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"Hi,
my name is James Gomez. I am on my book tour,"
I said when I met Tang Liang Hong at a Chinese
restaurant in Melbourne on March 20. He scoffed
in reply, "I am Tang. I am on the run!"
After all, Liang is a former Singaporean opposition
politician living in exile after he was persecuted
by leaders of the ruling Peoples' Action Party.
This set the tone for our two-hour conversation
that afternoon. The session animated with numerous
Hokkien and Mandarin phrases laid out some of
Tang's basic political opinions. Among which were
the issues he raised during his campaign period
in the 1997 elections and the events following
the fallout afterwards.
One of the first things he highlighted was the
length of the campaigning period in the last general
election because it fell during the week of Christmas
and New Year, it effectively reduced campaigning
to only five days - one of the shortest in Singapore's
history. That is the extent of electoral democracy
in the republic. Something that is in need of
serious review.
Tang insisted that the "shit-pot cover"
must be lifted from parliament to expose the inner
goings on.The public for instance should know
how much each MP was worth and where and how he
or she made their money. He said, with PAP ministers
getting such high salaries, what we have in Singapore
is "legalised corruption".
Asked about the charges of chauvinism levied against
him by the ruling party, Tang said that the basic
problem with his candidacy was that he was able
to move the Chinese ground. Although he was in
social contact with many of the PAP leaders, when
he contested in the general elections, they branded
him as anti-Christian and a Chinese chauvinist.
This was calculated to push the minorities and
the English-educated Christians away from him.
More importantly to also cause dissension among
the Chinese community. From a public relations
point of view, the Chinese community would not
want to come out looking like a chauvinist in
multi-ethnic Singapore.
Thus painting him as a multi-chauvinist was a
strategy the PAP adopted as Tang was perceived
as an important political threat to the regime's
hold on power. When asked whether there are other
Chinese leaders that might take over from where
he left off, he said that presently most were
scared and were not prepared to stand up in a
public way against the PAP.
Nevertheless, he said the Chinese as well as the
other minorities needed to reclaim control from
the PAP, as the ruling party rhetoric marginalises
everyone who explores the ethnic issue as attempting
to sow discord and chaos. In fact by continually
painting the discussion of religion and ethnicity
as taboo subjects, the PAP maintains the upper
hand on how it harnesses such issues for its own
political advantage.
With regards to political control the reality
is that it is limited to the few on top of the
political rung. This makes the arguments that
some use that they want to change from within
problematic. In reality, when they do try to work
from within, they soon realise that effective
political control is elsewhere and all they can
do is provide suggestions and hope that they will
get picked up.
On a day-to-day basis, real control is through
PAP cadres and supporters that have been placed
in strategic places of influence in all sectors
of Singapore's economy, society and civil/political
institutions.
Where the effective credibility and legitimacy
of the party is challenged, things have a tendency
of falling into place. An unpacking of the cadre
name list and where many of them were presently
positioned in and outside Singapore and their
relationship with the PAP elite will show the
extent of the powerful network of control. An
informal system of rewards is part of this power
structure.
Tang also gave an insight into the electoral process
and things that went on at the polling stations.
For instance he said when the ballot papers were
poured out for counting at Cheng San, there were
stacks of 10 to 15 slips that were folded together.
He said this was unusual as all ballots were cast
singly. But he said given the flurry of events
during and after the elections he was unable to
investigate and gather evidence around this incident.
He also drew attention to a group of 30-40 men
that gathered around him during the campaign period
always shouting him down and trying to intimidate
him. He said they were muscular and very well
organised. It was unlikely to be a spontaneous
citizen grouping, he said, as there was strong
ground support for him at Cheng San.
In fact this ground support was what prompted
the PAP ministers to come and campaign at his
constituency. When a complaint was made later
that is was a violation of the campaign rules,
it resulted in a silly judgement in court that
since the PAP ministers were within the polling
station, such a rule does not apply.
He also poked fun at the culture of Singaporeans
as bequeathed by the ruling party. Presently Singaporeans
have a mentality that every thing is "si
bay ho" (Hokkien for "very good").
But a literal translation of this Hokkien phrase
approximately means "That when father dies
it is good". It eludes that when someone's
father dies, it is a sign of good fortune as the
family wealth then passes on to the waiting children.
It subconsciously implies that children are wishing
their parents dead so that they can come into
some wealth effortlessly.
This effortless dependency by children on wealth
generated by the parents, he said, was unhealthy
for Singapore. This is precisely why a risk taking
culture is absent while ironically celebrating
the situation as "si bay ho". He laid
the blame squarely on the PAP for this outcome.
He also pointed out that small and medium enterprises
cannot make money as the government linked corporations
(GLCs) dominate the business sectors and muscle
out the small-time businesses. The dependency
created by the PAP has snuffed out the creativity
for entrepreneurship in Singapore.
Asked how he was supporting himself, Tang said
he has a small amount he had put away which he
uses for his living expenses. He said a donation
appeal to help him when the political fallout
occurred only amounted to a couple of thousand
dollars. Political donations have not been forthcoming.
When asked why he chose not to stay in Singapore,
he replied that he had considered the option but
found that it did not further the cause in any
significant way. He said he will be tried, judged
and found guilty as there has been no precedent
in the PAP losing any political case. Further
more, there will be a media blackout and the issue
will be kept away from the people's consciousness.
He said if there was any campaigning it will be
by a few. And this will not be effective against
a regime that is bent on control and a compliant
citizenry that practises self-censorship. The
international community also cannot be depended
on to come to the aid of opposition politicians
in Singapore. It is far more effective to be free
and still work on Singapore issues from the outside
for now.
At the end of the two-hour session, I was able
to get an impression as well as insight into the
man's political reasoning behind some of the issues.
Tang has been on the run for over two years now.
He remains an animated and lively person at mid-60s.
But somehow the lines of weariness are beginning
to show in his face. It also makes vivid the consequence
of engaging in electoral politics against the
ruling party. It shows that one has to be better
organised, more forward thinking, anticipate all
possible outcomes and more importantly, to draw
first blood .
But the saddest part is that the electoral process
has resulted in a Singaporean living on the run.
No one should suffer such a fate. Not if every
Singaporean matters.
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