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George Yeo Boss In Hong Kong Keep Crticising Lee Hsien Loong

gingerlyn

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Dear brothers and sisters,

what had happened to Singapore politics?

George Yeo is working for Kerry Logistics and this groups also owns Hong Kong South China Morning Post.

Recently Hong Kong South China Morning Post is becoming the number 1 Singapore overseas Newspapers in criticising Lee Hsien Loong leadership.

Writer Catherine Lim's open letter to Singaporean PM fuels social media debate
http://www.scmp.com/news/asia/artic...tter-singaporean-pm-fuels-social-media-debate

Southeast Asian leaders flounder in the face of online criticism
http://www.scmp.com/news/asia/article/1527701/southeast-asian-leaders-flounder-face-online-criticism

who is behind this dirty trick of attacking Lee Hsien Loong leadership in Hong Kong?
 
George Yeo is working for Kerry Logistics and this groups also owns Hong Kong South China Morning Post.

Recently Hong Kong South China Morning Post is becoming the number 1 Singapore overseas Newspapers in criticising Lee Hsien Loong leadership.

Does it have anything to do with someone long dead who goes by the alias of Peng Cheng?
 
methinks she's a better replacement for seah chiang nee, anytime!
 
Does it have anything to do with someone long dead who goes by the alias of Peng Cheng?

"....................

Student politics were a cause of concern, too, to the authorities in the University of Malaya when it was located in Singapore in those early days, and in this connection the author mentions James Puthucheary and William Kuok Hock Ling (who used the communist alias of Peng Cheng), both well known student activists. Though the author does not refer to it, William Kuok—who went underground with the Communist Party of Malaya at the start of the Malayan Emergency in June 1948, edited a stenciled CPM English-language newssheet from the jungle, and was eventually killed by the security forces in an attack on a communist jungle camp in north Malaya—came from a well known and respected business family in Johor Bahru. His brother, Robert Kuok, is reputed to be the richest Chinese in Southeast Asia today.

......................"

For more click here: http://asiapacific.anu.edu.au/newma...f-student-activism-in-malaysia-tlcnmrev-xxxv/
 
Hong Kong newspapers are enjoying the freedom of expression!
 
Singaporeans 'no longer trust their government': Writer Catherine Lim criticises PM in open letter
Singaporeans no longer trust their leaders, says writer Catherine Lim in open missive to Lee Hsien Loong that fuels social media debate


Satish Cheney PUBLISHED : Monday, 09 June, 2014, 3:54am UPDATED : Monday, 09 June, 2014, 11:42am



Catherine Lim in open missive to Lee Hsien Loong. Photos: SCMP, EPA

An open letter to Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, written by one of Asia's most iconic personalities in the field of literature, is spreading fast on social media, with many leaving comments on her blog thanking her for speaking up while others are sceptical.

Dr Catherine Lim is a well-known and prominent writer in the region, having published numerous novels and collections of poetry and short stories as well as political commentaries.

Her books have been used in government schools for literature studies. The award-winning Singaporean writer was made a Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters by the French government and received an honorary doctorate of literature from Murdoch University in Australia.

In her open letter, she claimed that Singaporeans "no longer trust their government and the government no longer cares about regaining their trust".

Lim, who is in her early 70s, said there were clear signs of a trust issue. She cited the recent case of graffiti at a public housing block that was targeted at the ruling People's Action Party (PAP) as well as the rising number of protests and the increased online criticism, among other examples.

The Malaysian-born author said the government had put in a lot of effort to improve the lives of citizens but warned that the better-educated internet generation demanded more.

She heavily criticised Lee's recent defamation suit against Roy Ngerng, a young blogger who allegedly accused the prime minister of misappropriating state pension funds. While supporters say the defamation suit is crucial to ensure Singapore does not embrace a culture of slander and libel, critics insist it will harm the image and reputation of Lee and his party, especially since the case is being pegged as a David-vs-Goliath duel.

International rights advocates have often chided the Singaporean government for using the threat of defamation suits as a way of stifling opposing voices.

"When Mr Lee Kuan Yew liberally used the defamation suit against his critics, one of the reasons he gave (if I remember correctly) was that he wanted to punish them for implying government corruption, and thus eroding the trust of the people, which he said was necessary for the government to do its work," Lim wrote.


Catherine Lim heavily criticised Lee's recent defamationsuit against Roy Ngerng (Above). Photo: AFP


"Today, in a twist of supreme irony that would have incensed Mr Lee, Singaporeans see the defamation suit itself, and not the act that has entailed it, as the very cause of the erosion of trust.

"A few more applications of this once-effective instrument of control, even if legally justifiable, would surely damage the PAP cause further, in the highly charged atmosphere of the new Singapore."

Even though it won the 2011 general election, the PAP suffered its worst performance since independence in what many observers have termed a watershed election. Since then, the government has faced criticism from citizens complaining about overcrowded public transport, plans to bring in more foreign workers and the rising cost of living.

Over the years, Lim has written many commentaries addressing sociopolitical issues, surprising many with her bravado.

"Thank you Catherine for speaking up and sharing your view, for being an eloquent voice and for remaining constructive," said a blog reader named Markus. But while many left positive comments on her blog, some attacked her for writing the letter.

"If you think being a prime minister is so easy, why don't you go ahead and run for the position?" asked a commentator who posted his name as Jason Chua.

"It is easy to complain, complain, complain … but can't you see that the government is already doing its best?"

Lim is no stranger when it comes to ruffling political feathers. In September 1994, one of her controversial commentaries, "The PAP and the people - a great affective divide", was published by The Straits Times, the country's main English-language broadsheet. The op-ed piece claimed that while citizens respected the PAP, there was little affection towards the party.

Two months later she wrote another damning piece. The staunch PAP critic was then rebuked by the prime minister at the time, Goh Chok Tong.

In his book Conversations with Lee Kuan Yew, author Tom Plate, a former editorial director with the Los Angeles Times and acclaimed syndicated columnist, wrote: "By fax I asked him [Lee Kuan Yew] to offer some self- criticism.

"He referred me to Catherine Lim."
 
Three comments on the above article

 
Interestingly this article is smack at the front of the home page of SCMP website. I would have thought the Karachi airport attack will be of greater interest and not Singapore's domestic bickering.

 
Joetys thank you very much for pasting the picture. I just simply dont know how to do it.
 
Joetys thank you very much for pasting the picture. I just simply dont know how to do it.

Welcome.

I use photobucket. If you tab on the photos I posted they link to photobucket. I like this because I cold take photos in my phone and upload them to photobucket and post immediately from there.
 
In 1949, after his father died, Robert; a brother, Philip; and other relatives founded Kuok Bros. Sdn., which later specialized in sugar refining.

Philip went on to become a Malaysian diplomat, and a second, much-admired brother, William, took an entirely different path again by joining the communist revolt against colonial rule. In 1953, William Kuok was killed by British troops in a jungle ambush.

Robert Kuok, by contrast, used his English-language skills on visits to London to learn the sugar business while remaining based in Malaysia and later Singapore.

……………….

For all his triumphs in the capitalist world, Robert Kuok [owner of South China Morning Post - when will Sinkieland grant newspapers licences to anyone who has the money and organisation?] says the biggest influences on his life were his devoutly Buddhist mother and his communist revolutionary brother, William.

“Otherwise, probably I would have been an arrogant middle- class Chinese, only caring about materialism, worldly pleasures and fleshpot pleasures,” Kuok says, his moist eyes betraying a momentary sadness. “When I am tempted, I think of what William went through. He sacrificed his life trying to help the underprivileged.”

Kuok says he has tried to pass on those values by not cocooning his children in privilege. Nor, he adds, does he place much emphasis on scholastic qualifications, including MBA degrees, when hiring senior staff.

……………….

http://www.scmp.com/business/compan...ght-heir-his-empire-can-last-four-generations
 
In her open letter, she claimed that Singaporeans "no longer trust their government and the government no longer cares about regaining their trust".

There seems to be certain truth to this statement. You have pappies talking down arrogantly to the sinkies instead of trying hard to please sinkies. In Taiwan, such MPs would be stoned in the streets. One Minister arrogantly asked sinkies how they would like to have their 3 meals a day in the hawker's centre or a restaurant and another old hag female MP telling sinkies to fuck off from SG if unhappy.

Really unheard of in other countries to find MP "kuailan" with constituents.
 
Joetys
let me test. I have photo bucket and want to show this picture

fuckPAP_zpsac94c5e2.jpg.html
 
Hong Kong is an example of where press freedom does not stifle economic growth or create social instability-as some people would want us to believe.
In fact freedom of the press ensures check and balances on executive abuse/power and encourages good governance.

Have any political office holder in Hong Kong sued any opponents or people who criticises them before?-because it will be a political suicide to do so.
All this considering that Hong Kong is part of PRC, a communist ruled country!
 
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