to create political and economic space for itself.

To ensure survival, small countries like Singapore have to rise above geographical and resource constraints and be accepted as a serious player internationally.

To achieve this, Mr Lee said, Singapore must be different from others and maintain a competitive edge.

He said: "We have to try and forecast what are the countries that will help us grow. In the early days, back in 1960s, 1970s up to 1990s, it was first Taiwan, Hong Kong and Japan, America, then Europe. Then we could see China was rising, so we went out of our way to be helpful to them, we went to Suzhou. You've got to anticipate the shape of things that will come, before they come, so that you are there."

Mr Lee noted that as the world changes, small countries have to swiftly adjust their policies and positions and remain nimble to seize opportunities that come with changing circumstances.

A post-Cold War world, he said, brings a different global order.

And, amidst the current economic crisis, China's growth will hasten. Mr Lee noted that while the Asian giant is growing at 8 per cent, the US may suffer negative or low growth. Despite this, American resilience and creativity should never be underestimated.

Mr Lee said: "Their great advantage is not in military influence but in their economic influence. They are part of Asia, they are close, they've offered help to Korea. Together with Japan, they've got an FTA with ASEAN. They got special relationship now with India, they have the manpower to do things cheaper in any part of the world economically. Their influence can only grow and grow beyond the capabilities of America.

"China will pull ahead of Europe, Japan, India and Russia. US-China relations are setting the framework for East Asia. In the latter 21st century, US-China relations will become the most important bilateral relationship in the world, like the US-USSR relations during the Cold War."

Singapore, he said, must embrace the reality of globalisation and be prepared to maximise opportunities and manage challenges. For this, it needs leaders who are able to discern future trends and grasp opportunities ahead of others.

Mr Lee said: "But ultimately, it is the Prime Minister and other key ministers who decide on changes in policies. At face-to-face meetings over long hours, they can sense each other's thinking and leanings before their officials are privy to them. Hence, our foreign policy from 1965 was settled by the PM and his key ministers.

"A mediocre PM and Cabinet will decline our standing with other countries and we will lose opportunities like the lead we enjoy in Free Trade Agreements or Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements with the US, Japan, China, India, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand; and our close relations with the oil states of the Gulf."

Mr Lee noted that while time has worn down the sharper edges in Singapore's relationship with its immediate neighbours, some complexities will remain due to the differences in political and social systems.

But as long as every generation of Singaporeans does not forget the fundamentals of Singapore's vulnerabilities and remain alert and cohesive, he is confident that Singapore will survive and prosper.

- CNA/ir

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Questions on SAF bonds, platform doors

Questions on SAF bonds, platform doors

Friday • April 10, 2009

WHILE platform screen-doors are being rolled out at all open platform MRT stations, what’s being done meanwhile for passengers’ safety? Can Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) officers on bonds apply to leave the service early?

While the theme of the economic downturn continues to run through questions filed for Monday’s sitting of Parliament, some recent deaths in the news have also sparked questions by parliamentarians.

The death of SAF Captain Dr Allan Ooi, for instance, has put on the spotlight on SAF service bonds. Tampines GRC MP Irene Ng is asking the Defence Minister under what circumstances it will allow bonded officers to resign; and how many such requests there have been over the years.

With two deaths this year of passengers who had fallen onto MRT tracks, Sembawang GRC’s Lim Wee Kiak is asking for an update on the programme to install half-height screen doors at all open platforms; and whether this would be accelerated.

On the recession’s impact on business, Ang Mo Kio GRC’s Lee Bee Wah wants to know if the National Development Minister will freeze all JTC and HDB rentals.

Also, was he aware of banks not being willing to extend existing loan periods for property developers to tide them over the times? Would he consider, asked Ms Lee, assisting the developers?

Three Government Bills will be read a second time: Preservation of Public Monuments, Public Order and Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore.

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Widjaja's Family seeks clarifications

Family seeks clarifications

Friday • April 10, 2009

Teo Xuanwei

xuanwei@mediacorp.com.sg

THE family of David Widjaja, the Nanyang Technological University (NTU) student who fell to his death on campus last month after allegedly stabbing his lecturer, is in Singapore to seek clarification from the authorities on several matters.

William, David’s elder brother, told 938Live they want to meet the police, NTU president Su Guaning, Associate Professor Chan Kap Luk — the victim in the alleged attack — and those they believe have information on the case. He and his parents were spotted at the Indonesian Embassy on Wednesday afternoon.

The family have queries about David’s autopsy report released on April 2.

Said Mr William Widjaja: “The police gave it to NTU, not the Indonesian Embassy. That’s strange because it should have been released to the embassy to be legalised first, before the autopsy report could be given to the family.”

When contacted, a police spokesman told Today the family had authorised the university to collect the report on April 2. It was sent to the family in Indonesia the following morning.

The spokesman said the case has been fixed for further court mention on April 17 and the family will be kept updated.

“The family has yet to contact us but should they want to meet up with the police, they can contact us directly or through the embassy.”

NTU told Today that the family had requested, through the Indonesian Embassy on Wednesday afternoon, to meet Dr Su for an update.

Unable to reschedule Dr Su’s appointments due to the short notice, NTU suggested the parents meet with the university’s senior associate Provost — in charge of undergraduate education — that evening instead.

But the family could only meet yesterday, said NTU, and so a meeting was scheduled but they did not turn up.

Meanwhile, the police highlighted errors in an April 1 report in the Jakarta Globe. The family claimed a police officer had told them David, 21, had no cuts on his wrists. No such comments were made, said the spokesman.

“It is unhelpful for uninvolved parties including the media to speculate on the circumstances or cause of death, or comment on how the case is being handled,” he said. “The police will be thorough in its investigations to establish what actually happened”.

Mr Widjaja said the family will hold a news conference in Singapore in a few days.


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MM Lee: This century’s most important relationship

This century’s most important relationship

... and why each would want Singapore on itsside, according to MM Lee

Friday • April 10, 2009

Leong Wee Keat

weekeat@mediacorp.com.sg

TIES between the United States and China will become the world’s most important bilateral relationship in the latter part of the 21st century, similar to the US-Soviet Union relationship during the Cold War, said Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew.

“As the dominant global power, preserving the status quo is in US interests. As a rising power, China will not acquiesce to a status quo indefinitely. Competition is inevitable, but conflict is not,” said Mr Lee.

While the economic crisis would hasten China’s growth vis-a-vis the US and allow the Chinese to close in on the lead the US enjoys, Mr Lee feels relations will remain stable — provided the world does not slide into protectionism.

For the next few decades, America is most likely to remain the dominant global player. China, on its part, will be a global player “in another three to four decades”; already it has “made beachheads in the Middle East, Africa and Latin America”, but its preoccupations for now are domestic and in North-east and South-east Asia.

In Mr Lee’s view, it is not China’s interest to displace America now but to bide its time.

The Chinese’s “great advantage is not in military influence but in their economic influence”, he added. “They have the manpower to do things cheaper in every part of the world ... And at a fraction of the cost of the American expatriate ... Economically, their influence can only grow, and grow beyond the capabilities of America.”

Could a “G2” — a partnership of the US and China envisioned by some US thinkers — materialise? And how would that affect small states like Singapore, asked the East Asian Institute’s director Zheng Yongnian.

“Would small states have more or less international space than in the Cold War era, when the world was divided by the Soviets and the US?” said Professor Zheng.

Mr Lee said a partial G2 dialogue already exists, with China and the US institutionalising high-level talks aimed at enhancing bilateral ties.

But he does not believe the Chinese are ready to be on the same level as the US. “Maybe in another 50 to 100 years, they might have the same technology, the same capabilities. At the moment, it’s asymmetrical,” he said. “Yes, it’s a sudden rise ... but if you put a Chinese fighter aircraft against an American fighter aircraft, I would put my money on the American.”

As for Singapore, Mr Lee was of the opinion that both powers would want to have the Republic on their side, because of its strategic location.

Noting that the Americans have a naval logistics base here, he said: “We have told the Chinese that if your ships want to come to our naval base, you are welcomed. As we welcome Indian ships and so on. We are a kind of sea-going citizen. Omni-directional, as the Japanese would say.”

As for the world’s current financial and economic woes, he said, these require a “global rebalancing of consumption and savings” — a change in economic relationships between the US and China. “The American consumers must spend within their means. The Chinese consumers must increase their domestic spending,” he said. “This will be a difficult transition.”

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Is whistleblower protection necessary in Singapore?

Is whistleblower protection necessary in Singapore?

Reverend Ming Yi, the founder and former CEO of the Ren Ci Charity, is currently on trial for serious abuses of authority and mismanagement of funds. This is the latest scandal to hit the local charity sector, after the Youth Challenge scandal in 2007, and the NKF scandal in 2005. In all three instances, a capable, charismatic leader became so powerful that they became a law unto themselves, with each individual charity’s Board of Directors simply rubberstamping their decisions instead of keeping a watchful vigilance on their activities.

During Rev. Ming Yi’s trial, a key witness, Mrs. Chan Ching Oi, a member of the Ren Ci Charity Hospital management committee, said that the committee members weren’t aware of how much Rev. Ming was paid. Instead, he was allowed to set his own salary and run the foundation any way he felt like. In short, the hospital management committee and the Ren Ci Charity foundation’s Board of Directors were guilty of gross dereliction of duty. When asked why, Mrs. Chan replied that Rev. Ming was a highly respected Buddhist monk, so there was no reason not to trust him; especially since he had worked very hard to make the charity what it is today, the second largest charity foundation in the country after the National Kidney Foundation. What is strange about this of course is that Buddhist monks have taken a vow of poverty, so why Rev. Ming Yi was paid a salary instead of having it all donated to charity is a question that the Board has to answer for.

This is not the first instance of a charity CEO being allowed to do as he pleased with the tacit compliance of the Board of Directors. T. T. Durai also ran the NKF on the basis of trust from its board. And look where it got them. Vincent Lam ran Youth Challenge on the basis of trust from its board as well. And look where it got them too. So did other charities such as SATA. And look at what happened each and every single time. Isn’t this ample proof that a leader who was once capable and responsible may eventually become corrupted and lose sight of his original mission when given unlimited power without any mechanisms of checks-and-balances?

Following the NKF scandal, Dr. Vivian Balakrishnan, the Minister of Community, Youth and Sports said that the lack of transparency in the foundation was unacceptable, and said that it should never happen again. This, of course, came after Durai dropped his defamation suit against Singapore Press Holdings. It should be noted that before the facts surrounding Durai’s abuses became public knowledge, both the NKF’s former patron, Mrs. Goh Chok Tong, and the Minister for Health, Mr. Khaw Boon Wan, had openly showed support for him. Mrs. Goh even said that Durai’s $600,000/- annual salary was “peanuts” for a capable CEO who had done as much for the foundation as he had. Yet despite Dr. Balakrishnan’s statement that such similar incidents “should never happen again”, such incidents did happen again. And again. And again.

Haven’t the authorities learnt anything by now? Don’t these repeated failures of governances prove that the existing system in Singapore has failed to prevent such abuses? Don’t they prove that a fresh approach towards enforcement of governance is required, and that not only is a system of checks and balances necessary to prevent abuses of authority by CEOs, but that whistleblower protection is absolutely vital to ensure that executives aren’t able to misuse their authority with impunity? The government’s reassurances that they have only appointed the best holds no water: T. T. Durai, Rev. Ming Yi, Vincent Lam and others were all proven capable leaders; the real problem wasn’t that they were incompetent, the real problem was that they became intoxicated with power and lost sight of their original objectives. Had whistleblower protection been part of Singapore law, it is highly unlikely that these problems would have gone on for as long as they have or grew as large as they did; the whistleblowers would have surfaced these problems into the public’s attention, and the problems themselves nipped in the bud.

Before the NKF scandal became public knowledge, then-Prime Minister Mr. Goh Chok Tong said that the failures of governances in the Enron saga and World.Com proved that the American system had its weaknesses, and that Singapore’s “Asian-values” based system was better suited for us. Yet was the American system truly a failure, at least in the Enron case? A closer examination of the facts would seem to indicate otherwise. It is true that the auditors in the Enron and World.com scandals failed to uncover serious abuses by the CEOs of these countries, but that was only the first level of safeguarding. The second level, whistleblower protection, worked very well in the Enron scandal, as it enabled Enron CEO Kenneth Lay’s Executive Secretary Ms. Sharron Watkins to expose his crimes publicly, putting an end to his abuses. And certainly the NKF, Youth Challenge and Ren Ci scandals all proved the failures of their respective auditors to detect managerial abuses. The possibility that a whistleblower protection program could have resulted in the emergences of local answers to Ms. Watkins, who courageously jeopardized her own career to expose Mr. Lay’s abuses, and that the actions of such individuals could have prevented these scandals from escalating out of control the way they did, cannot be ruled out. So how then is Singapore’s “Asian-values” based governance enforcement system superior, when not only did local auditors fail to uncover abuses, just as in the Enron case, but its lack of whistleblower protection in turn meant that staffs who are aware of such abuses cannot safely report them without fear of reprisals?

So what is the excuse that the government gives for not protecting whistleblowers then? That it is to prevent employees with an ax to grind from sabotaging their superiors? And how often do good, capable superiors get sabotaged by disgruntled staffs? After all, good capable leaders are usually highly-respected, if not well-liked by their staffs. On the contrary, the leaders that tend to be loathed by their staffs tend to be incompetent, even corrupted. Isn’t exposing high level corruption far more important than the risk of an occasional low-ranking troublemaker trying to sabotage a fair, capable leader? If Boards of Directors prefer to trust their management instead of monitoring their performances, let alone protecting whistleblowers who risk their careers to expose corruption and abuse by these managers, then would they not have failed in their duty to ensure their managements’ accountabilities for their actions? Or are they afraid that whistleblowers may reveal facts that could be very embarrassing for them, even if nothing illegal was done?

This is a question that appears to answer itself: it was a whistleblower that revealed that two employees of the North-West CDC had received 8 months bonus payments. Since then, Dr. Teo Ho Pin, mayor of the North-West precinct, Mr. Khaw Boon Wan, MP for Woodlands GRC, and Mr. Lim Boon Heng, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office, have all repeatedly stumbled over themselves trying to justify the payments. Or to avoid having to answer for the payments, as the case may be. Whatever the case may be, having such extravagances made public during a recession proved to be most embarrassing for the authorities, who seem unable to account for their “ignorance” of the matter, and to even appear foolish in public by their repeated claims of “I don’t know.” It is very likely that they privately wish that the whistleblower would simply crawl under a rock and die instead of publicly exposing this matter instead.

On the question of accountability, who do the CEOs of GIC or Temasek Holdings answer to? The people? Parliament? The President? The Finance Minister? Having lost millions in failed investments, who are they supposed to explain these debacles to? And more importantly, why are no answers forthcoming? If Singapore society functions on the basis of “trust”, then clearly the CEOs of GIC and Temasek Holdings have failed in delivering on the “trust” invested in them, as can be seen by their failures to invest the country’s monies wisely, to take responsibility for their failings, and to answer for their mistakes. Of course, there is no known indication or even suggestion of illegal actions on the part of anyone in the loss of monies in these organizations; nonetheless, even if everything done was entirely above-board, whistleblower protection may still have caused the bad investments made to surface earlier, allowing for swift action to stem losses. Had such whistleblower protection systems been in place, the amounts lost may have been far less, possibly even negligible.

The abuses by Durai, Ming Yi and Vincent Lam could very easily have been nipped in the bud by whistleblower protection. According to Mr. Khaw Boon Wan, several independent investigations had been conducted by MoH into allegations against the NKF, and nothing untoward was ever found. Yet it was obvious that things were very wrong there, as was eventually revealed. Were there no witnesses that the investigators could have spoken to? It would certainly seem that way, based upon Mr. Khaw’s claims, and yet several whistleblowers who tried to report Durai’s excesses were sued by him, some into bankruptcy, because their identities were known to him. How this could possibly happen remains unknown, unless of course their identities were revealed to him for him to conduct internal investigations into his own misdeeds. If this was indeed the case, then why Durai and the NKF board were entrusted to investigate allegations of their own misdeeds instead of an impartial, external third-party investigation conducted should be publicly queried. Regardless of the reasons for this, the lack of whistleblower protection meant that they knew who were reporting their abuses, and they made sure that these well-intentioned people pay for their courageous acts dearly. Anyone who has done nothing wrong has nothing to fear from whistleblowing. This commonsense adage should make everyone wonder why the authorities are so afraid of whistleblowers that they refuse to protect them.

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Kenneth Jeyaretnam co-opted into Reform Party CEC

Kenneth Jeyaretnam co-opted into Reform Party CEC

Friday, 10 April 2009

Mr Kenneth Jeyaretnam, the elder son of the late opposition leader Mr J.B. Jeyaretnam, joined the opposition Reform Party three weeks ago and has been co-opted into the party’s Central Executive Committee, according to the Straits Times.

The Reform Party (RP) was set up by the late Mr JB Jeyaretnam a few months before he died last September.

“The 50-year-old hedge fund manager was co-opted into the party’s 13-man central executive committee (CEC) a week later,” the Straits Times says.

Mr Jeyaretnam, who graduated from Cambridge with a double-first class honours degree in economics, had been working in London for several years. He returned to Singapore last year when his father took ill.

When contacted by The Online Citizen, the Reform Party’s chairman, Mr Ng Teck Siong, said Mr Jeyaretnam’s membership “will raise some interest among [the] public… that one of the sons of JBJ is joining us.” Mr Ng also hopes that with Mr Jeyaretnam’s presence in the RP, the legacy of Mr JBJ will carry on. “It will be alive,” Mr Ng said and added that the party’s aim is to carry on the legacy of Mr JBJ to “improve life in Singapore – politically and socially.”

“We have other people joining us,” Mr Ng says. “We hope more and more will join RP.” Asked about the next general election, he says the party will put up candidates to participate and that the party will work hard to get a good result.

Mr Jeyaretnam is married and has a 12-year old son.

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Much needed cleanup finally done by NEA

Much needed cleanup finally done by NEA

Friday, 10 April 2009

Khairulanwar Zaini

The Geylang Serai temporary market was a somber place when I visited it yesterday. Surrounding two foreign workers helping the cleanup efforts were the shuttered food stalls. The cleaners were scrubbing the floors between the empty tables.

Looking grim too were some stall owners who were present. The cleanup, originally slated for next week, had been brought forward by the Geylang Serai temporary market’s management in response to the recent food poisoning incident. Most stall owners were receptive of the cleanup efforts, underlying the much needed confidence of customers who have concerns about the hygiene conditions of the market.

Restoring confidence

After the mass poisoning, the tenants - including those from the wet market and textile shops - were subjected to stringent checks by the NEA officers; the food stalls at the hawker centre were accorded the most attention, with the health officers thoroughly going through the various nooks and crannies. Mr Wahab, a chicken rice seller, said that the NEA officers, whom he claims spend an average time of 10 minutes on each stall, also advised the stall owners to throw away any unnecessary items from their freezers to avoid any potential contamination.

Although it may mean two days of loss income, most of the stall owners present were appreciative of the long-term benefits that this clean-up can bring. “It will restore the confidence of our customers,” said a neighbouring chicken rice seller, Madam Lin, 52. Mr Salim, who was tending to his textile shop, said that even though he does not sell any consumable food items, the clean-up effort was a step in the right direction. It will ensure that customers are “not in uncertainty and are fully confident that not only are the food stalls clean, but the entire Geylang Serai temporary market is clean too!”

Many stall owners took the opportunity to go beyond the recommended NEA guidelines. A couple of them were seen layering a fresh coat of paint to the pipes and walls of their stalls, out of their own expenses and despite being only two months away from a move to the new Geylang Serai market. Madam Hasinah, who sells nasi padang, hopes that with the new paint, her stall is not only clean, but looks presentable as well.

Why was cleanup not done earlier?

However, many raised concerns that the clean-up should have been done with more regular frequency. Madam Hasinah took issue with the “sudden” manner the spring-cleaning was brought forward; she received notice from the management committee about the new cleanup dates only a day before, on Tuesday morning. Her husband criticized the knee-jerk nature of the change of dates, saying that it was undertaken “only after something has happened.”

Pak Wan, a vegetable stall owner from the wet market, recalled that these washings were done once every two months at the previous wet market.

The stallholders all confirmed that this is the “first time [a] 100% check” is done since the temporary market was established, save for minor NEA initiatives such as an anti-cockroach campaign held six months ago which did not entail any stall closure.

While Pak Wan suggested that the cleanliness of this temporary market was better than at the old market, Mr Wahab said that “each stall should be responsible for their own hygiene and cleanliness standard”, particularly with the wet market separated only by a narrow corridor. He said the presence of raw vegetables and food attracted pests, although he was reassured by the new double-storey market which will separate the food stalls and market stalls on two different levels.

Moving forward

The stall owners were not concerned that this incident may adversely affect the collective reputation of the market. Their regular customers do not seem unduly worried, they said. Madam Hasinah said she still “received orders despite the closure.” However, one mee goreng seller, Mr Sadik, expressed his reservations. He said that his business has been affected and that he was finding it hard to “get new customers.”

Madam Lin expressed a desire to move on from this unfortunate episode, although she admitted that it will be difficult given the severe fallout, particularly for the families affected. Mr Wahab expressed sympathy for his fellow stall owner, whom he said was “unlucky” after “40 years of selling” without incident; although he agreed with the need for a punishment, Mr Wahab was also against depriving completely the rojak seller of the only livelihood he has known for four decades.

The question on Singaporeans minds now is: how much of the blame should NEA bear for the market’s filthy conditions? Now that lives have been lost, the knee-jerk cleanup might just be too little too late for the families of the deceased.

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JBJ’s son Kenneth joins Reform Party to keep his legacy alive

JBJ’s son Kenneth joins Reform Party to keep his legacy alive

The Reform Party, which has been rudderless since the passing of opposition scion Mr Joshua Benjamin Jeyaretnam was given a big boost when JBJ’s son Kenneth joined the party and was co-opted into the party’s CEC 2 weeks ago. (read article here)

Mr Jeyaretnam said the timing was right and joining the party is one way to honor his father and to continue his legacy.

We applaud Kenneth’s move to join the Reform Party and hope that he will serve as a nidus to attract more qualified Singaporeans to join it.

In a way, the Reform Party was a farewell gift left to us by JBJ. Throughout his political career, he had fought consistently to overhaul and reform the obsolete PAP system to one which is based on the rule of law, democratic principles and power to the people.

The late JBJ never feared to speak up for the people even if it had led him to financial ruins brought upon him by the countless defamation suits launched by his opponents.

JBJ is one deserving opposition MP we should have put in Parliament to represent us. The PAP feared him and tried ways and means to bar him from Parliament.

Our parents’ generation have let JBJ down. Let us make up for the tribulations he has gone through for us by giving our whole-hearted support to his son, Kenneth and the Reform Party.

The Reform Party is not set up by JBJ just to make up the numbers. It is not a party which is contented to manage a HDB estate and willing to wait 50 more years to be in a position to challenge the incumbent.

Why “Reform” Party? Because without reforming the entire system, it is pointless to have elections after elections to give legitimacy to the PAP to masquerade Singapore as a vibrant democracy when it is nothing more than a totalitarian fascist state.

JBJ had called for reform of the political system, the judiciary, the media and many other flaws in the system put in place by the PAP to keep them perpetually in power.

The younger generation of Singaporeans desire more political competition and a level playing field. We must not allow ourselves to be fooled and misled by these shenigans again.

The time has come for change and we hope that Kenneth’s arrival into the polical scene will be a catalyst to galvanize and united the entire opposition camp to press on with its mission to demand for greater accountability and transparency from the PAP which is seriously lacking now.

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JBJ’s son Kenneth joins Reform Party to keep his legacy alive

JBJ’s son Kenneth joins Reform Party to keep his legacy alive

April 10, 2009

The Reform Party, which has been rudderless since the passing of opposition scion Mr Joshua Benjamin Jeyaretnam was given a big boost when JBJ’s son Kenneth joined the party and was co-opted into the party’s CEC 2 weeks ago. (read article here)

Mr Jeyaretnam said the timing was right and joining the party is one way to honor his father and to continue his legacy.

We applaud Kenneth’s move to join the Reform Party and hope that he will serve as a nidus to attract more qualified Singaporeans to join it.

In a way, the Reform Party was a farewell gift left to us by JBJ. Throughout his political career, he had fought consistently to overhaul and reform the obsolete PAP system to one which is based on the rule of law, democratic principles and power to the people.

The late JBJ never feared to speak up for the people even if it had led him to financial ruins brought upon him by the countless defamation suits launched by his opponents.

JBJ is one deserving opposition MP we should have put in Parliament to represent us. The PAP feared him and tried ways and means to bar him from Parliament.

Our parents’ generation have let JBJ down. Let us make up for the tribulations he has gone through for us by giving our whole-hearted support to his son, Kenneth and the Reform Party.

The Reform Party is not set up by JBJ just to make up the numbers. It is not a party which is contented to manage a HDB estate and willing to wait 50 more years to be in a position to challenge the incumbent.

Why “Reform” Party? Because without reforming the entire system, it is pointless to have elections after elections to give legitimacy to the PAP to masquerade Singapore as a vibrant democracy when it is nothing more than a totalitarian fascist state.

JBJ had called for reform of the political system, the judiciary, the media and many other flaws in the system put in place by the PAP to keep them perpetually in power.

The younger generation of Singaporeans desire more political competition and a level playing field. We must not allow ourselves to be fooled and misled by these shenigans again.

The time has come for change and we hope that Kenneth’s arrival into the polical scene will be a catalyst to galvanize and united the entire opposition camp to press on with its mission to demand for greater accountability and transparency from the PAP which is seriously lacking now.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=26489.1

Singapore, a First World country?

Singapore, a First World country?

Straits Times Article (April 10, 2009): S'pore's meritocratic edge

Let me put aside my anger with MM Lee's obvious hypocrisy (quoted by ST, am seeking the original speech transcript for a better understanding of the context. Could have sworn the ST had a link to the PDF file the last time I checked):

MINISTER Mentor Lee Kuan Yew has urged Singaporeans not to delude themselves that they are a part of the First World in South-east Asia.

Singapore is situated in a region with 'special features' which makes it particularly vulnerable, so to keep its competitive edge and be relevant to the world, it must stay a cohesive, multiracial, multireligious nation based on meritocracy, he said.



If he had apologized about having repeatedly pronounced Singapore's "arrival" at First World status when trumpeting his achievements, I might have felt better about this.

Anyway, I want to focus on the definition of "First World" here. Here's something from Wikipedia (link):

The terms First World, Second World, and Third World were used to divide nations into three broad categories. The three terms did not arise simultaneously. After World War II, people began to speak of the NATO and Warsaw Pact countries as two major blocs, often using such terms as the "Western Bloc" and the "Eastern Bloc". The two "worlds" were not numbered. It was eventually pointed out that there were a great many countries that fit into neither category, and in 1952 French demographer Alfred Sauvy coined the term "Third World" to describe this latter group; retroactively, the first two groups came to be known as the "First World" and "Second World".



It was intended as a political moniker, not an economic one. It so happened that most Third World countries were poor. Economically speaking, now that we are past the era of the Cold War, people often use the term Developed Countries and Developing Countries. Singapore is defined as a High-Income Country by the World Bank.

Notice how MM Lee abuses the term "First World" by taking advantage of (what I think is) the general misunderstanding of the phrase. Also notice how he has twisted the use in the context of a mixed social-political-economic environment.

The question now is "What is the motivation behind this exhortation?". Personally, I hope it is not a veiled threat against a (very slowly) rising tide of liberal thinking (which is, unfortunately, mistakenly tied to "First World" or "Western" countries whenever it suits people in power).

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=26718.1

Swinging Reform Party to the Center - Kenneth Jeyaratnam enters the political fray

Swinging Reform Party to the Center - Kenneth Jeyaratnam enters the political fray

The surprised entrance of Kenneth Jeyaratnam into Singapore’s rather bleak opposition scene represents a fresh air into Singapore’s political landscape. A note of caution would be that KJ should be considered on his own terms rather than on the terms of being the son of the late JBJ.

KJ graduated with a double first class honors from Cambridge University in the UK in Economics. If we believe PAP’s rhetoric about the need for a individual to become highly educated so as to become an MP, KJ’s educational credentials places him higher than most of the new PAP MPs in the last election. In terms of political experience, one could argue that he does not have much grassroots experience. Yet, his relationship with his father, which is best dissected by later historians, is in itself a form of education for him in all forms of politics - from grassroots to parliamentary electioneering. His economic experiences shores up the weak front of the opposition in convincing the electorate of the economic viability of a non PAP government (even that is particularly remote given most of the election’s outcome), even though hedge fund managers are certainly not seen as the good guys neccessarily in this economic climate. Some over exuberant Singaporeans might even called KJ the obama of Singapore given his age, credentials and public speaking skills, but generally having star powers may attract firestorm from opponents.

More importantly, while ST journalists predicted earlier that Reform Party (RP) would swing towards the SDP’s side, KJ’s entrance might swing RP more towards the political center (aka the WP). In doing so, it is likely that RP and WP might find common grounds in the next election, which means KJ could contest under a WP’s banner in a GRC. Alternatively, RP might ally with Chiam’s weakening SDA or the stoic NSP. If KJ would to run in a GRC with RP’s members under RP banner, one wonders if the results would be at best a NCMP seat for KJ given the weak brand name of RP. SDP will continue to reach out to RP under KJ, but it is unlikely that KJ would risk his maiden foray into the battle with a party with a huge target on its back constantly.

What about the PAP’s reaction?

A wait and see is always the preferred strategy for the PAP. The entrance of KJ into the political sphere would please the liberals within the PAP, who might be able to make the case for increased politicial liberalization given the percieved higher quality candidates for the opposition. The hardliners within the PAP might try to dig up JBJ’s past and mistakes to counter KJ, which can backfire on the party given that attacking a man who is not alive is simply underhanded to many electorates.Yet, such actions might provoke KJ to do something politically problematic, which will neutered the initial negative effects of any such attempts. Given that the PAP is increasingly populated with moderates, the wait and see atttitude would be the preferred outcome for the PAP in the short run.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=26716.1

Singapore suffers record contraction

Singapore suffers record contraction

By John Burton in Singapore

Published: April 14 2009 02:43 | Last updated: April 14 2009 18:48

Singapore’s trade-dependent economy contracted by a record 11.5 per cent in the first three months of 2009 from a year ago as non-oil exports fell 17 per cent in March, the 11th consecutive monthly decline.

The-sharper-than-expected deterioration in the economy’s performance forced the government to cut its full-year GDP forecast from minus 6 per cent to minus 9 per cent, which would make it Singapore’s worst postwar recession and Asia’s worst economic performer this year. The economy contracted 4.2 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2008.

Previously, the worst downturn in Singapore occurred in 2001 when the economy contracted by 2.4 per cent due to the bursting of the global technology bubble. Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s elder statesman, recently said that it could take as long as six years before the economy makes a firm recovery.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore, the de facto central bank, also devalued slightly the currency as it re-centred the secret policy band that pegs the Singapore dollar to a basket of international currencies.

The move is expected to result in a 1 per cent to 3 per cent devaluation of the currency, but MAS said there was no reason for any undue weakening of the Singapore dollar since inflation is likely to stay at minus 1 per cent to plus 1 per cent this year.

The latest data revealed the plunge in exports is slowing from a 35 per cent drop in January and 24 per cent in February. But there are worries that the continued weakness in the US economy will hurt exports for the rest of the year.

However, some economists argue that the dire figures for the first quarter suggest the economy has bottomed out and might start recovering or at least stabilise as the pace in the decline in exports slows.

Economists at banking groups said they were sticking with their forecasts that the economy could contract by 4 per cent to 5 per cent this year, with many saying the government estimate was too gloomy.

The poor economic data could set the stage for a much-discussed second stimulus package on top of a S$20.5bn (US$13.7bn) programme announced in January.

Lee Hsien Loong, the prime minister, said: “The crisis will eventually pass, but we will not be back to the situation before 2007. This is therefore an opportune time for the government to review our policies and strategies.”

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=27057.1

Socialism has failed. Now capitalism is bankrupt. So what comes next?

Socialism has failed. Now capitalism is bankrupt. So what comes next?

Whatever ideological logo we adopt, the shift from free market to public action needs to be bigger than politicians grasp

o Eric Hobsbawm
o The Guardian, Friday 10 April 2009

The 20th century is well behind us, but we have not yet learned to live in the 21st, or at least to think in a way that fits it. That should not be as difficult as it seems, because the basic idea that dominated economics and politics in the last century has patently disappeared down the plughole of history. This was the way of thinking about modern industrial economies, or for that matter any economies, in terms of two mutually exclusive opposites: capitalism or socialism.

We have lived through two practical attempts to realise these in their pure form: the centrally state-planned economies of the Soviet type and the totally unrestricted and uncontrolled free-market capitalist economy. The first broke down in the 1980s, and the European communist political systems with it. The second is breaking down before our eyes in the greatest crisis of global capitalism since the 1930s. In some ways it is a greater crisis than in the 1930s, because the globalisation of the economy was not then as far advanced as it is today, and the crisis did not affect the planned economy of the Soviet Union. We don't yet know how grave and lasting the consequences of the present world crisis will be, but they certainly mark the end of the sort of free-market capitalism that captured the world and its governments in the years since Margaret Thatcher and President Reagan.

Impotence therefore faces both those who believe in what amounts to a pure, stateless, market capitalism, a sort of international bourgeois anarchism, and those who believe in a planned socialism uncontaminated by private profit-seeking. Both are bankrupt. The future, like the present and the past, belongs to mixed economies in which public and private are braided together in one way or another. But how? That is the problem for everybody today, but especially for people on the left.

Nobody seriously thinks of returning to the socialist systems of the Soviet type - not only because of their political faults, but also because of the increasing sluggishness and inefficiency of their economies - though this should not lead us to underestimate their impressive social and educational achievements. On the other hand, until the global free market imploded last year, even the social-democratic or other moderate left parties in the rich countries of northern capitalism and Australasia had committed themselves more and more to the success of free-market capitalism. Indeed, between the fall of the USSR and now I can think of no such party or leader denouncing capitalism as unacceptable. None were more committed to it than New Labour. In their economic policies both Tony Blair and (until October 2008) Gordon Brown could be described without real exaggeration as Thatcher in trousers. The same is true of the Democratic party in the US.

The basic Labour idea since the 1950s was that socialism was unnecessary, because a capitalist system could be relied on to flourish and to generate more wealth than any other. All socialists had to do was to ensure its equitable distribution. But since the 1970s the accelerating surge of globalisation made it more and more difficult and fatally undermined the traditional basis of the Labour party's, and indeed any social-democratic party's, support and policies. Many in the 1980s agreed that if the ship of Labour was not to founder, which was a real possibility at the time, it would have to be refitted.

But it was not refitted. Under the impact of what it saw as the Thatcherite economic revival, New Labour since 1997 swallowed the ideology, or rather the theology, of global free-market fundamentalism whole. Britain deregulated its markets, sold its industries to the highest bidder, stopped making things to export (unlike Germany, France and Switzerland) and put its money on becoming the global centre of financial services and therefore a paradise for zillionaire money-launderers. That is why the impact of the world crisis on the pound and the British economy today is likely to be more catastrophic than on any other major western economy - and full recovery may well be harder.

You may say that's all over now. We're free to return to the mixed economy. The old toolbox of Labour is available again - everything up to nationalisation - so let's just go and use the tools once again, which Labour should never have put away. But that suggests we know what to do with them. We don't. For one thing, we don't know how to overcome the present crisis. None of the world's governments, central banks or international financial institutions know: they are all like a blind man trying to get out of a maze by tapping the walls with different kinds of sticks in the hope of finding the way out. For another, we underestimate how addicted governments and decision-makers still are to the free-market snorts that have made them feel so good for decades. Have we really got away from the assumption that private profit-making enterprise is always a better, because more efficient, way of doing things? That business organisation and accountancy should be the model even for public service, education and research? That the growing chasm between the super-rich and the rest doesn't matter that much, so long as everybody else (except the minority of the poor) is getting a bit better off? That what a country needs is under all circumstances maximum economic growth and commercial competitiveness? I don't think so.

But a progressive policy needs more than just a bigger break with the economic and moral assumptions of the past 30 years. It needs a return to the conviction that economic growth and the affluence it brings is a means and not an end. The end is what it does to the lives, life-chances and hopes of people. Look at London. Of course it matters to all of us that London's economy flourishes. But the test of the enormous wealth generated in patches of the capital is not that it contributed 20%-30% to Britain's GDP but how it affects the lives of the millions who live and work there. What kind of lives are available to them? Can they afford to live there? If they can't, it is not compensation that London is also a paradise for the ultra-rich. Can they get decently paid jobs or jobs at all? If they can't, don't brag about all those Michelin-starred restaurants and their self-dramatising chefs. Or schooling for children? Inadequate schools are not offset by the fact that London universities could field a football team of Nobel prize winners.

The test of a progressive policy is not private but public, not just rising income and consumption for individuals, but widening the opportunities and what Amartya Sen calls the "capabilities" of all through collective action. But that means, it must mean, public non-profit initiative, even if only in redistributing private accumulation. Public decisions aimed at collective social improvement from which all human lives should gain. That is the basis of progressive policy - not maximising economic growth and personal incomes. Nowhere will this be more important than in tackling the greatest problem facing us this century, the environmental crisis. Whatever ideological logo we choose for it, it will mean a major shift away from the free market and towards public action, a bigger shift than the British government has yet envisaged. And, given the acuteness of the economic crisis, probably a fairly rapid shift. Time is not on our side.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=26622.1

Lee Kuan Yew: THE FUNDAMENTALS OF SINGAPORE'S FOREIGN POLICY

S Rajaratnam Lecture 2009 by Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew

THE FUNDAMENTALS OF SINGAPORE'S FOREIGN POLICY: THEN AND NOW

Independence was thrust upon Singapore. The fundamentals of our foreign policy were forged during those vulnerable early years. They remain relevant because small countries have little power to alter the region, let alone the world. A small country must seek a maximum number of friends, while maintaining the freedom to be itself as a sovereign and independent nation. Both parts of the equation - a maximum number of friends and freedom to be ourselves - are equally important and inter-related.

Friendship, in international relations, is not a function of goodwill or personal affection. We must make ourselves relevant so that other countries have an interest in our continued survival and prosperity as a sovereign and independent nation. Singapore cannot take its relevance for granted. Small countries perform no vital or irreplaceable functions in the international system. Singapore has to continually reconstruct itself and keep its relevance to the world and to create political and economic space. This is the economic imperative for Singapore.

To achieve this, we have to be different from others in our neighbourhood and have a competitive edge. Because we have been able to do so, Singapore has risen over our geographical and resource constraints, and has been accepted as a serious player in regional and international fora. We earn our living by attracting foreign investments and producing goods and services useful to the world. Hence, we must always have the ability to be ourselves and be different from others in the wider region of East and South Asia. Had we disported ourselves like our better endowed neighbours, we would have failed. For Singapore, unlike others in our neighbourhood, is of no intrinsic interest to any developed country when they can invest in our larger neighbours endowed with more land, labour and natural resources.

At the same time, we must never delude ourselves that we are a part of the First World in Southeast Asia, a second and third world group of countries. Our region has its own special features. Singapore's destiny would be very different if we were sited in Europe or North America. We cannot transplant our island elsewhere. Therefore, a recurrent issue for Singapore is how to differentiate ourselves from our neighbours in order to compete and survive, and also get along with them. This is a perennial foreign policy challenge.

The Changing International Environment

As the world changes, small countries have to swiftly adjust their policies and positions in a pragmatic and clinical manner. We have to live with the world as it is, not as we wish it should be. We must remain nimble to seize opportunities that come with changing circumstances, or to get out of harm's way.

Let me outline the major changes in the international and regional environment since we became independent.

In 1965, the Cold War was at its height. The world was bipolar, divided into communist and non-communist blocs and a main fault line ran through Southeast Asia. The Vietnam War had been raging on for several years. That year, President Lyndon B Johnson upped the ante by bombing North Vietnam. All the non-communist countries of Southeast Asia faced serious internal threats from communist insurgencies or subversive movements supported by a China that was then in the throes of the launch of the Cultural Revolution.

All the non-communist countries of Southeast Asia were embroiled in disputes of varying intensity with one another. Singapore had just been "separated" from Malaysia and Indonesia was pursuing a policy of "konfrontasi" against Malaysia and Singapore. The Philippines claimed Sabah. Brunei with British help had suppressed an internal rebellion backed by Indonesia. There were also strong irredentist pressures on the borders between West Malaysia and Thailand, and between the Philippines and Indonesia. In these unpropitious circumstances, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) was formed so that the non-communist states in Southeast Asia could contain and manage their differences to meet the greater threat from the communists.

The world has completely transformed. The Cold War is over after the Berlin Wall fell in 1989 and the Soviet Union imploded in 1991. Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia have joined ASEAN. The threat of mutual nuclear annihilation during the Cold War has gone.

But it is not the "end of history" that an American has written in the euphoria of triumphalism. The Cold War divided the world into two blocs for more than 40 years from the end of the Second World War. Two heavily armed nuclear blocs made it a dangerous world. Once this over-arching strategic discipline of the bipolar Cold War was dissolved, long submerged conflicts broke out in many parts of the world, but fortunately not in Southeast Asia.

With the collapse of the communist ideology of how society and the economy should be organised, all states joined the global wave of the free market.

Singapore has since 1965 plugged into the international economic grid. We welcomed Multi-National Companies (MNCs) to invest and manufacture in Singapore when the conventional wisdom was that MNCs exploit Third World countries. As an open economy, we took full advantage of globalisation.

East Asian countries had been leading the pack in this globalisation wave. They distinguished themselves from other Third World countries by single-minded emphasis on development. Japan was the earliest to plug itself into the global system. The Newly Industrialising Economies of Hong Kong, Republic of Korea, Singapore and Taiwan followed suit from the 1960s; then came the Southeast Asian 'tigers': Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand. Vietnam reformed its economy in the 1990s.

The most dramatic transformations were China and India. China's re-emergence in the world economy is the single most profound event of the 21st century. Two huge economies in China and India will reshape the world order before the end of the 21st century.

In the 1960s and 1970s, Singapore was berated in the Chinese media as a lackey of the American imperialists. The Malayan Communist Party (MCP) backed by China refused to recognise Singapore's independence. This changed after Deng Xiaoping visited Singapore in November 1978. It marked a dramatic change in Singapore's relations with China, and also China's relations with Southeast Asia. Deng visited Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur before he arrived in Singapore. He personally saw that China had fallen behind these supposedly backward cities. Also, he concluded that China had to stop supporting insurgencies in Southeast Asia if he wanted ASEAN to support the resistance to Vietnam's invasion of Cambodia.

In 1985, Dr Goh Keng Swee retired as Singapore's Deputy Prime Minister. He was invited to be Economic Advisor to the State Council on the development of China's coastal areas and tourism. China, a huge nation with an ancient history, was willing to learn from a tiny city-state.

Deng Xiaoping kept abreast of developments in Singapore and Southeast Asia. During a tour of southern China in February 1992, he said, "there is good social order in Singapore. They govern the place with discipline. We should draw from their experience, and do even better than them." Vice Minister of Propaganda Xu Weicheng led a delegation to Singapore for 10 days that same year. Since then, exchanges between Singapore and China have grown. Hundreds of Chinese officials continue to be trained in Singapore. Since 1996, we have trained over 16,000 Chinese officials.

Rebalancing the world

The post-Cold War world is in a state of flux. All countries are transiting to a different global order.

The present unprecedented global economic crisis has resulted from a lack of checks on the many financial products called "derivatives". There was insufficient oversight in international financial markets as layer upon layer of ever more complex financial instruments spun out of control. The world is suffering the consequences.

A mood for more regulations and control prevails in many economies. This could slide into protectionism. Protectionist measures to protect domestic employment will prolong the economic crisis with unpredictable geopolitical complications.

This crisis will hasten China's growth vis-à-vis the US. It is growing at 8%; the US may suffer negative or low growth. China has proven itself to be pragmatic, resilient and adaptive. The Chinese have survived severe crises - the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution - few societies have been so stricken. These are reasons not to be pessimistic.

The relationship between the US and China has already become the most important geopolitical issue of this century. Both countries realise that they need to work with the other. Neither wants conflicts. Both have to reckon with internal pressures from serious problems of growing unemployment.

However, American resilience and creativity should never be underestimated.

As the dominant global power, preserving the status quo is in US interests. As a rising power, China will not acquiesce to a status quo status indefinitely. Competition is inevitable, but conflict is not.

The US and China will both come through the present economic crisis. China is closing in on the lead the US enjoys. Their relations will remain stable, provided the world does not slide into protectionism. Each has to accommodate the core interests of the other.

The world, including East Asia, is not yet "decoupled" from the US. Multi-polarity where different poles are approximately equal in strategic weight is unlikely to emerge because the "poles" are not equal. A global economic recovery is not possible unless the US recovers.

After the crisis, the US is most likely to remain at the top of every key index of national power for decades. It will remain the dominant global player for the next few decades. No major issue concerning international peace and stability can be resolved without US leadership, and no country or grouping can yet replace America as the dominant global power.

Europe can become an economic force. Because its members have not submerged their sovereign interests, the EU cannot be a global strategic actor. This crisis has shown how divergent the national interests of EU members are.

China, the EU, Russia, India will be independent players. China has made beachheads in the Middle East, Africa and Latin America. It will be a global player in another three to four decades. China's present preoccupations are domestic, and its relationships with the countries of North East and South East Asia.

Russia's capabilities are limited. It wants to consolidate its influence in its "near abroad". Japan will be distracted by domestic politics. India is an emerging power, but at present lacks a competitive industrial base. However, it is the dominant power in South Asia.

China will pull ahead of Europe, Japan, India and Russia. US-China relations are setting the framework for East Asia. In the latter 21st century, US-China relations will become the most important bilateral relationship in the world, like the US-USSR relationship during the Cold War.

The US needs support from its European, Japanese and other allies to deal with international issues. The West is less cohesive after the Cold War. On international issues, like climate change, conflicts in the Middle East, proliferation, terrorism, food and energy security, pandemics or promoting Third World development, the US is not assured of unanimous support.

The current financial and economic problems require a global rebalancing of consumption and savings: a change in economic relationships between the US and China. Both must change in their cultural habits and mindsets. The American consumers must spend within their means. The Chinese consumers must increase their domestic spending. This will be a difficult transition.

Globalisation cannot be reversed because the technologies that made globalisation inevitable cannot be uninvented. In fact, better and cheaper transportation and communications will further advance the forces of globalisation. Singapore has to embrace this reality and remain open to talent, capital, technology and immigrants to make up for our low birth rate (total fertility rate of 1.29) with around 35,000 babies each year.

Singapore's Future

Singaporeans must always be prepared to maximise our opportunities and manage the challenges. In an era of increasing rapid and convenient transportation and communications, political leaders frequently meet each other at bilateral and multilateral summits; and they become comfortable to phone each other through secure lines. Ambassadors do not influence foreign policy so significantly. Sound foreign policy requires a prime minister and a foreign minister who are able to discern future trends in the international political, security and economic environment and position ourselves bilaterally or multilaterally to grasp the opportunities ahead of the others. Able foreign ministry officers and diplomats who give insightful recommendations based on dealing with their counterparts and assessments on the ground can greatly assist the Foreign Minister and his cabinet colleagues towards this end. But ultimately, it is the Prime Minister and other key ministers who decide on changes in policies. At face-to-face meetings over long hours they can sense each other's thinking and leanings before their officials are privy to them. Hence, our foreign policy from 1965 was settled by the PM and his key ministers. A mediocre PM and cabinet will decline our standing with other countries and we will lose opportunities like the lead we enjoy in Free Trade Agreements or Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements with the US, Japan, China, India, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand, and our close relations with the oil states of the Gulf.

ASEAN is now more robust than in 1967. It has been an exception among Third World regional organisations. ASEAN has avoided being bogged down in post-colonial rivalries and tensions, and has focused on development.

Several ASEAN countries are in political transitions, working towards more sustainable and durable systems. Political circumstances will determine ASEAN's pace of progress. Placed between the giants of China and India, ASEAN countries have to combine their markets to compete and be relevant as a region. There is no other choice. ASEAN is also playing a major role in shaping a wider architecture of cooperation in the Asia-Pacific.

Conclusions

Let me return to the complexities of Singapore's relations with our neighbours. The events that led to our independence are receding into history. These different complexities are not the result of historical baggage, but of basic differences in political and social systems. Baggage is something we can discard. Political and social systems we cannot change so easily.

Singapore is a multi-racial meritocracy. Our neighbours organise their societies on the supremacy of the indigenous peoples, Bumiputras in Malaysia and Pribumis in Indonesia. Though our neighbours have accepted us as a sovereign and independent nation, they have a tendency to externalise towards us their internal anxieties and angst against their own minorities. This is unlikely to go away.

Time has worn down many of the sharper edges in our relations with our immediate neighbours. A habit of working together in ASEAN has also helped. Singapore is now more established, internationally and regionally. Forty years ago, many did not believe Singapore would survive, let alone prosper.

We have a strong economy, accumulated robust reserves, developed a civil service of integrity and ability, a mature and capable foreign policy team, and institutionalised our systems.

We have strategic relationships with the major powers. We have a credible defence capability. The SAF is an insurance in an uncertain world.

Each successor generation of Singaporeans must build on these assets and work out their solutions to new problems, seize new opportunities and avoid impending disasters in an ever changing world. The perennial challenge is to remain competitive. To be competitive, we must remain a cohesive, multi-racial, multi-religious nation based on meritocracy. We have to strengthen our national consciousness at a time when the forces of globalisation are deconstructing the very notion of nationhood.

All countries face this challenge. A country like America has over 200 years of history to bond its citizens. We have only 40 years. But so long as the succeeding generations of Singaporeans do not forget the fundamentals of our vulnerabilities, and not delude themselves that we can behave as if our neighbours are Europeans or North Americans, and remain alert, cohesive and realistic, Singapore will survive and prosper.

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Who should take the rap for Geylang Serai food poisoning?

Who should take the rap for Geylang Serai food poisoning?

Nobody dies from acute gastroenteritis, or diarrhoea in developed countries. The number one killer of children worldwide is a public health concern in many Third World countries where poor public hygiene facilitates the transmission of disease-causing pathogens via the faecal-oral route.

It is therefore unacceptable that the Geylang Serai food poisoning outbreak has claimed two victims so far with 11 still in hospital which makes a mockery out of our reputation as a squeaky clean country. (read article here)

The NEA said yesterday that it was not directly responsible for hygiene at temporary markets, but only at permanent ones owned by the Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources.

In an official statement released to the media, it claimed that the care of each temporary market is the job of its management committee, although it does make spot checks on hygiene at individual hawker stalls.

A joint statement from the MOH and the National Environment Agency (NEA) confirmed that 12 people, including the first woman who died, had tested positive for the bacteria Vibrio parahaemolyticus.

Vibrio paramaemolyticus causes an explosive, watery diarrhoea which is usually self-limiting. According to the husband of the second victim, Madam Noraini Kasim, she was trailing blood as she made her way to the toilet. There may be more than one pathogen involved such as Shigella, Salmonella or Enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli.

At the same time, 61 rats were found and cleared by pest controllers at the premises today. (read article here) It is most unbelievable to find so many rats inhabiting a public eating outlet in Singapore!

This tragedy is definitely preventable. It is not another simple ‘honest’ mistake where nobody is at fault. Serious lapses in monitoring public hygiene at the temporary market had obviously occurred and somebody must take the rap for it.

NEA was quick to shift the blame to the management committee of the temporary market, but surely it is the authority in charge of overseeing its state of hygiene even if it is not directly responsible.

I hope the ongoing investigations will shed more light on the following questions:

1. How often does NEA conduct spot checks on the market?

2. When is the last time it conducted such a check?

3. Did the check reveal any problems with hygiene?

4. Who are the NEA officers involved?

5. Why weren’t the rats detected then?

6. Is there negligence on the part of the foodstall holder, the management committee or NEA?

The rats don’t appear overnight and the bacteria needs time to incubate. What has the market’s management committee been doing? Is it fair for them to shoulder all the blame? Had NEA been more vigilant, it would have picked up the problem earlier and close the market till it improves on its standard of hygiene.

Two deaths has been lost. Many more fell ill and some were hospitalized. The victims should seriously consider taking legal action against the culpable parties. Or should they blame fate for eating the wrong food at the wrong place and time?

This is not just an ordinary public healthcare scare, it is a PR disaster for Singapore as well and to this day, nobody from the government has stepped forward to allay public concerns.

Where is the Minister of Environment and Water Resources? Is Mr Abdullah Tarmugi still away in Uzbekistan? And where is his Permanent Secretary Tan Yong Soon? Didn’t he boast about being able to leave his work entirely to his capable subordinates when he took a 5 week cooking trip to Paris last December?

Are these the kind of “top talents” Singaporeans have been coerced to pay top salaries for who are quick to claim credit for themselves when things are going well, but nowhere to be seen in the event of a mishap?

Blunders like this don’t happen without good reason and is almost always attributed to negligence. If this were to happen in Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan or even China, the minister in charge will probably have to apologize to appease public anger.

Instead of asking serious questions about how the mass food poisoning came about, the state media has been busy trying to deflect attention away from NEA to give the erroneous impression that it is unavoidable and there is nothing they can do about it.

NEA’s official statement that “it is not directly responsible” is both disappointing and unacceptable. As the government agency in charge of hygiene in public places, it owes Singaporeans an explanation for its failure to prevent the worst food-poisoning outbreak which is unheard of even during the colonial days.

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MM Lee: This little red dot must be different, relevant

This little red dot must be different, relevant

But a mediocre Cabinet can affect Singapore’s image: MM

Friday • April 10, 2009

THE little red dot needs to get along with its far bigger neighbours in the region — but at the same time, it cannot afford to be like them.

This is because Singapore has “to differentiate ourselves from our neighbours in order to compete and survive”, said Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew yesterday.

Noting that Singapore cannot simply rely on the friendship of others, he said the Republic has to “continually reconstruct itself and keep its relevance to the world and to create political and economic space”.

Having been able to do so, it has been accepted as “a serious player in regional and international fora”.

“Had we disported ourselves like our better endowed neighbours, we would have failed. For Singapore, unlike others in our neighbourhood, is of no intrinsic interest to any developed country when they can invest in our larger neighbours endowed with more land, labour and natural resources,” said Mr Lee, who engaged an audience of some 550 diplomats, academics and students at the S Rajaratnam Lecture last night, at the Shangri-La hotel.

A copy of his speech was distributed in advance, and the lively hour-long dialogue saw the Minister Mentor fielding questions on — among other topics — China-US relations, how Singapore and Malaysia’s new leadership can work together, and whether the Republic should modify its foreign policy objectives for the future.

One imperative Mr Lee emphasised: Singapore needs political leaders who can hold their own on the international stage.

“Sound foreign policy requires a Prime Minister and a Foreign Minister who are able to discern future trends in the international political, security and economic environment and position ourselves bilaterally or multilaterally to grasp the opportunities ahead of the others,” he said.

Since independence in 1965, Singapore’s foreign policy has been settled “by the PM and his key ministers”.

No doubt, Foreign Ministry officers and diplomats can offer “insightful recommendations”. But “ultimately, it is the Prime Minister and other key ministers who decide on changes in policies. At face-to-face meetings over long hours, they can sense each other’s thinking and leanings before their officials are privy to them”, he said.

As such, “a mediocre PM and Cabinet will decline our standing with other countries”.

“We will lose opportunities like the lead we enjoy in Free Trade Agreements or Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreements with the US, Japan, China, India, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand, and our close relations with the oil states of the Gulf,” Mr Lee said.

Creating ‘economic space’

One example of foresight that he cited: How Singapore, seeing that China was rising, had gone out of its way to be helpful, such as with the Suzhou industrial park. The experience has given us “an entree into all the cities of China”. “They are sending their mayors, about 111 of them, to NTU (Nanyang Technological University), learning how to manage a city. So everybody in China at the city level knows of Singapore, and businesses from Singapore will find open doors.”

Moving ahead, Mr Lee said: “We got to create economic space for Singapore. I even went to Russia. We got some hotels, service apartments and we are selling 3-in-1 coffee mix in Russia and a few other things ... It does not create jobs here, that’s the trouble. Our GDP will grow, and we are creating jobs in China, India and Russia ... And I think that is the duty of the Government. You’ve got to anticipate the shape of things to come; when they come, you are there.”

Another concern: Singaporeans must never fool ourselves “that we are a part of the First World in South-east Asia, a Second and Third World group of countries”.

Rounding up his speech, the Minister Mentor said that as long as future generations keep in mind the Republic’s vulnerabilities, “and not delude themselves that we can behave as if our neighbours are Europeans or North Americans, and remain alert, cohesive and realistic, Singapore will survive and prosper”.

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The Medea strain

The Medea strain

Friday, 10 April 2009

The limits of female advancement in the PAP

In patriarchal Greece of yore, two fictional women stood out for having been depicted as particularly charismatic and influential: the crafty Lysistrata, who forced the men to stop their wars by organising a sex-strike by women, and the formidable Medea, who was instrumental in winning for her husband his throne but who destroyed him when he betrays her.

The playwright Aristophanes portrayed Lysistrata as an unusually headstrong but still very feminine character; indeed, Aristophanes revelled in reinforcing stereotypes of the ‘weaker’ sex current during his time and their political involvement is framed within this context. Order is restored when the women – Lysistrata included – are restored to their traditional, submissive role after the war ends. In contrast, the Medea immortalised by the tragedian Euripides is fierce and utterly implacable, one who has – at least according to later-day feminist interpretations of Euripides’ play – thrown off the yoke of her gender’s conventional dependency and deference.

But it is the example of Lysistrata which seems more applicable to Singapore, at least in the context of the political sphere. Professor Kenneth Paul Tan of the National University of Singapore has written an insightful piece about how images of women are constructed and legitimised in the public sphere, using these ideas to explain the “Catherine Lim affair” of 19941. Ms Lim, a renowned Singaporean writer, made waves in 1994 with two commentaries that triggered a particularly forceful response from the country’s leaders.

Professor Tan argued that Singaporean women might have had to “outwardly disavow” their femininity and exhibit manly attributes to be taken seriously and succeed in fields dominated by men, since women are still regarded as being “primarily responsible for reproducing the nation”. One field in particular is politics, where Ms Lim Hwee Hua – who, incidentally, was made Singapore’s first female minister some weeks after Professor Tan’s piece was published – is personified as the kind of female politician the ruling People’s Action Party (PAP) recruits because they reaffirm the “desirability of manly attributes” without posing a threat to male dominance.

At the heart of this system stands the chief patriarch, PAP founding father Lee Kuan Yew, who is the personification of the “masculine” state with all its protective attributes. In contrast, the people are portrayed with a “feminine” tinge: they are “selfish, ignorant, deficient and dangerous”, essentially unable to take care of themselves. That narrative reflects Mr Lee’s strong influence on the PAP as well as his own convictions: in a revealing letter to the press, his daughter recounted that her parents’ marriage was anything but an “equal partnership”, with her mother being a high-earning lawyer who coped with the traditional roles of wife and mother while Mr Lee was very much the traditional family patriarch.

According to Professor Tan, Ms Catherine Lim only managed to survive the Singapore establishment’s 1994 onslaught against her by concealing her criticisms with an outward show of feminine deference in “excess”. This made it “ungentlemenly” for the PAP leaders to come down too hard on her.

养精蓄锐,出类拔萃

Professor Tan’s framework helps to explain why women seem to be lagging considerably in Singapore politics. It took more than four decades for Singapore to get its first full female minister, and even then only 18 out of 82 of the current batch of elected MPs are female; prior to this, Singapore had 22 MPs in total during the period 1959-1997. That is a peculiarity that can’t be explained by societal trends alone, since Singapore scores fairly well in closing the gaps in secondary education and the number of professionals as well as senior managers between the sexes according to the 2008 Global Gender Gap ranking by the World Economic Forum. Furthermore, the opposition parties appear to have a better representation of high-ranking women: the chairman of the Worker’s Party (WP) and two members of the Singapore Democratic Party’s (SDP) Central Executive Committee are women.

It is therefore likely that adverse selection by the PAP plays a significant part in explaining the lack of women holding public office. Even Ms Lim Hwee Hua, now the leading female politician in the country, seemed to have alluded to it – commenting on her elevation to a ministerial position, Ms Lim told the press that men were “wasting talent” if they did not give women opportunities. Full equality still seems some distance away: even as Singapore gains its first female minister, questions are already being asked about when women will be given substantive portfolios (Ms Lim is currently a minister without portfolio and deputy minister in two other ministries).

The problem with such a policy of adverse selection is that it is difficult to see the PAP inducting women who might be genuine contenders for party leadership. Such female recruits would probably be rejected as potential threats to male dominance, or at least for as long as Mr Lee remains in the party. Presumably that would mean that the leadership would favour Lysistrata-types, who accept the patriarchal hierarchy, over Medea-types who might have little qualms about upsetting it.

Unfortunately, that sets a regrettable example for the rest of society, as it would only reinforce patriarchal notions. It might discourage women from even considering whether to enter politics, as it implies that only those who fit a certain mould will get the chance to serve in public office. It may also diminish the PAP’s own prospects of renewing itself.

Ironically though, it might mean that female opposition figures have a better chance of breaching the PAP’s grip on power. As Professor Tan has argued, the “Catherine Lim” affair showed a potential approach for criticising the government: “in a gently ‘spousal’ way to make a strongly argued point without incurring the state’s full-blown violence”. That already seems to be happening, with WP chairman Sylvia Lim espousing a centrist line in contrast with the more strident efforts of SDP’s Chee Siok Chin. Ms Chee’s unabashed advocacy has landed her in prison on several occasions.

But a more practical reason is that female talent overlooked by the PAP might thereby be inclined to pitch in for the other side. Perhaps it is time for opposition parties to start looking for female candidates who have the Medea strain.

***

1 Kenneth Paul Tan, “Who’s Afraid of Catherine Lim? The State in Patriarchal Singapore”, Asian Studies Review, March 2009, Vol. 33, pp. 43-62

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