Sign the Tak Boleh Tahan! petition on May Day in WKS's constituency

As announced, the SDP will be in Toa
Payoh to commemorate International Workers' Day on 1 May 08. The May
Day event is part of the Tak Boleh Tahan! campaign against rising costs in Singapore.
We
will be asking residents of Toa Payoh to sign a petition calling on the
Government to do something about the unbearable cost of living and to
stop the exploitation of Singaporean workers.
Singapore
Democrats and friends will be at Toa Payoh Central (next to the Toa
Payoh Community Library) from 11 am to 6 pm next Thursday.
We will encourage Singaporeans to support the campaign by signing the petition (see below). The SDP will also visit the kopitiams and talk with residents about their difficulties in coping with the horrendous increase in prices.
We
will also be distributing flyers showing how the ministers, all
multi-millionaires, continue to make use of cheap foreign labour to
suppress the wages of locals so that they can squeeze yet greater
profit and revenue to feed their opulent lifestyles.
We will also be selling Tak Boleh Tahan!
t-shirts and buttons. The aim is to turn the campaign into a national
effort to stop the PAP from continuing its rapacious policies. Dr Chee
Soon Juan's books will also be on sale.
All in all, the
occasion will be a meaningful one where we hope to raise the voice of
Singaporeans so that the PAP will sit up and listen.
There is
also the added factor that Toa Payoh is the constituency of Mr Wong Kan
Seng. It is opportune to let the Government know that the Home Affairs
Minister must be held accountable for his failures.
Whatever your reason, come down to Toa Payoh Central on 1 May to support the campaign and tell the Government: “Tak boleh tahan!”
The Tak Boleh Tahan! Petition
To: Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong
We,
the undersigned, call on the Government to help the ordinary citizen
cope with the crushing cost of living which is making life unbearable.
The slew of price hikes over the past several months and the increase
of the GST has caused inflation to sore to record levels.
Coupled
with decreasing wages, many of our workers can't even afford three
square meals a day. Some can't afford to pay for water and electricity.
Many are homeless.
Given the dire circumstances, we call on you to:
1.
Show that you understand our plight by not increasing your salary to
such an exorbitant amount of $3.8 million a year. This works out to be
more than $10,000 a day! Many of us will take a year just to make what
you earn in a single day. Such an attitude is making the rich like you
richer and the poor like us poorer.
2. Be more judicious in
allowing foreign workers into Singapore. Our society and economy cannot
sustain the indiscriminate influx of the so-called foreign talent. We
cannot live on the kind of wages that foreigners can because, unlike
them, we have to raise our families here.
3. Remember that many
of our male Singaporeans have to serve National Service and thereafter
return for reservist training for many years. Yet the foreign
nationals, who do not have to make such sacrifices are getting all the
jobs.
4. Release our hard-earned CPF savings. We are the
biggest savers in the world and yet, we have the lowest retirement
incomes compared to other countries. This is because you keep the HDB
prices unaccountably high and then use all sorts of schemes to retain
the little that is left in our savings. compulsory annuity plan is the
latest scheme.
5. Make public the information of the billions of
our dollars that you conduct your businesses with through the GIC and
Temasek. While you invest for the "long-term" many of us cannot afford
to live decent lives and afford the soaring healthcare costs.
In
veiw of these, we urge you to govern democratically and return to us
our economic and political rights. Your policies are not benefiting us,
the people. We say to you: "Tak boleh tahan!" and call on you to make things right.
Signed,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Those fighting for a more democratic
society in Singapore must introduce it first to the ordinary man. Once
that is done, the government will automatically fall into place. In
Singapore, democracy has to take root from bottom up, not from top
down. Making brilliant Winston Churchill speeches in Parliment is
unlikely to bring real change. You first have to awaken an entire
Singapore population that has been numbed into wholesale submission.
Having
lived abroad for many years, and through my work as an immigration
lawyer met people from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe, the entire alphabet of
countries, I will tell you an astonishing fact. The Singaporean stands
out as a totally different species from any other human being in the
world.
For instance, no matter if you are an Afghan, a Hottentot
or a Pygmy, one thing is certain. If a Prime Minister of any country
pays himself $3.7 million a year and several million more a year in hidden perks, while the average person earns no more than $2,000.00 a month,
such as the case in Singapore; there is not a single breathing human
being anywhere in the world who would not have picked up his cudgel or
sickle of whatever he had at hand, marched to the Prime Ministers
office to demand an answer to this outrage and would have refused to
leave until he got it.
Believe me, this is normal human
behaviour for an Afghan, a Belgian, a Canadian, a Dane, an Eskimo, a
Finn, a German, a whatever. But in Singapore, except for the Internet
where there is a great deal of criticism, but mind you, with everyone
engaged in it being anonymous through fear; there is not a single soul
in the entire island with enough courage to even so much as raise a
whimper!
Singaporeans just like other humans around the world
are taxpayers too. But all other taxpayers, since they are taxpayers to
repeat the obvious; would demand an explanation as to how their taxes
are being spent. Are you wasting it, through objectionably high
salaries for Ministers, for scholarships for foreigners while denying
it to Singapore children, training foreigners for jobs while
Singaporeans are neglected? These are questions that any other human
being taxpayer will ask; that is, any other human being except a
Singaporean!
For one or more reasons, the Singaporean over the
years has become entirely subdued, submissive and obedient. Such people
are not conducive and do not comport with a democratic society, because
for democracy to thrive, you first have to have an emboldened people. A
people who refuse to take no for an answer when the inequity is
obvious, such as, to take one example, million dollar ministerial
salaries.
Take prisoner Mas Salamat Kastari who recently escaped from his illegal detention at Whitley Detention
Center; illegal by reason of the absence of any criminal charges filed
against him for 2 long years, where criminal jurisprudence requires the
release of a suspect after just 48 hours in the absence of a charge.
Despite
the fact that we have been publicly told of nothing less than gross
negligence, even criminal recklessness of the facility's guards in
enabling the escape through an open window panel, no government
official has yet been willing to take responsibility. The minister
responsible has publicly stated that he does not care what people think
of him and will not resign!
Now any other human being, even if
he happens to be a Hottentot who inhabits the remotest parts of the
German South West African bush, would have by now run amok demanding
justice! But not so in quiet and obedient Singapore. From last I heard,
there is not even a single miserable Singaporean except for the handful
of brave protesters, raising a single complaint.
In a society like Singapore where the people have been numbed into a sense of helplessness and tolerance, no amount of democratic institutions will actually change anything. As the saying goes, you can
take a horse to water, you cannot make him drink. If a Singaporean is
determined not to have freedom, no amount of persuasion can make him accept it.
Therefore as I said in my last post, The Singapore Parliament is a white elephant; getting more opposition members to enter Parliament is unlikely to bring about any real change. Somehow the opposition has to work on trying to embolden and empower the Singaporean. Once that is done, the people, through their demands will resurrect the Phoenix of democracy.
The first thing to do is to remove the fear which shrouds each Singaporean keeping him in his straitjacket; by telling him that his fear is unnecessary; that his fear is merely an illusion designed to keep him satisfied; that the government is nothing more than a toothless tiger if you think of it; that they really cannot sack and dismiss everyone from their jobs or imprison everyone and beat everyone. And once the ordinary man
realises this, the taxi driver realises this, the Chinese sausage maker
realises this, the Malay belachan maker realizes this, the Indian Mama Prataman (not the President) realises this, then you have it made.
If you can manage that, you will find this government suddenly becoming more representative, more concerned and more humble. It will all automatically come about. All you have is to change the mindset of the Ah Kow, the Ahmat or the Ravi; you would have changed society and a democracy will come about overnight.
In order to achieve this, you have to embolden each and every Singaporean not to accept injustice and stand his ground, like I said in my last post. The opposition needs to have a hot line and a member on standby to take the complaints of the citizens, keeping ready for deployment a group of willing protesters with ready cameras and placards, ready to be deployed at any offending location where the injustice has occurred to stage their protest.
It may be the HDB office which has denied justice to a tenant, a CPF member who was not paid, a taxi driver protesting high taxi rents or gasoline
and so on. In other words, protesting has to become a pivotal exercise in the opposition's work for democratic change.
In the present difficult circumstances that Singaporeans face, with high food costs, low salaries, fewer jobs, heavy unemployment, the ground is ripe to be worked for this purpose. There are growing numbers that have been pushed to the limit of their suffering who may be ready to be empowered. I think the opposition should take advantage of the situation and start moving now.
Gopalan Nair