SDP - The lesson a great man taught

Cosmos10

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The lesson a great man taught

Added on: Wednesday (Today), 11 December 2013

by the Singapore Democrats

http://yoursdp.org/news/the_lesson_a_great_man_taught/2013-12-11-5748

Nelson-Mandela.jpg


True peace is not merely the absence of violence but the presence of justice
 
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The lesson a great man taught

http://yoursdp.org/news/the_lesson_a_great_man_taught/2013-12-11-5748

Every now and then, history gifts humanity someone who embodies all that we aspire to but did not have the courage to pursue. Nelson Mandela was just such a man. Together with the rest of world, the SDP mourns the passing away of this truly great man.

Universally beloved, Mandela's legacy is not that he possessed riches or power, for he craved neither. Rather he leaves behind a vision of peace brought about by compassion and the unwavering love for justice. He cherished freedom, fought for democracy and celebrated human rights.

South Africans are, indeed, a fortunate people to have had such a leader who put them, not profits, first. Even when Western corporations enticed him with wealth in exchange for his people's freedom, Mandela had the wisdom to choose to put in place first a sound foundation of democratic practices for his country.

This is a lesson that Mandela has taught the world – that money cannot buy what is right and just. Alas, even as our Government leaders sing the praises of South Africa's first democratically elected president, they have not heeded the lesson that another great leader, Martin Luther King, Jr, had taught: "True peace is not merely the absence of violence but the presence of justice.”

With the Internal Security Act still in place, our country cannot be blessed with true peace. Just as Mandela was imprisoned for nearly three decades, we have Singaporeans who have been just as harshly incarcerated. The tragic difference is that while Mandela has been exonerated, justice has not yet been won in Singapore.

Perhaps the wrong will be eventually made right. Perhaps we may require a truth and reconciliation commission of our own to close the chapter on the abuse of our people. Until then, Mandela's immortal words will inspire all freedom-loving Singaporeans to work even harder for true peace.
 
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With the Internal Security Act still in place, our country cannot be blessed with true peace. Just as Mandela was imprisoned for nearly three decades, we have Singaporeans who have been just as harshly incarcerated. The tragic difference is that while Mandela has been exonerated, justice has not yet been won in Singapore.

Perhaps the wrong will be eventually made right. Perhaps we may require a truth and reconciliation commission of our own to close the chapter on the abuse of our people. Until then, Mandela's immortal words will inspire all freedom-loving Singaporeans to work even harder for true peace.
 
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too bad so little people know that Nelson Mandela was jailed becoz he was a Communist terrorist that actually planted bombs and sanctioned bomb stacks even when in jail.........
 
hahaha....Mendala is nothing compared to LKY...
he gave the mighty British a slap on the face and unilaterally proclaimed Singapore independent...
in any other country such an act would be honoured in History and a statue erected at the site where the proclaimaition took place...
but our great leader was so humble that he only mentioned it in half a sentence in one of his books.....
hail our humble leader...LKY.........lol.
 
After the Little India riot the voters would be in no mood to repeal the ISA or for that matter any of the other tough laws. Any opposition party that makes repeal of ISA the keystone of its manifesto will be trounced at polls likely to be held in 2015.
 
After the Little India riot the voters would be in no mood to repeal the ISA or for that matter any of the other tough laws. Any opposition party that makes repeal of ISA the keystone of its manifesto will be trounced at polls likely to be held in 2015.


I agree. There is no need to repeal the ISA, but to restructure it into a counter-terrorism unit (CTU).

It is the CLTP should be expanded to deal with rioting cases.
 
Without doubt Mandela symbolise fight for equality but his country is still long way to go before claiming democracy. Corruption n crimes r 2 big bug bear
 
Without doubt Mandela symbolise fight for equality but his country is still long way to go before claiming democracy. Corruption n crimes r 2 big bug bear

Mandela was a stooge who did absolutely nothing upon his release. The whites let him out so he could manage the transition without them being lynched.
 
I agree. There is no need to repeal the ISA, but to restructure it into a counter-terrorism unit (CTU).

It is the CLTP should be expanded to deal with rioting cases.


It is arguable that ISD/ISA can be restructured, or the terms of reference can be made clearer or more explicit. That can be debated on intellectual grounds. But the anti-terrorism-related function of ISD/ISA is only one of the roles within its remit. This is a point that some advocates of a specific Anti-terror-related Act to replace ISA might not be aware of. The more traditional role of counter-intelligence, i.e., to catch spies engaged in espionage for foreign governments, remains just as important a role for ISD/ISA today. (And when such spies are caught, they are detained under the ISA, and this is done quietly to avoid further fallout with the country in question.) And with threats to state security ever evolving in the Internet age, it could be argued that the government of the day should be given the latitude to deal with such evolving threats within the broad and sweeping powers offered by ISA as it stands. This is one school of thought.
 
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