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FORMER senior civil servant Tan Jee Say arrived at the Elections Department to submit his application forms for a certificate of eligibility to contest the coming Presidential election.
The 57-year-old, the fourth presidential hopeful to apply for a certificate, was accompanied by his wife Patricia, 50, and a group of supporters.
Mr Tan, an ex-principal private secretary to former prime minister Goh Chok Tong, stood as an opposition candidate in the May 7 General Election. He was part of the four-man Singapore Democratic Party (SDP) team that lost to the PAP in the contest for the Holland-Bukit Timah GRC.
He has since resigned from SDP to run for president and said previously that he believes he will meet the eligibility requirements. A person can qualify to be a presidential candidate in several ways, including if he had been the chairman or chief executive of a Singapore company with a paid-up capital of at least $100 million.
Mr Tan was regional managing director of AIB Govett Asia, a Singapore-registered asset company, from 1997 to 2001. During this period, the company's paid-up capital was less than $100 million but he said that it managed 'several hundred million dollars' in invested funds.
The other presidential hopefuls are: former deputy prime minister Tony Tan, 71, and ex-NTUC Income chief executive Tan Kin Lian, 63, both of whom submitted their application forms on July 7; former PAP MP Tan Cheng Bock, 71, who handed in his forms on July 22; and former JTC Corporation group chief financial officer Andrew Kuan, 57, who has yet to apply for a certificate of eligibility.