Ex-Tampines PAP MP Irene Ng also calls for demolition of 38 Oxley Road now

Funny how former MPs are so vocal.

Belmont Lay | July 07, 2017, 12:09 PM

Former PAP Member of Parliament Irene Ng has taken to Facebook to share her views about what to do with the 38 Oxley Road conundrum.

Her statement, which appears to have been independently derived but similar to the post by former Ang Mo Kio MP Inderjit Singh also shared on Thursday, July 6, calls for the immediate demolition of the 38 Oxley Road house.

An MP from 2001 to 2015, Ng, a former reporter at The Straits Times, wrote that Lee Wei Ling has to move out of the house immediately to trigger the demolition clause.

Or else, if she persists in living there, the interior could still be subjected to structural changes over the years and will not be preserved in its original form.

But for the authorities to step in and gazette the house to prevent changes made to it will only serve to trigger another round of dispute by the two younger Lee siblings.

The option that should be taken, Ng suggests, is to make demolition immediate and to site the Founders' Memorial there, where Lee Kuan Yew and his team of nation builders can be honoured at the same time.

The rationale is that the lack of the original physical structure of the house is itself a tribute to and symbol of Lee Kuan Yew's unique leadership qualities, which is to honour his wishes of not creating personality cults.

It is noteworthy that these independent takes by ex-MPs Ng and Inderjit were not perspectives raised in Parliament on July 3 and 4, when Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong had demanded for MPs to speak up and grill him about the issue.

This is Ng's post in full:

END the saga now.

This has been the plaintive cry heard in many corners of Singapore, including in Parliament, on the bitter dispute between the three children of founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew over the fate of his Oxley Road’s house.

Since June 14, when the younger siblings Wei Ling and Hsien Yang started their online open warfare against their elder brother Hsien Loong, also our Prime Minister, the entire nation has been dragged into the dispute, and also into some disrepute.

There seems to be a glimmer of hope that the public feud between Mr Lee’s three children might now quieten down. After PM Lee’s statement in Parliament presenting his case and expressing hopes for reconciliation, his younger siblings Wei Ling and Hsien Yang have declared a sort of online ceasefire. It comes, however, with a caveat: “For now, we will cease presenting further evidence on social media, provided that we and our father's wish are not attacked or misrepresented," they wrote in a joint statement on July 6. This is the dreaded sort of truce that comes with guns cocked and reloaded, and there is no telling what can set them off again.

I believe that as long as the core issue remains – what to do with the house – and as long as the house stands, the saga will not end. It will be a running sore. The Lee family will continue to suffer, and we will not be spared.

I do not think this is what Mr Lee Kuan Yew would have wanted. Despite his wisdom, he could not have foreseen that, when he willed his house to Hsien Loong while making his other two children the executors of his estate, it would lead to such family strife to the extent that his own name would be besmirched in some circles and the country’s reputation dragged down with the public feud.

How can we put a definitive end to the saga now? I have a suggestion, but it will come with a price for all involved.

Demolish the house now. We should be very proud that we have a founding leader who did not want or need monuments to himself. He did not want a personality cult built around him. We should honour that. We should respect his wish to demolish his house after his death.

At the same time, preserve the historical significance of the house for future generations. How? Site the Founders’ Memorial there. After all, the basement was where, more than 50 years ago, Mr Lee gathered frequently with the group of future leaders to discuss the formation of a mass-based left-wing political party and their struggle for Singapore’s self-autonomy and subsequent independence from British rule.

Let the heritage value of Oxley Road be focused more on the fact that this was where it all began with the group of people who would become the founding leaders of Singapore – rather than just about Lee Kuan Yew. That would be in keeping with the spirit of not only Mr Lee’s values, but also be true to the facts of history – that it was not just one great man who built Singapore, but a group of great men led by a great man. Lions led by a lion.

To end the saga now by demolishing the house, all parties involved have to pay a price:

1. Lee Wei Ling has to forfeit her unfettered right to live there, and move out. Her father has left her his Cluny Road flat.

2. Lee Hsien Yang will have to forfeit the potential profit that can be made from the sale of the land. To be fair, Hsien Yang says he has no desire to profit from the property. Hence, this should not be an issue.

3. PM Lee has to let go of his reservations over the making of the last will, and accept that as representing Mr Lee Kuan Yew’s final wishes.

4. The government has to unwind some of the ideas being considered for the Founders' Memorial and the Oxley Road house. The government’s tentative ideas for a memorial park (also suggested by HsienYang) and a heritage centre for the Oxley Road house can be worked into the plans for the Founders’ Memorial if sited at Oxley Road. On keeping the basement dining room – it is nice to have, but not essential. With 3D technology and other film and digital media formats, visitors can have a sense of how it was like without its physical four walls. The furniture in the basement can be considered as historical artefacts, and exhibited in a replica of the basement in the heritage centre. The site should be marked with a plaque explaining why Mr Lee Kuan Yew wanted the house demolished, a statement in itself of his style of leadership and that of his team.

Due process can and should still be carried out. It should factor in the fact that the house will be gutted and renovated entirely, as Mr Lee Kuan Yew has also set that in motion with his approval of an architectural plan. It will not be in its original state. There is lesser historical merit in preserving the house if it has been modified from its original state. If Wei Ling continues to live there till her ripe old age, this process of structural change will likely continue unless the house is gazetted. Yet to gazette it, without the commitment to demolish it, will no doubt be the invitation for the siblings to open fire all over again.

The act of demolishing Lee Kuan Yew’s house itself will carry its own unique historical significance. We are after all dealing with a unique founding leader.

As his Old Guard colleague S Rajaratnam said of Mr Lee at the latter’s 60th birthday in 1983: “Mr Lee Kuan Yew’s greatest achievement is not the physical transformation of Singapore but the transformation of the mind and character of the average Singaporean.”

Referring to Napoleon’s quip that he would rather have an army of rabbits led by lion than an army of lions led by rabbits, Mr Rajaratnam said that Mr Lee’s goal is “not a nation of rabbits led by lions, or a nation of lions led by rabbits, or worse still, rabbits led by rabbits, but as befits the Lion City, a nation of lions led by a lion.“ Lions led by a lion.

Demolish the house, end the saga now, and let's all move on.

Top photo via Irene Ng Facebook

Related article:

Ex-Ang Mo Kio MP Inderjit Singh: Lee Wei Ling moves out of 38 Oxley Road now & demolish house