Sun.Star Cebu

SINGAPORE GETS FIRST FEMALE PRESIDENT

- / AFP

An establishm­ent stalwart was named Singapore’s first female president yesterday but the milestone was overshadow­ed by criticism her selection was undemocrat­ic after she was handed the job without a vote.

Halimah Yacob, a former speaker of parliament from the Muslim Malay minority, did not have to face an election for the largely ceremonial post originally due this month after authoritie­s decided her rivals did not meet strict eligibilit­y criteria.

It was not the first time in the affluent city-state that the government has disqualifi­ed candidates for the presidency, making an election unnecessar­y.

But there was already unease about the process as it was the first time that the presidency had been reserved for a particular ethnic group, in this case the Malay community, and the decision to hand her the job without a vote added to anger.

Social media was abuzz with criticism as Halimah, a bespectacl­ed 63-year-old who wears a headscarf, was formally announced as the president-elect, with Facebook user Pat Eng writing: “Elected without an election. What a joke.”

Halimah, a member of parliament for the ruling People’s Action Party for nearly two decades before resigning to contest the presidency, tackled the doubts about the selection process in a speech to a cheering crowd after she was named president-elect.

“I’m a president for everyone. Although there’s no election, my commitment to serve you remains the same,” she said.

Authoritie­s had decided to allow only candidates from the Malay community to put themselves forward for the presidency, a bid to foster harmony in the citystate of 5.5 million people, mostly ethnic Chinese.

 ?? FOTO AP ?? SINGAPORE PRESIDENT. Halimah Yacob will take office at a later date as Singapore’s first female president.
FOTO AP SINGAPORE PRESIDENT. Halimah Yacob will take office at a later date as Singapore’s first female president.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines