The Phnom Penh Post

Singapore PM denies nepotism amid feud

- Elizabeth Law

PRIME Minister Lee Hsien Loong yesterday rejected as “baseless” claims from his siblings of abuse of power and nepotism as he faced parliament over a political drama that has shocked tightly controlled Singapore.

The leader was seeking to draw a line under an escalating feud about his late father Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore’s founding leader, which has captivated the wealthy city-state where speaking so openly against the first family is rare and critics have in the past been taken to court.

The dispute burst into the open last month when the premier’s brother and sister launched attacks on social media – which quickly went viral – accusing him of exploiting their father’s legacy for his own political agenda and seeking to groom his son as a future leader.

They have also raised questions about his wife, who is chief executive of state investment fund Temasek Holdings.

The elder Lee, who led Singapore for three decades and died in 2015, is widely revered for having transforme­d the former British colony into one of the world’s wealthiest societies but faced criticism from rights groups for muzzling the press and jailing political opponents.

In a closely watched speech, Lee, 65, said the allegation­s levelled at him by his brother and sister were “entirely baseless”.

“I know many Singaporea­ns are upset by this issue. They are tired of the subject, and wish it would end,” he told the legislatur­e, which is dominated by lawmakers from his long-ruling People’s Action Party. “As a son, I am pained at the anguish this strife would have caused my parents if they were still alive.”

People who have publicly criticised the first family have in the past faced libel suits but the leader said he would not sue his brother and sister as the process could drag on for years and “besmirch my parents’ names”.

The row with his sister Wei Ling, 62, and brother Hsien Yang, 60, stemmed from a dispute over what to do with a century-old family bungalow that has simmered since the death of the elder Lee. The patriarch had wanted the bungalow destroyed after he passed away to prevent the creation of a personalit­y cult, but the siblings say the premier is attempting to block its demolition to capitalise on their father’s legacy.

Lee said that despite a “demolition clause” governing the house in his final will, his father was “prepared to consider alternativ­es” and even approved renovation plans should the government decide against tearing it down.

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