Former AIC chief spotted with East Coast GRC MPs; first public servant new face seen on the ground


Minister Edwin Tong taking a wefie with (back row; third, fourth and fifth from left) DPM Heng Swee Keat, MP Jessica Tan, Minister Maliki Osman and Senior Minister of State for National Development Tan Kiat How (in peach-coloured outfit), as well as (front row; second and third from left) Dinesh Vasu Dash, Hazlina Abdul Halim and congregation members, at Al-Ansar Mosque on March 31. - ST

SINGAPORE: Recently resigned public servant Dinesh Vasu Dash accompanied East Coast GRC MPs on a mosque visit in Chai Chee on Monday (March 31) morning.

Dinesh, whose last day as the chief of Agency for Integrated Care was on March 27, is the first former public servant spotted on the ground with PAP MPs since the recent string of resignations from the Government.

The 50-year-old was seen walking into Al-Ansar Mosque in Chai Chee, accompanying Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat and Minister for Culture, Community and Youth Edwin Tong.

This comes amid speculation that he has joined the ruling party and will be fielded in the upcoming election.

Hazlina Abdul Halim, 40, the former chief executive of Make-A-Wish Singapore, was also with the group.

The senior vice-president of strategy and communications at advisory firm Teneo had previously been spotted shadowing MacPherson MP Tin Pei Ling and was formally introduced to residents and reporters at a Marine Parade GRC walkabout on March 22.

MP Jessica Tan was also in attendance. Senior Minister of State for National Development Tan Kiat How arrived slightly later and joined the group before they entered the mosque.

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The other two East Coast GRC MPs – Dr Maliki Osman and Cheryl Chan – were not with the group. Dr Maliki had arrived earlier on his own, while Chan was on a work trip.

Speaking to The Straits Times after the visit, Tong said that Dinesh and Hazlina are “getting a good sense of the community and what it means to be working with and working for the community”.

They are also building connections, making friends and working with the sitting MPs to see how they serve the residents, he added.

“I think (they are) making very good progress in that regard,” he said.

DPM Heng said that both have a lot that they can contribute to Singapore, pointing out Mr Dinesh’s work with the Health Ministry during the Covid-19 pandemic.

“We are very happy that they are walking the ground to learn more about, (in particular), East Coast,” he said.

When asked about Hazlina being seen in Marine Parade the week before, DPM Heng said: “Isn’t it good that she gets to know more of different parts of Singapore?

“This is part of our exposure for all potential candidates, for them to get to know our society better.”

Tong added that it is a strength for her to be in different areas.

“Communities don’t organise themselves based on electoral boundaries... Serving in one area doesn’t preclude you from understanding the community in a different space,” he said.

Both ministers said that they were warmly welcomed by the members and congregants at the mosque on the morning of March 31.

“One of the points we made to them was how special it is in Singapore that we are able to celebrate an occasion like this... but making it multi-ethnic and really multiracial,” said Tong.

“I think this is something that is special and something that we need to preserve and ensure that we don’t take for granted as we look at social cohesion and harmony in Singapore,” he said.

DPM Heng added: “This year, we are celebrating SG60, and I think one of the greatest strengths of Singapore is our ability to build a multiracial, multi-religious society where we exist in harmony.”

Tong, who is currently an MP for Marine Parade GRC, oversees the Joo Chiat area that was carved into East Coast GRC in the latest electoral boundaries report.

He has been in talks with East Coast GRC MPs on integrating plans between the two areas, and was seen on March 23 on a walkabout in Bedok with DPM Heng.

Dinesh is the latest senior officer to quit the government sector in recent weeks.

Three other senior civil servants quit the service on March 25.

They include Mr Jeffrey Siow, second permanent secretary of the Manpower and Trade and Industry ministries, and Mr Shawn Loh, who oversaw the last two Budgets and was director of security and resilience programmes at the Finance Ministry.

The third is Smart Nation Strategy Office director Goh Hanyan, who was also director of the national artificial intelligence group for policy and strategy at the Digital Development and Information Ministry.

ST had earlier reported that Jasmin Lau, deputy secretary for policy at the Ministry of Health, and Foo Cexiang, director for private and future mobility at the Transport Ministry, had resigned. Their last day at work will be in early April.

The civil service is a traditional PAP hunting ground for election candidates. Those who are selected usually resign from their jobs in the run-up to the polls. - The Straits Times/ANN

 

 

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