Tuesday, March 24, 2015

THE LATE SINGAPORE LEADER A VISIONARY IN CREATING A CAPITALISM MARKET FOR THE SMALL ASIAN COUNTRY AFTER ITS SEPARATION FROM BRITISH RULE AND BREAKING FROM MAINLAND MALAYSIA LEADING THE FRAME WORK THAT WOULD BE MODELED BY THE ASIAN TIGER SUCH AS KOREA, TAIWAN, AND HONGKONG–DIES AT 91 LEE KUAN YEW

Former Singapore Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew has died early Monday. He was 91 years old. Lee was Singapore's leader from 1959 until 1990, but remained a highly influential figure and a strategist on the city state's economy.
Lee was hospitalized in Singapore General Hospital in early February with severe pneumonia, and was later placed on life support.
"Harry" Lee Kuan Yew, a fourth generation Singaporean, whose ancestors migrated from China's Guangdong Province in the 1860s, played a primary role in guiding the island state's post-colonial era toward economic  success.
A survivor of the Japanese Imperial Army's occupation of Singapore, Lee studied economics in London after the war and attended Cambridge University, gaining a law degree.

His political life began in 1954 with the formation the People's Action Party (PAP), a coalition of middle class and pro-communist trade unionists. In 1955 Lee was the opposition leader in the legislature. But splits within the PAP with the party's left wing led to arrests of pro-communists in 1957.
The PAP won an electoral landslide in 1959, and Lee Kuan Yew became Singapore's first Prime Minister, a position he held until 1990 before taking a post of senior minister.
Carl Thayer, a political scientist at the University of New South Wales in Australia, says Lee was pivotal to Singapore's long term future.
"The story of modern day Singapore can't be told without reference to Lee Kwan Yew," said Thayer. "He took the country from colonial rule to independence. He fended off challenges from the socialist left and then he dominated politics."
Lee faced political challeges as prime minister. An early goal was the formation of a Federation of Malaysia bringing together Singapore, Malaya, Sabah and Sarawak.
But differences soon emerged between Peninsular Malaysia's Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman and Lee, especially after race riots between Chinese and Muslims in 1964 and again in 1965. And on August 9, 1965 Abdul Rahman called for separation.
"There have been differences between the central government and the leader of the Singapore state government," said Abdul Rahman. "And these differences take so many forms and are so many kinds that it has not been possible to resolve them and so we decided we must part company."
Historians say Lee opposed Abdul Rahman's favoring local Malays over ethnic Chinese. Lee was distraught with news of separation.
"You see the whole of my adult life I believed in the Malaysia merger and the unity of these two territories. You know some connection by geography and ties of kinship... would you mind if we stopped for a while," he said.
At the age of 42 Lee became Singapore's sole leader, driving hard on economic growth to build the Republic and to foster unity. "I am not here to play someone else's game. I have a few million people's lives to account for and Singapore will survive."
Analysts say Lee's strengths lay in setting standards and objectives, a "strategic thinker" promoting Singapore's most valuable resource -- its people.
Foreign investment followed. With economic growth running often at near 10 percent over the decades, Lee helped define a model of capitalist development that was also adopted by the so-called "Asian Tigers" -- Hong Kong, Taiwan and Korea.

http://english.chosun.com/site/data/html_dir/2015/03/23/2015032300576.html

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