Singapore in 2015: SG50
from SINGAPORE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 May 2017
Summary
How should a review of Singapore in 2015 be best framed? By an acronym and a number: SG50. This was the year Singapore celebrated its fiftieth year of independence, with the ubiquitous SG50 logo embossed on and attached to almost anything. Much like an individual turning middle-aged, the year was one where the nation experienced loss, made decisions about its future, reflected on and celebrated its past with pride, and tried to become comfortable with its own skin.
Domestic Political Developments
National Loss: The Passing of Lee Kuan Yew
Loss in 2015 for the nation came in the form of the death of former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew on 23 March at the age of ninety-one — just under five months before the city-state was to celebrate fifty years of independence. Lee passed away after being hospitalized for severe pneumonia on 5 February. Lee's elder son, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, declared a week-long period of national mourning and all national flags were flown at half mast during that period. After a private wake, his body was moved to the Parliament House of Singapore on 25 March where he lay in state for four days before his cremation on 29 March.
Lee's death has undoubtedly closed a chapter in Singapore's history, as he is widely regarded as the key founding father of modern Singapore. Co-founder of the People's Action Party (PAP), the political party that has governed Singapore uninterrupted since home rule in 1959, Lee was Singapore's first and longest-serving Prime Minister. He oversaw the rapid development of the nation in one generation from underdeveloped to developed status. In a televised address to the nation on the day of his father's death, Prime Minister Lee maintained “[t]o many Singaporeans, and indeed others too, Lee Kuan Yew was Singapore”. The immense measure of the man and the intimacy of the ties between him and the nation may be found in the tributes paid from abroad, the number of people who queued for hours to pay their respects when he lay in state and the numbers who lined the roads to see the cortege travel to the funeral service and the crematorium.
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- Information
- Southeast Asian Affairs 2016 , pp. 295 - 314Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2016