| INTERNATIONAL FRAME 
&THE STRUGGLE for Tamil Eelam
 "Sri Lanka - the Country will Never be Put Together Again"Lee Kuan Yew, 1998
 
  
 Lee 
Kuan Yew: the Man and His Ideas  is the title of a book published in 
Singapore in 1998. Written by three Straits Times journalists Han Fook Kwang 
Warren Fernandez and Sumiko Tan, the book carries fresh interviews with Lee Kuan 
Yew on the events that shaped his life and the way he governed Singapore. Now in his graying years - he is 74 now - the founding father of 
Singapore is regarded as virtually a national institution at home. In 
transforming a busy ramshackle port city on a resourceless island into a 
prosperous multi-lingual nation, he created a model for other developing 
countries. He left the premiership in 1990 and assumed the role of , senior 
minister, but wields as much prestige and influence today as he did while 
holding office, a distinction rarely earned by any politician in any other 
country. In talking of Sri Lanka, this is what Lee Kuan Yew says: -  
	"We have got to live with the consequences of our actions 
	and we are responsible for our own people and we take the right decisions 
	for them. You look at the old Philippines. The old Ceylon. The old East 
	Pakistan and several others. I have been to these countries and places. When 
	I went to Colombo for the first time in 1956 it was a better city than 
	Singapore because Singapore had three and a half years of Japanese 
	occupation and Colombo was the centre or HQ of Mountbatten's Southeast Asia 
	command.  And they had sterling reserves. They had two Universities. 
	Before the war, a thick layer of educated talent So if you believe what 
	American liberals or British liberals used to say, then it ought to have 
	flourished. But it didn't.  
	One-man one-vote led to the domination of the Sinhalese majority over the 
	minority Tamils who were the active and intelligent fellows who worked 
	hard and got themselves penalised. And English was out. They were educated 
	in English. Sinhalese was in. 
	They got quotas in two universities and now they have become fanatical 
	Tigers. And the country will never be put together again.  Somebody should have told them - change the system, loosen 
	up, or break off. And looking back, I think the Tunku was wise. (The 
	reference is to Tunku Abdul Rahman the Malaysian Prime Minister under whose 
	rule Singapore separated from Malaysia). I offered a loosening up of the 
	system. He said: "Clean cut, go your way". Had we stayed in, and I look at 
	Colombo and Ceylon, I mean changing names, sometimes maybe you deceive the 
	gods, but I don't think you are deceiving the people who live in them. It 
	makes no great difference to the tragedy that is being enacted. They failed 
	because they had weak or wrong leaders ". |