IHT : Lee Kuan Yew Interview
Saturday, May 6, 2006
Personally, I thought, as it unfolded a few weeks ago, that I was witnessing a massive screwup by the Channel News Asia folks. It was surely some kind of a mistake - some youngsters were having a chat with the legend himself, and how ! Interrupting, accusing, laying it all out. Well, today's International Herald Tribune carries an article entitled "Generational shift threatens Singapore founder's legacy" with most of the interesting parts from that now landmark TV event. Excerpts -
As his party headed for another crushing victory in another election, being held Saturday, the man who created Singapore in his own severe image, Lee Kuan Yew, had an unsettling glimpse into what could be the future of his country, and he did not like it. In the newspapers, on the airwaves and in threats of lawsuits against opposition leaders, the tough operators of his People's Action Party were doing what they always do, grinding their challengers into broken, humiliated little bits and pieces. In the last election, in 2001, only two of the 84 elected seats in the Singaporean Parliament were won by opposition candidates. If that number increases by even one or two this time, eyebrows will be raised.
But there they were on live television three weeks ago, 10 polite young Singaporeans, challenging Lee, who is 82, with a confidence and lack of deference that is rare among their elders here….."What we want is a choice," said Mabel Lee, 28, an editor and television presenter. "What we want is political vibrancy. What we want is a media that could reflect both the views of the opposition as well as of the ruling party fairly. What we want is to see that the opposition is being given a level playing field. What we want is fairness in the political sphere." Lee argued back as if he had met, in this open-minded younger generation, his real opposition – interrupting, cross-examining and telling them that they needed to be put in their places like his own grandchildren. "Let me tell you this," said Lee, who holds the title minister mentor and whose 54-year-old son, Lee Hsien Loong, is prime minister of Singapore. "If what you say is a reflection of your generation, then I'm a bit sad." People over 55, he said, people who had known the hardships his country had overcome to provide them with their affluence and stability, would never talk this way.
…..One common form of attack by the ruling party, or PAP, is to bring libel suits against critics, putting them on the defensive and contributing to a culture of self-censorship. The suits have drawn criticism from human rights groups, from the United States, from members of the opposition and, on the television show last month, from one of Lee's young questioners, who said the tactic "gives the impression that the PAP is arrogant and even a bully." Just a few days later, Lee and his son threatened to sue members of one of the three opposition parties, the Singapore Democratic Party, for statements in its newsletter that they said appeared to link them to corruption. The prime minister explained why. "If you don't have the law of defamation, you would be like America where people say terrible things about the president and it can't be proved," the prime minister said. "Is it right? Is it wrong? Because even if it is wrong, the president cannot sue. "Or it will be like the Philippines where people say terrible things about the president. She can't sue. Or Thailand where serious things are said about Thaksin and then he wanted to sue and eventually for other reasons, couldn't proceed," he said referring to Thaksin Shinawatra, former prime minister of Thailand…..There were no opposition members in Parliament for the first 16 years of Singaporean nationhood, he noted recently, a period when the nation experienced some of its most dramatic social and economic progress. Some day, if they have proved themselves, Lee said, there would be room for a more active opposition here. But he said: "I want a world-class opposition, not this riff-raff." Speaking to his young questioners on television, Lee was at pains to describe some of the challenges Singapore had overcome on this racially mixed, resource-poor island. But his examples, dating from before they were born, may not have resonated with them.
In the last chapter of a long and successful career of nation-building, Lee seems to have little patience with critics who, in his view, see only part of the picture. "You are not going to intimidate me, ever," he told a questioner at a recent meeting with foreign reporters, as if he could ever be intimidated. "We're not going to allow foreign correspondents or foreign journalists or anybody else to tell us what to do," he said. "There are very few things that I do not know about Singapore politics, and there are very few things that you can tell me or any foreign correspondent can tell me about Singapore."
IHT Reference : http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/05/05/news/sing.php



