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SELECTIVE
EN BLOC REDEVELOPMENT SCHEME COMPLETION CEREMONY
FOR ANG MO KIO AVE 3
26 JANUARY 2002
SPEECH BY GUEST-OF-HONOUR
DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER LEE HSIEN LOONG
I
am very happy to be here this evening to celebrate the new year
with you, in your brand new living environment.
It
was not too long ago in 1997 when the SERS was offered for your
old flats in Avenue 3 in Ang Mo Kio. Your response was positive.
86 percent of households took up the offer of new replacement flats
at this site. I believe you made the right decision. Today, the
benefits of the scheme have become a living reality. You are all
proud owners of beautiful new flats, representing the latest range
of HDB flats and are comparable to those in the newer towns.
Fortunately
also, Singaporeans have reacted rationally and calmly
to the discovery. Malay/Muslim leaders and community organi-sations
have come out promptly to condemn strongly the terrorists.
They also repudiated the extreme views of Zulfikar Mohamad
Shariff of the Fateha group, defending the plotters and
supporting Osama bin Laden. This has helped to show Singaporeans
that the vast majority of Muslims here are moderate, rational
citizens, and that the Muslim community does not condone
or sympathise with
the radical minority. |
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The
benefits of the SERS extend beyond your home and family. Through
SERS, HDB can build more new homes in mature estates like Ang Mo
Kio. Residents often come to ask me if they can buy flats in Ang
Mo Kio. They don't want to move out to another new town, further
away from their parents and friends. With SERS, more of them will
be able to buy flats here.
On
top of these upgrading projects, Ang Mo Kio town, as a whole, is
undergoing Estate Renewal. By 2006, we will have a new $200 million
Town Centre that is being jointly developed by NTUC and the Singapore
Labour Foundation. It will include condominiums, offices, a new
bus interchange, and a 5,600 square-metre NTUC hypermart.
Residents
of Ang Mo Kio will therefore enjoy the best of both worlds. You
will have all the brand new facilities of a new town. You don't
have to leave your friends and neighbours behind, or your favourite
char kway teo and mee rebus stalls. The SERS and other programmes
like MUP and IUP, all share an important aim - to preserve and enhance
the family, social and community ties built up over the years, that
make HDB towns good places to live.
This
is particularly important now, after the recent discovery of the
terrorist plot by the Jemaah Islamiyah group, linked to the Al Qaeda
network, to bomb various targets in Singapore. Had the group succeeded,
and Singaporeans been killed and injured, it would have caused serious
damage to our racial and religious harmony. It would have sown deep
suspicion and distrust between the Malay/Muslim community and other
Singaporeans.
Fortunately
they failed.
Fortunately
also, Singaporeans have reacted rationally and calmly to the discovery.
Malay/Muslim leaders and community organi-sations have come out
promptly to condemn strongly the terrorists. They also repudiated
the extreme views of Zulfikar Mohamad Shariff of the Fateha group,
defending the plotters and supporting Osama bin Laden. This has
helped to show Singaporeans that the vast majority of Muslims here
are moderate, rational citizens, and that the Muslim community does
not condone or sympathise with
the radical minority.
Non-Muslim
Singaporeans in general have also responded rationally. In America,
Britain and even Australia after September 11, many cases have been
reported where people of Muslim or Arab appearance were verbally
abused and physically attacked. But in Singa-pore our multi-racial,
multi-religious harmony remains intact.
But
do not think that the problem has gone away permanently. The global
war on terrorism will go on. Malaysia and Indonesia are also tackling
extremist groups out to destabilise their countries. So is the
Philippines. Our people have many contacts with their peoples? Singaporeans
travel there easily, and their citizens often visit us here. The
JI group had links with Malaysia and Indonesia. So we should not
be
surprised if new groups form here, and hatch new plots to attack
targets and endanger innocent lives.
We
must be vigilant and prepared. In our community, and in our personal
lives, we must make an extra effort to reach out across racial and
religious lines, to further build confidence and trust between the
ethnic groups. Muslim Singaporeans have made clear that the JI group
is an extremist minority, which the community repudiates. So too
non-Muslim Singaporeans have to show that they continue to trust
their Muslim fellow-citizens, and do not think of every Muslim as
a potential terrorist.
This
calls for more interaction and person-to-person contacts between
Singaporeans of the various ethnic groups. All of us must have more
friends of other races and religions, as colleagues working together,
friends who go out and play together, or neighbours who keep an
eye on one another's homes. The more we can do this, the more we
will understand each other, and the less misunderstanding and mutual
suspicion there will be.
Our
community activities are opportunities for residents of all races
and religions to come together and get to know one another better.
We will organise more such activities over the year. I hope you
will come and support them, and by participating in a fun activity
strengthen our bonding and social cohesion.
Last
year was a difficult year for Singapore. Going ahead, we face many
challenges. Maintaining our racial harmony is one of the most critical.
But we have good reason to be confident. Let us work together as
one united people, regardless of race, language or religion, to
build a Singapore we can all be proud of and call our home.
I
wish you all the best in your new homes.
Source:
Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts, Singapore
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