Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

rodders

Well-Known Member
Legendary 10 Years
A time for reckoning – an open letter to PM Lee

Posted by theonlinecitizen on April 11, 2011 50 Comments
The following is an open letter from a TOC reader to Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. PM Lee will be on a Channel NewsAsia programme tomorrow – Question Time With The Prime Minister – to take questions from Singaporeans. The programme is scheduled to air LIVE on the web on Tuesday, April 12, 8-9pm. (See here and here.)

Our reader too has some questions for the Prime Minister in the following open letter.

Dear Prime Minister,

At the end of each term, every child in school receives a report-card that sums up his or her performance during the term. It is essential for each child to get good grades so he or she can move on to the next class.
Similarly, we hope the PAP government will be willing to look at a report card on its performance over the past five years. The report is not exhaustive but merely a sampling of some of the issues that concern your subjects, oops, the plebeians, I mean the people.
The editors of The Online Citizen (TOC) have assured me that in the interests of transparency and openness, your reply will be published in full, unedited and unabridged and certainly unchanged for “sense”. I am sure you will find this a refreshing change from the heavy-handed treatment that letter-writers to some of TOC’s larger contemporaries in town (mainstream media) get.
For your convenience, the report has been grouped into sections. Most of the points have been framed as questions for your kind consideration:

ACCOUNTABILITY

1. Financial crisis: What were the exact losses suffered by Temasek Holdings (Temasek) and the Government Investment Corporation (GIC) between 2008 and 2009 owing to the global financial crisis? How much of the losses were recovered in 2010? Global best practices as seen in countries such as Norway require that these be disclosed.

2. Shin Corporation, ABC Learning etc: How much has Singapore lost on its investments in these and similar companies over the past five years? Has anyone been held accountable for the losses? (We are specifically interested in the second question).
We understand it is in the nature of markets for investments to go up as well as down. However, this does not mean there are no bad investments and that they should not be scrutinised and held up to public view. We hope you agree.

3. Myanmar: How much of Singapore’s public money is invested in Myanmar? Did Singapore sell arms to the military junta and is it continuing to do military deals with the government in that country? Why does Singapore continue to have relations with this repressive regime at all? (Perhaps your Foreign Minister, Mr Yeo, would like to comment on this; he has been remarkably quiet on this subject).

4. Failed SGX-ASX merger: We understand the Australian government has rejected the proposed merger of the Singapore and Australian Stock Exchanges owing to its strongly negative perception of the government’s holdings in the Singapore Stock Exchange (SGX) through Temasek. Would you care to comment on why Temasek’s interests in SGX should be viewed negatively? Could it be because of excessive government control of business and industry in Singapore? Would you say it has something to do with the opaque manner in which the government operates its businesses and its tendency to monopolise certain sectors of the economy?

5. Mas Selamat’s escape: We are very sympathetic to your government’s plight over this unfortunate episode. We understand that our highly paid Deputy Prime Minister and Co-ordinating Minister for National Security could not have foreseen the security lapse so, of course, it was not his fault. Nevertheless, the people are concerned because we are told our Ministers expect to be paid in line with top earners in the private sector.
Of course, we understand that service in your government is different from working in the private sector and that it is not necessary for senior people to take responsibility for major lapses. (The security breach could, in theory, have been very damaging to Singapore if Mas Selamat had not been recaptured by our neighbours). We also understand the culture in other countries where ministers resign to take responsibility for lapses in their ministries is alien to us; Singapore, after all, is a special country with special circumstances. In this country it is acceptable for junior officers to be disciplined and removed but not senior grandees, sorry, ministers.

6 Youth Olympic Games (YOG):
We are told the cost of this event was one-tenth that of the Summer Olympics. The Beijing Summer Olympics attracted a total of 4.7 billion viewers. Could the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports (MCYS) tell us how many viewers the YOG attracted worldwide? We understand the MCYS Minister, rather than being held accountable for his performance, has been promoted to head your government’s re-election bid in a Group Representation Constituency (GRC).
We fully understand he, like the gentleman mentioned in the previous point, was not responsible for the budget over-run or the food-poisoning incident. He did an exemplary job in generating marketing exposure for Singapore and attracting additional tourist revenue. Only, we have not been told how much of this exposure was generated internationally and whether it was really beneficial (as opposed to mere internet “noise”) or sustainable for the long term? Would you care to enlighten us?

7 Road traffic: When the Certificate of Entitlement (COE) and Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) schemes were introduced 20 years ago, we were told the purpose was to keep traffic in Singapore “free-flowing”. Your government has earned billions from these two schemes yet we have traffic snarls on our roads that are approaching the infamous levels seen in the capitals of some of our neighbouring countries. Of course, it could not have been foreseen by your Ministry of Transport or highly paid Transport Minister that releasing COEs liberally to pander to the demands of the motor industry would lead to this situation. The poor minister who is responsible for these conditions, we understand, needs the support of another “heavyweight” minister from your cabinet in his bid for re-election in a GRC.
In short, our point is that many ordinary Singaporeans are held accountable in their everyday jobs and they are penalised for serious mistakes. The people would like to know whether your government and specifically, your talented cabinet, has a similar culture of accountability and acceptance of responsibility?

KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS (KPI)

1. Median wages: The median income for all households in Singapore rose by barely 1.6% per year in real terms over the past decade[ii]. Income for the bottom third of households increased by much less. During this time, Singapore’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) increased by 86% from $162.6 b to $303.7 b[iii]. Your Ministers have, of course, rewarded themselves handsomely based on the growth of the economy. Would you care to explain why wages have not kept pace with the growth of the economy? Would you agree that your single KPI, GDP growth, is hopelessly misaligned with the interests of Singaporeans as a whole? Shouldn’t the main KPI for senior civil servants and ministers be median wages rather than the GDP?

2. Other indicators: Shouldn’t non-material indicators such as work-life balance of Singaporeans, working hours and leisure time, flexible working hours for young parents, our carbon footprint, population density and so on also be included in the KPI of senior officers in your government?

SOCIAL SERVICES

1. We have already touched upon the stagnant wages of the bottom third of society. There have been many stories in the media concerning the elderly and the homeless in Singapore. Why is it that despite Singapore’s phenomenal economic growth, we continue to have an underclass of desperately poor people? Could it be because your government’s mindless pursuit of economic growth has been divorced from all concerns of whether or not the growth benefits all segments of society?

2. The number of hospital beds in Singapore has been stagnant over the past decade. In fairness to you, several new hospitals are coming on-stream over the next few years. Nevertheless, we hear that large sections of the people are not covered under the Medishield programme for various categories of serious illnesses, such as cancer, as has been highlighted on this blog recently. Why is it that Singapore, with a per capita GDP approaching $60,000[iv] cannot provide a basic safety-net for the poorest or the stricken in our society, in keeping with those in other countries at a similar level of development? Would you agree with the charge that your government’s liberal foreign worker policy has disadvantaged and impoverished our people?

3. Would you agree that a country can have a high GDP per head while maintaining a low population density and a high quality of life (eg Luxembourg)? Do you not agree that the business model pursued by your government has resulted in a congested and environmentally degraded city? Has this overcrowding not resulted in public housing (HDB) prices rising by over 60% in the past three years?

PERSONAL LIBERTIES

After almost half a century since independence and the end of the Malayan Insurgency and Konfrontasi, and 20 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War, why are Singapore citizens still not allowed to freely:
Assemble
Speak in public
Demonstrate peacefully
Publish newspapers or
Broadcast on television and the Internet?
Why do we need a law that allows detention without trial? Surely your government can produce a proper anti-terrorism law that allows those charged the benefit of a fair trial? Why are we still stuck in the past with retrograde, repressive laws?
We hope it is not too much to expect an answer from you to these questions? With a salary approaching $4 million a year for yourself, three full ministers assisting you and a budget for the Prime Minister’s Office of close to $348 million per year we pray these questions will not burden you too much.
The people look forward to your reply to this brief report card so they can decide whether or not to give you and your government a clean bill of health in the coming General Election.
Thank you for taking the time to read this.
Yours sincerely,
A Concerned Singaporean

PS: We know you will be overwhelmed with questions at the Q&A session on Channel NewsAsia “live” on Tuesday and that the editors will have a hard time picking the questions for you to answer. I am sure there is no truth to the rumour that they will pick the ones that show your government in the best light. In any case, we hope the written questions above will give you time to ponder over them at your leisure and reply at your convenience. Singaporeans await your reply with bated breath.
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

Frankly, certain issues listed are over myopic and micro in nature. Almost like nick-picking on the incumbents.

Example - Would Mas Selamat have escaped anyways if anyone else is the Home Affairs Minister? But I agree there was a PR boo-boo insofar as communication is concerned......
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

Agree with you on the pointers raised. The writer is probably giving the pappies a taste of their own medicine.
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

I can't wait for this to be over, the digital angst is getting OLD AND BORING.
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

kenntona;635127 said:
Frankly, certain issues listed are over myopic and micro in nature. Almost like nick-picking on the incumbents.

Example - Would Mas Selamat have escaped anyways if anyone else is the Home Affairs Minister? But I agree there was a PR boo-boo insofar as communication is concerned......

When a control fails, the control owner and not the operators answer for it.

MM Lee quite rightly pointed out that complacency was to be blamed for Mas Selamat's escape. But who's complacency are we talking about? MS escaped through an open toilet window, while the security cameras mulfuctioned. Is it not WKS's responsibility to know in detail the effectiveness of the physical controls at the Whitley Detention Ctr? At least through regular reports and reviews?

Bear in mind that this was not the only security related lapse that happened. There was still:
1. 2 detainees at Sub Court beating up a police officer and escaping into the open before being caught.
2. Father who accidentally used his son's passport and managed to get past Changi airport immigration checks and board the plane. Not realising the mistake until in the air.
3. Breach at MRT depot

All these lapses in security, point to a bigger problem, a systemic failure in national security.
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

marklee said:
When a control fails, the control owner and not the operators answer for it.

MM Lee quite rightly pointed out that complacency was to be blamed for Mas Selamat's escape. But who's complacency are we talking about? MS escaped through an open toilet window, while the security cameras mulfuctioned. Is it not WKS's responsibility to know in detail the effectiveness of the physical controls at the Whitley Detention Ctr? At least through regular reports and reviews?

Bear in mind that this was not the only security related lapse that happened. There was still:
1. 2 detainees at Sub Court beating up a police officer and escaping into the open before being caught.
2. Father who accidentally used his son's passport and managed to get past Changi airport immigration checks and board the plane. Not realising the mistake until in the air.
3. Breach at MRT depot

All these lapses in security, point to a bigger problem, a systemic failure in national security.
How would a minister in a similar capacity be accounted for in similar or worse situation?

Examples: New York city during 911 or the terrorist act in London. Who did the people blamed on?
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

In the case of 911, there is a lot of lapses in airport security and even the FBI so rightfully the head of FBI and person in charge of airport security should tender their resignation but the main blame should still be on the terrorist! In Japan I am sure some minister will own up and say Aligato I yum soli....but nowadays they dont commit harakiri anymore....


kenntona;635192 said:
How would a minister in a similar capacity be accounted for in similar or worse situation?

Examples: New York city during 911 or the terrorist act in London. Who did the people blamed on?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

zorro;635196 said:
In the case of 911, there is a lot of lapses in airport security and even the FBI so rightfully the head of FBI and person in charge of airport security should tender their resignation but the main blame should still be on the terrorist! In Japan I am sure some minister will own up and say Aligato I yum soli....but nowadays they dont commit harakiri anymore....

9/11 Commission Report - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Most interestingly, take a look at the "Criticism" section.

Excerpt:
"The Report has been accused of not giving the whole story about the warnings the U.S. received prior to the attacks.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9/11_Commission_Report#cite_note-13 While the Report did describe that "the system was blinking red" and that an al Qaeda attack was imminent, it did not include the testimony of former CIA director George Tenet to the Commission in January 2004, in which he claimed to have given a specific warning to the Administration in a July 2001 meeting with Condoleezza Rice. Commission members Thomas Kean and Lee Hamilton stated that they had not been told about the meeting. But the Boston Globe reported that "it turns out that the panel was, in fact, told about the meeting, according to the interview transcript and Democratic Commission member Richard Ben-Veniste, who sat in on the interview with Tenet.""http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9/11_Commission_Report#cite_note-14
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

126PM: DPM and PAP MP Wong Kan Seng @ Deyi Secondary School addresses crowd on SPP contest at Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC:"You know what we have done for the last five years. I know you will choose wisely." Crowd chants "Mas Selamat... Mas Selamat."


1236PM: Objection raised by SDP team led by Dr Vincent Wijeysingha at Holland-Bukit GRC. It contests that PAP candidate Miss Sim Ann is listed in her nomination papers as "unemployed" but as she is still serving out her notice of resignation, technically, she is still in the Civil Service, which disqualifies her from the GE. The SDP team objects to her candidacy and strenuously request the Returning Officer to declare her candidacy null and void.
SDP team led by Dr Vincent Wijeysingha's turn to address the crowd: "We raised an objection regarding the PAP team for Holland Bukit-Timah. We raised two specific points of objection... They told us that objections were over-ruled but did not tell us why... I call upon the Returning Officer at the Elections Department to look into this anomaly."
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

Was Mas Selamat in the crowd? You never know with WrongCuntSingh!

rodders;635213 said:
126PM: DPM and PAP MP Wong Kan Seng @ Deyi Secondary School addresses crowd on SPP contest at Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC:"You know what we have done for the last five years. I know you will choose wisely." Crowd chants "Mas Selamat... Mas Selamat."
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

kenntona;635127 said:
Frankly, certain issues listed are over myopic and micro in nature. Almost like nick-picking on the incumbents.

Example - Would Mas Selamat have escaped anyways if anyone else is the Home Affairs Minister? But I agree there was a PR boo-boo insofar as communication is concerned......

during NS, we conducted regular exercises to test the defence system. In my camp, we had regular "attacks" from other forces to test and close up holes in the security system ..

Does the Whitley Road detention camp have that sort of exercise?
How often is that conducted?
When was it last conducted before MS escaped?
Why wasnt the loophole in the security detected in those exercises?
Was it due to insufficient frequency?

If the answers for above are lousy excuses, then isnt it the management's fault? we can blame the guards? :screwedu:

WHY the manhunt didnt include survellance of MS's close friends and relatives during the initial days of his escape still confounded me.
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

powersteer said:
If the answers for above are lousy excuses, then isnt it the management's fault? we can blame the guards? :screwedu:

WHY the manhunt didnt include survellance of MS's close friends and relatives during the initial days of his escape still confounded me.
Agree ........

BUT


























"It was an honest mistake, let's move on !!!"

:nehnehhh: :nehnehhh: :nehnehhh:
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

rodders;635213 said:
126PM: DPM and PAP MP Wong Kan Seng @ Deyi Secondary School addresses crowd on SPP contest at Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC:"You know what we have done for the last five years. I know you will choose wisely." Crowd chants "Mas Selamat... Mas Selamat."
FIERCE.gif
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

rodders;635213 said:
126PM: DPM and PAP MP Wong Kan Seng @ Deyi Secondary School addresses crowd on SPP contest at Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC:"You know what we have done for the last five years. I know you will choose wisely." Crowd chants "Mas Selamat... Mas Selamat."

:goodup::lol2::lol2::lol2::lol2::lol2:
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

This is a long, rambling letter without context and perspective. The writer has angst and is basically nitpicking.

I hope our opposition parties are made of better stuff than this.

Alvin.
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

rodders;635213 said:
126PM: DPM and PAP MP Wong Kan Seng @ Deyi Secondary School addresses crowd on SPP contest at Bishan-Toa Payoh GRC:"You know what we have done for the last five years. I know you will choose wisely." Crowd chants "Mas Selamat... Mas Selamat."

Ouch ..........
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

Source : from subaru forum


Monica Lee Kim Mon who is sister of LKY is mother of Paper General , Paper General Chan Chun Sing.

Monica Lee Kim Mon is married to Chan Chee Chiu. The couple named above bought a unit at Scots 28 also......(Remember HPL saga?)
So MG Chan Chun Sing (Kee Chiu) is son of Chan Chee Chiu?..... ah...so.....
CAVEATS LODGED AT LAND TITLES REGISTRY AGAINST UNITS IN SCOTTS 28

Which means LKY is the grandfather-in-law of Keechiu Chan. TP GRC somemore to ensure safe passage.

No wonder he is the human walking stick for Old Fart. That explains. Singapore-style meritocracy at work again.

And the famiLee and PAP kept silent about this.

It is only a matter of time before Keechiu Chan becomes Home Affairs Minister, and control the internal affairs (police, internal security) for the next emperor of the familee dynasty.

Chan Chun Sing
Yes, I was at the funeral. The Army under my charge was tasked to support the gun carriage procession in honour of the late Mdm Kwa Geok Choo. Hence, I was there with my men.
I am related to the Lee family as much as I am relat...ed to all Singaporeans... as fellow Singaporeans. Or as someone cheekily told me, that if one believes in evolution, then we all - regardless of race, language and religion - came from the same ancestor.
I didn't answer an earlier post on this because I don't think we shld be disrespectful by politicising a funeral.
Chan Chun Sing | Facebook ... =1&theater
-------------------------------
 
Re: Open Letter to PM Lee -Performan​ce Review for GE2011

An open letter from a typical back seat driver whiner .................

rodders;635117 said:
A time for reckoning – an open letter to PM Lee

Posted by theonlinecitizen on April 11, 2011 50 Comments
The following is an open letter from a TOC reader to Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. PM Lee will be on a Channel NewsAsia programme tomorrow – Question Time With The Prime Minister – to take questions from Singaporeans. The programme is scheduled to air LIVE on the web on Tuesday, April 12, 8-9pm. (See here and here.)

Our reader too has some questions for the Prime Minister in the following open letter.

Dear Prime Minister,

At the end of each term, every child in school receives a report-card that sums up his or her performance during the term. It is essential for each child to get good grades so he or she can move on to the next class.
Similarly, we hope the PAP government will be willing to look at a report card on its performance over the past five years. The report is not exhaustive but merely a sampling of some of the issues that concern your subjects, oops, the plebeians, I mean the people.
The editors of The Online Citizen (TOC) have assured me that in the interests of transparency and openness, your reply will be published in full, unedited and unabridged and certainly unchanged for “sense”. I am sure you will find this a refreshing change from the heavy-handed treatment that letter-writers to some of TOC’s larger contemporaries in town (mainstream media) get.
For your convenience, the report has been grouped into sections. Most of the points have been framed as questions for your kind consideration:

ACCOUNTABILITY

1. Financial crisis: What were the exact losses suffered by Temasek Holdings (Temasek) and the Government Investment Corporation (GIC) between 2008 and 2009 owing to the global financial crisis? How much of the losses were recovered in 2010? Global best practices as seen in countries such as Norway require that these be disclosed.

2. Shin Corporation, ABC Learning etc: How much has Singapore lost on its investments in these and similar companies over the past five years? Has anyone been held accountable for the losses? (We are specifically interested in the second question).
We understand it is in the nature of markets for investments to go up as well as down. However, this does not mean there are no bad investments and that they should not be scrutinised and held up to public view. We hope you agree.

3. Myanmar: How much of Singapore’s public money is invested in Myanmar? Did Singapore sell arms to the military junta and is it continuing to do military deals with the government in that country? Why does Singapore continue to have relations with this repressive regime at all? (Perhaps your Foreign Minister, Mr Yeo, would like to comment on this; he has been remarkably quiet on this subject).

4. Failed SGX-ASX merger: We understand the Australian government has rejected the proposed merger of the Singapore and Australian Stock Exchanges owing to its strongly negative perception of the government’s holdings in the Singapore Stock Exchange (SGX) through Temasek. Would you care to comment on why Temasek’s interests in SGX should be viewed negatively? Could it be because of excessive government control of business and industry in Singapore? Would you say it has something to do with the opaque manner in which the government operates its businesses and its tendency to monopolise certain sectors of the economy?

5. Mas Selamat’s escape: We are very sympathetic to your government’s plight over this unfortunate episode. We understand that our highly paid Deputy Prime Minister and Co-ordinating Minister for National Security could not have foreseen the security lapse so, of course, it was not his fault. Nevertheless, the people are concerned because we are told our Ministers expect to be paid in line with top earners in the private sector.
Of course, we understand that service in your government is different from working in the private sector and that it is not necessary for senior people to take responsibility for major lapses. (The security breach could, in theory, have been very damaging to Singapore if Mas Selamat had not been recaptured by our neighbours). We also understand the culture in other countries where ministers resign to take responsibility for lapses in their ministries is alien to us; Singapore, after all, is a special country with special circumstances. In this country it is acceptable for junior officers to be disciplined and removed but not senior grandees, sorry, ministers.

6 Youth Olympic Games (YOG):
We are told the cost of this event was one-tenth that of the Summer Olympics. The Beijing Summer Olympics attracted a total of 4.7 billion viewers. Could the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports (MCYS) tell us how many viewers the YOG attracted worldwide? We understand the MCYS Minister, rather than being held accountable for his performance, has been promoted to head your government’s re-election bid in a Group Representation Constituency (GRC).
We fully understand he, like the gentleman mentioned in the previous point, was not responsible for the budget over-run or the food-poisoning incident. He did an exemplary job in generating marketing exposure for Singapore and attracting additional tourist revenue. Only, we have not been told how much of this exposure was generated internationally and whether it was really beneficial (as opposed to mere internet “noise”) or sustainable for the long term? Would you care to enlighten us?

7 Road traffic: When the Certificate of Entitlement (COE) and Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) schemes were introduced 20 years ago, we were told the purpose was to keep traffic in Singapore “free-flowing”. Your government has earned billions from these two schemes yet we have traffic snarls on our roads that are approaching the infamous levels seen in the capitals of some of our neighbouring countries. Of course, it could not have been foreseen by your Ministry of Transport or highly paid Transport Minister that releasing COEs liberally to pander to the demands of the motor industry would lead to this situation. The poor minister who is responsible for these conditions, we understand, needs the support of another “heavyweight” minister from your cabinet in his bid for re-election in a GRC.
In short, our point is that many ordinary Singaporeans are held accountable in their everyday jobs and they are penalised for serious mistakes. The people would like to know whether your government and specifically, your talented cabinet, has a similar culture of accountability and acceptance of responsibility?

KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS (KPI)

1. Median wages: The median income for all households in Singapore rose by barely 1.6% per year in real terms over the past decade[ii]. Income for the bottom third of households increased by much less. During this time, Singapore’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) increased by 86% from $162.6 b to $303.7 b[iii]. Your Ministers have, of course, rewarded themselves handsomely based on the growth of the economy. Would you care to explain why wages have not kept pace with the growth of the economy? Would you agree that your single KPI, GDP growth, is hopelessly misaligned with the interests of Singaporeans as a whole? Shouldn’t the main KPI for senior civil servants and ministers be median wages rather than the GDP?

2. Other indicators: Shouldn’t non-material indicators such as work-life balance of Singaporeans, working hours and leisure time, flexible working hours for young parents, our carbon footprint, population density and so on also be included in the KPI of senior officers in your government?

SOCIAL SERVICES

1. We have already touched upon the stagnant wages of the bottom third of society. There have been many stories in the media concerning the elderly and the homeless in Singapore. Why is it that despite Singapore’s phenomenal economic growth, we continue to have an underclass of desperately poor people? Could it be because your government’s mindless pursuit of economic growth has been divorced from all concerns of whether or not the growth benefits all segments of society?

2. The number of hospital beds in Singapore has been stagnant over the past decade. In fairness to you, several new hospitals are coming on-stream over the next few years. Nevertheless, we hear that large sections of the people are not covered under the Medishield programme for various categories of serious illnesses, such as cancer, as has been highlighted on this blog recently. Why is it that Singapore, with a per capita GDP approaching $60,000[iv] cannot provide a basic safety-net for the poorest or the stricken in our society, in keeping with those in other countries at a similar level of development? Would you agree with the charge that your government’s liberal foreign worker policy has disadvantaged and impoverished our people?

3. Would you agree that a country can have a high GDP per head while maintaining a low population density and a high quality of life (eg Luxembourg)? Do you not agree that the business model pursued by your government has resulted in a congested and environmentally degraded city? Has this overcrowding not resulted in public housing (HDB) prices rising by over 60% in the past three years?

PERSONAL LIBERTIES

After almost half a century since independence and the end of the Malayan Insurgency and Konfrontasi, and 20 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War, why are Singapore citizens still not allowed to freely:
Assemble
Speak in public
Demonstrate peacefully
Publish newspapers or
Broadcast on television and the Internet?
Why do we need a law that allows detention without trial? Surely your government can produce a proper anti-terrorism law that allows those charged the benefit of a fair trial? Why are we still stuck in the past with retrograde, repressive laws?
We hope it is not too much to expect an answer from you to these questions? With a salary approaching $4 million a year for yourself, three full ministers assisting you and a budget for the Prime Minister’s Office of close to $348 million per year we pray these questions will not burden you too much.
The people look forward to your reply to this brief report card so they can decide whether or not to give you and your government a clean bill of health in the coming General Election.
Thank you for taking the time to read this.
Yours sincerely,
A Concerned Singaporean

PS: We know you will be overwhelmed with questions at the Q&A session on Channel NewsAsia “live” on Tuesday and that the editors will have a hard time picking the questions for you to answer. I am sure there is no truth to the rumour that they will pick the ones that show your government in the best light. In any case, we hope the written questions above will give you time to ponder over them at your leisure and reply at your convenience. Singaporeans await your reply with bated breath.
 

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