The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Studies on options for Kuan Yew’s house continuing – committee

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SINGAPORE: The studies on options for the house of the founding father of Singapore, the late Lee Kuan Yew at 38, Oxley Road, are continuing, says Singapore Deputy Prime Minister, Teo Chee Hean.

Though there is no urgency to complete these studies within a specified time frame, Teo who is also the Coordinati­ng Minister for National Security said he will consult his colleagues to see if it is useful to put out a range of possibilit­ies.

“It is to let the public ponder on the matter without having to arrive at any decision,” he said when delivering an Opening Statement on Ministeria­l Committee formed for the house at the Parliament yesterday.

“Lee Hsien Yang (Kuan Yew’s younger son) now owns the property. As provided for in Mr Lee Kuan Yew’s last Will of Dec 17, 2013, Dr Lee Wei Ling (Kuan Yew’s daughter) can stay in it for as long as she wishes,” said Teo who chairs the Committee.

He explained that the Ministeria­l Committee was formed as there was a significan­t public interest element involved when considerin­g options for the house.

Teo noted that “there is a misconcept­ion that the Government is making a decision now.”

“The Ministeria­l Committee does not decide,” he said adding that it has made clear to Hsien Yang and Dr Lee that neither the Ministeria­l Committee nor Cabinet will be making any decision.

“There is no decision required so long as Dr Lee continues staying in the house. This is what Mr Lee wanted and expressed in his will. It might be 20 to 30 years later before a decision needs to be made.

“However, if Dr Lee chooses to leave earlier, say within a few months, then the Cabinet will have to decide, and it would be useful to have studied the different options,” he said.

He informed the Parliament that the work of the Committee was to assess the historical and heritage significan­ce of the property, the wishes of Kuan Yew, and the possible plans for the property and the neighbourh­ood, and the options to move forward.

“It was home to our founding Prime Minister. It was in its basement Dining Room that many important discussion­s and critical decisions on the future of Singapore were made by Mr Lee and our pioneer leaders,” he said.

Teo recalled in his meeting with Cabinet in July 2011, Kuan Yew expressed his wish for the house to be demolished, but also listened carefully to the views of the cabinet members.

“While he expressed his personal wishes, he was also very proper. He did not direct the Government. He was aware of the Government’s responsibi­lities and how the law on this matter operated.

“He wrote to the Cabinet five months later, informing us that he had reflected on the matter.

“Subsequent­ly, as we have learnt from the beneficiar­ies of his Estate, he had also expressed his wishes on the property in Paragraph 7 of his last will.”

Teo said the Committee wrote to all Kuan Yew’s children on July 27, 2016, to invite them to share any views they would like on their father’s thinking on the property, and the context and circumstan­ces relating to his thinking beyond what had already been stated in public, so that these could be taken into account.

The siblings wrote back to the Commitee, providing differing views, including on the drafting of the last will, said Teo.

As of what was the Committee’s interest, Teo said the interest was confined to obtaining as full a picture as possible of Kuan Yew’s thinking on the House.

“I should emphasise that it is not for the Committee to decide whose claims are valid,” he said, stressing that “what we do try is to understand, as best we can, Mr Lee’s wishes and thinking.”

Teo said that it should be clear that the difference of views had origins that arose before the formation of the Committee in June 2016.

“The Committee is not the reason for these difference­s and dissolving the Committee does not resolve these difference­s,” he said.

 ??  ?? The house of the founding father of Singapore, the late Lee Kuan Yew at 38, Oxley Road.
The house of the founding father of Singapore, the late Lee Kuan Yew at 38, Oxley Road.

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