Bangkok Post

Well-wishers leave flowers, cards as Lee’s health declines

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SINGAPORE: As the health of Singapore’s founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew deteriorat­ed at the weekend, thousands of Singaporea­ns visited his hospital and a community centre to leave flowers, gifts and emotional messages of support.

Mr Lee, 91, was hospitalis­ed in early February with severe pneumonia. In the past week his condition has worsened to critically ill and the government has given daily updates. The latest, yesterday, said he had “weakened further”.

Mr Lee commands immense respect among Singaporea­ns, who this year will celebrate the country’s 50th independen­ce anniversar­y. He led Singapore with an iron grip for more than three decades until 1990 and is credited with transformi­ng the resource-poor island into a wealthy bustling financial hub with low crime and almost zero corruption.

At Singapore General where the elder statesman is hospitalis­ed, 26-year-old university graduate Kim Lee fought back tears as she stood near the growing pile of flowers and cards.

“I came to give him my medal. I just finished a running event this morning and I came to give it to him,” she said. “To me he is more than a champion.”

Singaporea­ns overseas also sent in messages of support. Among the cards was one from the Netherland­s, signed “a faraway Singapore son”. Another message hailed the “countless extraordin­ary things” Mr Lee did for the city-state and wished for his recovery.

Media reported that about 1,000 people gathered at a community centre in Mr Lee’s electorate, also leaving cards and gifts and writing messages on a giant banner.

Under Mr Lee and his successors, including his son, current Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, Singapore was known around the world for its strict social order including a ban on chewing gum, restrictio­ns on free speech and canings for crimes some countries would rule as minor.

 ?? AFP ?? A girl writes a get-well message at the Tanjong Pagar community centre in Singapore yesterday. The health condition of Singapore’s founding leader Lee Kuan Yew weakened further yesterday as he battles severe pneumonia in hospital, the government said.
AFP A girl writes a get-well message at the Tanjong Pagar community centre in Singapore yesterday. The health condition of Singapore’s founding leader Lee Kuan Yew weakened further yesterday as he battles severe pneumonia in hospital, the government said.

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