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14/07/2009

LEE KUAN YEW AND CORRUPTION - SINGAPORE STYLE

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Tuesday, 14 July 2009 11:38

By Shahidan Said

Lee Kuan Yew’s recent visit to Malaysia saw a flood of predictable commentaries from his admirers in blogosphere. Most members of his fan club have probably neither read anything substantive on the history of the struggles of the people of Singapore, nor grasped the significance of Singapore’s comprador role in Empire’s scheme of things in the region.

We have become accustomed to the standard chorus of mindless sheep-like bleating from such admirers who describe Kuan Yew as an outstanding statesman. One such hagiographical contribution in the blogs recently was from Tunku Abdul Aziz, who describes himself…’ as a dyed in the wool admirer of Mr. Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s Minister Mentor…because Lee undoubtedly played an important and historic role in the creation of Malaysia as a political entity.’ Tunku Aziz further adds, ‘ Enriching himself or his family has never been part of his game plan…He has never wavered in his belief right at the outset that corruption, humanity’s greatest curse, was not going to be a feature of Singapore’s governance model… Singapore operates a justice system that is incorruptible.’ 

Let us examine these assertions a little more closely. That Singapore has achieved an excellent record in cleaning its civil service from corruption, thus ensuring its citizens get their service as of right and are not subjected to the under table tolls imposed by corrupt civil servants as is often the case in Malaysia, is indeed  without dispute. We should do all we can to strive to achieve such desirable standards without compromise in Malaysia as well.  While successful in wiping out corruption in the sphere of routine day-to-day level of interaction between civil servants and citizens, it is absurd to conclude that this achievement suggests that Singapore has an incorruptible governance model. While the elimination of corruption at this level is a necessary condition, it is not a sufficient condition to describe Singapore as having an incorruptible governance model.  



As an activist in Transparancy International, Tunku Aziz waxes lyrical about Lee Kuan Yew’s achievements from a one-dimensional prism of an anti-corruption campaigner. He addresses the issue of corruption at the formal expression of this cancer to the exclusion of addressing corruption at the level of political power, which is different to the day-day-day corrupt practices most citizens face in their daily lives as they go about their business. In other words, corruption must be addressed holistically, including at the macro political level. Beneath the corruption-free image that is projected lays a corrupt social order in which citizens’ lives are policed at their work place, in their housing schemes and in educational institutes by the ruling party. All the levers of power and decision making are controlled by the PAP and dissent is ruthlessly crushed. This is a model of the corporate state. The reward for acquiescence in this scheme of things is a higher standard of living than that enjoyed by the citizens in the hinterland.

The very structure of the PAP, which has ruled Singapore since independence, is totally corrupt. The PAP is not an open party, but operates on an exclusivist principle whereby cadres are introduced and vetted on a secretive basis. This Leninist principle of organization is to ensure that the leadership - meaning Kuan Yew, his cronies and their children - are assured control of the party, as they indeed have been in control for the past half century. This method of membership selection ensures those privileged to belong to the party remain grateful for being given entry to the exclusive political organisation. It is a system of perpetuating the position of the leaders who have let you into the inner sanctum of the only ‘legitimate’ political organisation in Singapore.

In his excellent book on Singapore and Lee Kuan Yew, TJS George draws parallels with the Vatican’s process of electing the Pope. The Cardinals are selected through a secretive process by the Pope and the Pope is in turn selected through a secretive process, excluding all other members, by the Cardinals. At the level of power and decision making, Singapore’s elite, without doubt, ranks among the most corrupt globally.  

Singapore’s treasury has been denuded of tens of billions of dollars in the recent collapse of Lehman Brothers and other financial institutions in which investments were made through Temasek Holdings. This sovereign fund is managed by Kuan Yew’s daughter-in-law. Don’t hold your breath for any consequences to arise for the mismanagement of the people’s money, nor is there going to be an open discussion of these loss-making adventures anytime soon. Should Transparency International not concern itself with the opaque non-transparent decision making affecting Singapore’s citizens by members of Lee’s family on issues such as these? ‘Enriching himself or his family has never been part of his game plan’, asserts Tunku Aziz in tribute to Lee’s incorruptibility. Should the handling of sovereign funds and other national treasures without accountability by members of the Lee family not raise questions?  

This very corrupt structure of the party was one of many charges laid against the PAP, resulting in its expulsion from the Socialist International (SI), an international social democratic movement whose members include the European, Japanese and Australian/New Zealand labour parties. The SI found the anti-trade union laws and other repressive legislation implemented by the PAP to emasculate the labour movement violated SI principles. Other repressive laws cited were the printing presses ordinances carried over from colonial rule to curtail freedom of expression. In fact newspapers with articles critical of the regime have also been closed down and editors of newspapers detained. The student’s unions have seen their leaders who are not pro-establishment victimized and even tried in the ‘incorruptible’ courts on trumped up charges. Most damning from the point of view of the SI was the PAP’s use of the Internal Security Act to detain opposition leaders, some for decades.  

How do the MT commentators praise Kuan Yew as a statesman when there is a mountain of evidence to prove that the PAP is, and has always been, a repressive party run by thugs? How do these commentators oppose the repressive legislation here in Malaysia but support it in Singapore?      

To assert, as Tunku Aziz does, that ‘Singapore operates a justice system that is incorruptible’ in view of the accumulated evidence to the contrary is therefore astoundingly stupid. True, as mentioned above, in the mundane day-to-day crime prevention/business sphere, the justice system delivers. Has Tunku Aziz been in deep slumber when media critics and opposition activists have been railroaded through Singapore’s ‘incorruptible’ judicial system into bankruptcy and political oblivion over the years? The US State Department likes to protest such infringements of human rights violations which occur in countries that are not hitched to the US bandwagon. Singapore is given an easy ride even when one of its own US citizens, formerly a Singapore national, was last year sentenced to several months’ imprisonment for questioning the integrity of the ‘incorruptible’ justice system in Singapore. No wonder, then, that in a poll in the Singapore press, quoted by opposition activist, Dr Chee Soon Juan, in an interview with Lorraine Hahn on CNN’s Talk Asia, “… 93 percent of Singaporeans have indicated that they are fearful, that they were afraid to speak up even if they didn't agree with government policy.” ( http://www.singapore-window.org/sw02/020529cn.htm)  

The railroading in court of Dr Chee Soon Juan and his wife into bankruptcy is a recent example in a series of such cases. The Singapore Democratic Party blog reported the following exchange in the PAP controlled ’incorruptible’ court last year: 

 “During cross-examination of Mr Lee Hsien Loong, Mr Davinder Singh repeatedly objected to the questions. And yet the hearing was to assess the plaintiffs' reputations so that damages could be decided. 
And yet every time the questions about the Lees' reputations were raised, Mr Singh objected. And yet none of what Dr Chee tried to ask was reported in the press.” http://www.yoursdp.org/component/content/article/1-singap...

Chee (to Lee Hsien Loong): Would you refer to pg 192 of your AEIC, para 3 and read it to us. 
Mr Lee Hsien Loong starts reading. Just before he gets to the words he uttered about fixing the opposition and buying over his supporters, Mr Davinder Singh stands up. 
Singh: Objection, Your Honour. 
Judge: I'll read it. 
Chee: Mr Lee, you read it. 
Judge: Dr Chee please tell us the relevance. 
Chee: This paragraph will show it's true of him – 
Judge Move on, the question is disallowed. 
Chee: He has used words like "fix" and "buy votes". He's here to tell me that his reputation is based on so much. I'm here to demolish it, when he buys votes - 
Judge: Disallowed. 
Chee: Let it be recorded then. Mr Lee, come out and don't hide behind your counsel. You have every opportunity to answer the questions. You allow your counsel to cover - 
Singh: Objection, Your Honour. 
Judge: Court has taken note of Dr Chee's conduct. 
Chee: Mr Lee, please refer to pg 39 of your AEIC sub-heading "lack of transparency." Do you agree with the last line and last paragraph that the GIC operates in secrecy? 
Singh: Objection. Dr Chee is seeking to reopen the issue. This article relates to the offending words. The meaning has been taken to be false. The question of liability is done. 
Chee: Turn then to pg 75 of your AEIC, bottom of the page. Is the Government transparent? Do you agree with this statement? 
Singh: I object. 
Judge: Irrelevent. 
Chee: Do you believe the funds belongs to the people? 
Singh: Irrelevent. 
…………. 
Chee: Do you think that your Ministers spend too much - 
Judge: Disallowed. 
Chee: I put to you that the PAP is bent on greed and power. 
Singh Objection. 
Judge: Sustained. 
Chee Refer to pg 9 of your AEIC. Is the information on the cost of labour of building HDB flats available? 
Singh: Objection. 
Judge Sustained. 
Chee: Is information on the cost of material of building HDB flats available? 
Singh: Objection. 
Judge Sustained. 
Chee: Do you agree that the HDB is operating in secrecy? 
Singh: Objection. 
Judge Sustained. 

To suggest, as Tunku Aziz does, ‘…that Lee undoubtedly played an important and historic role in the creation of Malaysia as a political entity’ gives Kuan Yew more credit than he deserves. Colonial rule in Malaya, Singapore and the Borneo territories of Sabah and Sarawak became untenable, due principally to the anti-colonial movement and also because of strong opposition to colonial rule in its neighborhood by Indonesia.

Kuan Yew initially acted for the leaders of the anti-colonial movement who were detained by the British as their legal counsel. As his Machiavellian traits unfolded, he supported the Chinese educated left and at the same time collaborated with Sir William Goode to instigate the detention of these anti-colonial activists while laying the blame for the detentions on the Brits.

He thus maneuvered himself into the mainstream of the anti-colonial movement led by the PAP while his colonial masters detained all the senior leaders of the PAP: Dr Lim Hock Siew, Dr Poh Soo Kai, Said Zahari, Lim Chin Siong, Chia Thye Poh and over a hundred other leaders representing a cross section of trade unionists, academics, and student leaders. Some of these leaders were held under detention without trial for over a decade and a half. In fact, Chia Thye Poh was a prisoner of conscience for a longer period than Nelson Mandela. 

Kuan Yew wanted Singapore to be in Malaysia desperately because he wanted to expand his power base from the red dot to its hinterland from where he could speak on behalf of a larger constituency as he trotted around the globe as a US-sponsored leader in the region. He did not feel constrained to negotiate with Tengku to oust the MCA from the Alliance coalition and replace it with the PAP so that he could speak on behalf of the Chinese.  

Though Kuan Yew’s relationship with China and his Chineseness is evoked by the Chinese chauvinists on MT as his strong armour, that relationship is actually skin deep. He has always been and remains to the present a man described by some Commonwealth leaders as yellow outside, but white inside. He has been a reliable puppet to the US imperial agenda in the region, including the US containment of China strategy. He provides naval facilities to the US navy and was championing their effort to introduce US Marines into the Straits of Malacca to purportedly fight potential terrorist threats.

The US strategy is, in fact, to control all the choke points such as the Straits so that it will be able to turn off the energy flow to China when it deems it necessary. Over 70% of China’s energy needs flow through the Straits. The resistance to this part of the China containment policy was provided by Malaysia and Indonesia whose leaders argued the introduction of US marines into the Straits of Malacca would violate the sovereignty of the littoral states. 

Lee Kuan Yew was a supporter of the US war of aggression against Vietnam in which some three million Vietnamese were killed and many more injured. US armed forces personnel fighting their war of aggression in Vietnam were rewarded by Kuan Yew with the opening up of Singapore as a Rest and Recreation destination for these forces. Well, we all know what that means: US dollars flow in while the dignity of local women gets violated. 

We should also recall the US invasion of Iraq to get rid of its arsenal of WMDs, which turned out to be a pack of lies. One of the puppets in this region to support the US invasion, which has unleashed a civil war under US occupation and has caused the death of 1.3 million Iraqis and has turned more than 4 million Iraqis into refugees, was Singapore. Lee Kuan Yew, together with like-minded puppets, wanted to provide the US with the fig leaf of legitimacy for the invasion after the US-led war-mongers failed to secure UN Security Council approval. The US presented its murderous enterprise as having the popular support of a 30-nation coalition of the willing. Lee Kuan Yew was one of the willing. In taking Singapore to war in Iraq, the people of Singapore were not consulted by this paragon of incorruptibility.   

Do people like Tunku Aziz, who admire Lee Kuan Yew, not understand that their mentor is justifiably deemed a loathsome opportunist by progressive political opinion as their mentor has partaken in an orgy of death and mayhem by joining a coalition that launched an illegal and immoral war to support US imperialism, a war that is deemed by the Nuremburg Principles as the most heinous crime against humanity? 

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Comments

Like being expelled from the Malayan Federation, the expulsion from Socialist International was another one of the best things to happen to Singapore. Imagine being hog-tied to labour union ideology, and government regulations (politically derived) like many of the so-called "free" liberal/social democracies, whose governments are now scratching their collective (collectivist?)crotches trying to figure out ways to fund their impossible "social programs" so that everyone can be "equal".

True, Lee Kuan Yew and his cronies behave like thugs and gangsters, and the running of the power structure may have parallels with the Vatican, but these are simply metaphors and not reality in fact.

Being in politics means creating distortions, implanting memes of fear and uncertainty, and seizing opportunity — amongst other ignoble tactics — to grab and centralise power (and often money) simply because that is the objective of the game. The end-game is the achievement of some (arbitrary) ideological objective, whose mechanics work like this: certain types of individuals are forced to sacrifice for the benefits of other individuals — it could be settlers in Gaza, or Bhumi's in Malaysia, or GLCs in Singapore or the military-industrial complex in the US. Someone has to pay for someone else to benefit, and the political process has proven time and again that it a very effective mechanism to achieve these ends.

I suggest readers and writers read Nicolò Machiavelli's "The Prince". This is the de facto "textbook" for anyone evil or foolish enough to engage in politics or political games, and The Prince describes how to manipulate people for political ends. For those who are not interested in a political career the work is important to understand so that you can guard yourself against those who choose to manipulate you for their own agenda.

Link to online edition of The Prince:
http://www.constitution.org/mac/prince00.htm

Once you've read the work, you'll notice that Lee Kuan Yew is a textbook example — the quintessential political animal, and personal feelings aside, he is damn good at it.

Posted by: Matilah_Singapura | 15/07/2009

I know that our government is not as upright and incorrurptible as it claims. I know that the judiciary system is not as fair as it declared. After all, all governments will have their bits of darkness somewhere; no gov institution is perfect after all.

Yet at the same time, the above article seem to condemn LKY to hell, and for me, it seems a little overboard. I mean after all, did he not lead this country to where we are now? Have he not done things worthy of respect? That fellow is already 80+ years old. I really do not see much point in criticizing him.

I think it is important for us to ask ourselves if we are improving, if our quality lives are better than that of others in foreign nations, if it's getting better gradually, and if that is worth the freedom of speech, the free media.

Posted by: sc | 16/07/2009

Reply to sc

My another definition is "forgo your freedom and keep your mouth shut. And Little Emperor will bring economic success to Singaporean"

Anyone buy the above statement?

Posted by: V.Benedict | 17/07/2009

> forgo your freedom and keep your mouth shut <

I don't think that is correct. "You either speak and therefore have freedom or you keep quiet and therefore have no freedom".

This is a false dichotomy. And the idea is falsifiable: people may choose to "keep quiet" because they've got other (better?) things to do. Keeping quiet doesn't automatically make them "cowards", "indifferent" or have no freedom.

> Little Emperor will bring economic success to Singaporean <

I don't buy that statement for a nanosecond, but I rest assured that there are in existence people who do.

Posted by: Matilah_Singapura | 20/07/2009

One of the chronic dilemma in the society is the issue on corruption. Even in higher and lower form of offices corruption is present, taking a look in today's economy would you think that the economy will get any better if no matter how we try to stabilize the financial system while in some form of government corruption is apparent, it would lessen the dilemma. Now, corruption is indeed a treat, we need to take serious action with regard to this. Anyway, have you heard about that the People's Pharmacy was started by Joe Graedon, a pharmacologist, and his wife Terry, a medical anthropologist, because they wanted to find some better ways of doing things and living healthier, without needing to rely on some stooge for Big Pharma. Viewing the website is free, but the books published by the People's Pharmacy might be worth some online cash loans.

Posted by: The People's Pharmacy | 21/07/2009

Each to his own.

Whatever is right rests on the person and background !!

Hear the distant drum and dance to its beat.


rgds,

sam choo

Posted by: sam choo | 25/07/2009

Well there is one thing that is certain . When LKW dies and the PAP eventually loses power , the truth will come out about how the country was run and what they did .(just like certain other countries) The history books will be rewritten and maybe like a few other countries we could see court cases against the old Singapore establishment.
As they say time will tell , but from what we have seen in other SE Asian countries the truth will come out .

Posted by: PG | 19/11/2009

As someone who has lived in Singapore and looked at it from the outside it is not hard to see that LKY (family and cronies) probably owns most of the country in some form or another. Corruption at the highest levels is easily identified by the fact that Singaporean politicians are some of the highest paid in the world. A minster earns around 2 million for being a public servant in a country of around 4 million people - the President of the US earns roughly the same and he is in charge of 350 million people and is probably the most influential person on earth. Singapore is by comparison small potatoes (sorry to the Singaporeans who may be offended by that but that is a harsh reality. I'm an Aussie and Australia is small potatoes compared to the US and our PM earns around 350 thousand and he looks after 25 million people). One of the arguments that the pollies trot out is they should be paid like CEOs because of their jobs - well perhaps they should leave politics and go and earn that CEO salary as a CEO. They are public servants who should be motivated by a desire for the betterment of the nation and the people with a sense of civic pride and not by money. Are they paying themselves far more than they are worth to not be tempted by corruption? Isn't this corruption as well - paying someone extra not to be corrupt? With that would also come a veneer of 'since they are well paid they could not possibly be corrupt' deflecting any suspicion. But if they can get away with it then why not double dip?

The people of Singapore are really great people and I genuinely like the place and the people deserve much better from their politicians than what they get.

Posted by: Eyerish | 07/12/2009

Hi Mr. Said,
Read some of your stuff. I have also read TJS George's Lee Kuan Yew, and the irony is, I am living the kind of life created by Mr. Lee; my dad was a party member (Barisan Socialist) back in the early 70s and he was interviewed by the ISD for his partisanship. And the rest is all in the book; my family was put under surveillance--namely me (not that I was involved in politics or in any political party--I am not a socialist) and my mother (incidentally the ISD officer who interviewed my father live in the same apartment block--keep us in check--of all the lousy 'luck' in the whole wide world). I made the fatal mistake of not getting hold of this book early enough and now I am paying big time! I am a graduate of Political Science (it took me 5 1/2 years instead of 4 to finish my degree in Canada) and another two years of foreign spooks trying to find faults with me while doing a MA from the UK (got a diploma instead of a degree--remember Mr. Lee rather deal with the Soviets, the British, Australians and the New Zealanders than to accommodate the Americans during the height of the Cold War in 1965 when LBJ was still the president; according to the book, the Americans send in a CIA agent to Singapore--God bless their country--wanted to kick Mr. Lee out of the prime ministerial seat as a PM). Remember the part on Mr. Lee discouraging Singaporean's from studying think subjects like Sociology, Political Science and Philosophy? What about hiring PAP members as teachers in elementary and high schools? My favourite quote from TJS George on Mr. Lee's control of the education system in Singapore was "Keep the stomach full and the mind empty." How true! Keep the site going and power to the people! At this point, I would like to recommend reading Noam Chomsky "Rethinking Camelot"--mind blowing stuff, talks about the Politics of Cold War and collateral damages cause by 'zero-sum-game'--which of course explain a lot about how the world actually works. Some people will have more rights and freedom than others!

Posted by: Pol Prisoner Mal | 07/12/2009

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