Advertisement

Focus on Lee Kuan Yew's achievements may give boost to Singapore's People's Action Party

PAP is finding support since the death of its founder

Reading Time:6 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
0
Lee Kuan Yew's casket sits covered by Singapore's flag behind a portrait of the founding prime minister at yesterday's state funeral. Photo: Reuters

Over the past week, Hasanji Dhilawala has shed tears for a man he never met.

"I am grateful to Lee Kuan Yew for the life he gave me," said the 86-year-old, who wept in his wheelchair when he finally had a chance to be in the same room as Lee to thank him.

"He was a leader who kept his promises. I am the envy of my relatives back in India," said the grandfather of five, one of more than 400,000 Singaporeans who waited for hours this week to view Lee's body as it lay in state.

The bond that the older Singaporeans like Dhilawala had with the country's first prime minister was a special one. They experienced political tumult but saw their standard of living rise dramatically in a generation, and through it all Lee Kuan Yew was their assured leader.

Indeed, Lee has been such a constant that when he fell seriously ill last month and died last Monday at age 91, the most common question was whether the People's Action Party (PAP) would decline without the man who had been its centre of gravity for 60 years. Even PAP leaders have readily admitted that nobody is likely to fill Lee's shoes.

Advertisement