Govt weighs preserving Lee’s home as national monument


The city-state’s heritage board will assess if founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew’s home should be preserved as a national monument, the culture ministry said.

The late statesman’s youngest child Lee Hsien Yang applied on Oct 21 to demolish the single-storey bungalow on Oxley Road in central Singapore in line with his father’s wishes.

Preservation as a national monument would mean the heritage board can stop any operation or activity that could destroy, damage or alter the home.

It has been in the centre of a public spat between the three Lee siblings since the statesman’s death in 2015.

The issue re-emerged recently after Kuan Yew’s daughter, Lee Wei Ling, who was living in the house died on Oct 9.

“We do not think that any option should be precluded, or closed off, at this stage,” Minister for Culture and Community Edwin Tong wrote on Facebook yesterday.

In response, Hsien Yang, who has become a political refugee in Britain as the feud snowballs, said: “Many expensive ministerial man hours were spent and expert input sought to study options and a detailed report was published in 2018.

“What need is there now to be studying this further?”

Hsien Loong, the oldest of the Lee siblings who was prime minister from 2004 to May this year, thought it should be up to the government to decide.

In 2018, a ministerial committee laid out three options for the house, including conservation and demolition, and said the decision would be left to a future government.

At that time, Hsien Loong said he accepted the committee’s conclusion and the range of options laid out.

Kuan Yew told local newspaper The Straits Times in 2011 that he wanted the house demolished because it would “become a shambles” if it were opened to the public, and he hoped its removal would improve land values in the neighbourhood. — Reuters

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heritage board , Lee Kuan Yew , home

   

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