Yahoo – AFP,
Elizabeth Law, September 13, 2017
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| A supporter displays a figurine of former parliamentary speaker Halimah Yacob, who has been named the country's new president (AFP Photo/ROSLAN RAHMAN) |
Singapore
(AFP) - Singapore got its first female president Wednesday, but the milestone
was overshadowed by criticism that her selection was undemocratic after she was
handed the job without a vote.
Halimah
Yacob, a former speaker of parliament from the Muslim Malay minority, did not
have to face an election for the largely ceremonial post after authorities
decided her rivals did not meet eligibility criteria.
It was not
the first time in the affluent city-state -- which is tightly controlled and
has been ruled by the same party for decades -- that the government has
disqualified presidential candidates, making an election unnecessary.
But there
was already unease about the process as it was the first time that the
presidency had been reserved for a particular race, in this case the Malay
community. The decision to hand her the job without an election added to the
anger.
Social
media was abuzz with criticism as Halimah, a bespectacled 63-year-old who wears
a headscarf, was formally announced as president-elect, with Facebook user Pat
Eng writing: "Elected without an election. What a joke."
"I
will call her President Select from now on," said Joel Kong on the
networking site, while some posts were marked with the hashtag #NotMyPresident
-- echoing the message used by upset Americans after the election of President
Donald Trump.
'President for everyone'
Halimah was
a member of parliament for the ruling People's Action Party for nearly two
decades before resigning to contest the presidency. She addressed the concerns
about the selection process after being named president-elect.
"I'm a
president for everyone. Although there's no election, my commitment to serve
you remains the same," she said.
Halimah
added she would "start working immediately" to bring the country
together.
She also
insisted her status as Singapore's first female president was "not just
tokenism", in a speech to a cheering crowd while wearing orange, a colour
supposed to symbolise unity.
"Every
woman can aspire to the highest office in the land when you have the courage,
determination and will to work hard," she said.
Singapore's
head of state has limited powers, including vetoing senior official
appointments. But an establishment figure has always held the role and there
are rarely tensions with the government.
Authorities
decided to allow only candidates from the Malay community to put themselves
forward for the presidency to foster harmony in the city-state of 5.5 million
people which is dominated by ethnic Chinese, and give more opportunities to
minorities.
Halimah is
the first Malay president of Singapore for almost five decades. The last was
Yusof Ishak, president from 1965 to 1970, the first years of the city-state's
independence.
But the
decision to limit candidates to one race had caused concern, including among
Malays, as it was seen as positive discrimination that ran counter to the
city-state's traditional meritocratic principles.
Five people
had originally put their names forward for the presidency and the government
had scheduled an election for September 23.
Two were
quickly eliminated as they were not Malay. The two others, Malay businessmen,
were disqualified on Monday as their companies were smaller than required by
strict new eligibility rules introduced last year.
Halimah
automatically qualified as she has held public office. She will be inaugurated
in a ceremony on Thursday.


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