On Aug 9, 1965, towards the end of a press conference after Singapore
became independent, Mr Lee Kuan Yew said: "There is nothing to be
worried about. Many things will go on just as usual. But be firm, be
calm. We are going to have a multiracial nation in Singapore. We will
set the example. This is not a Malay nation, this is not a Chinese nation, this is not an Indian nation. Everybody will have his place: equal; language, culture, religion."
Mr Lee's call for unity amid diversity in our multiracial society
remains relevant half a century later. Fifty years on, as we near the
jubilee year of Independence, it's timely to look back at events leading
to the Aug 9 separation.
What were the events and the plans that led to that pivotal break?
What happened behind the scenes? Was Singapore "booted out" by Malaysia or was it a mutually agreed decision?
While researching for my doctorate in history, I set myself the task of
piecing together, from available records, a picture of what happened in
the weeks leading up to Aug 9, 1965.
NEGOTIATING THE FUTURE
In July and September 1964, there were racial riots which led to
damage, serious injuries and loss of lives in Singapore. On the economic
front, the common market of Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore did not
materialise.
In November 1964, the then Malaysian Finance Minister Tan Siew Sin proposed raising an extra RM147 million in taxes.
This could have led to Singapore taxpayers contributing more than 35
per cent towards the federal budget, although the Singapore population
comprised only about 17 per cent of the whole population in Malaysia at
that time.
Furthermore, the proposed turnover and payroll tax
would seriously affect businessmen in Singapore. The Malaysian Finance
Minister also wanted to increase the contribution of Singapore to the
federal government from 40 to 60 per cent of its revenue.
In
addition, there were increasing tension and differences between the
People's Action Party leaders in Singapore and the leaders in the
Malaysian central government.
According to Ms Tan Siok Sun's
biography, Goh Keng Swee: A Portrait, on Jan 22, 1965, Malaysian Prime
Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman wrote to Dr Goh Keng Swee and offered
Singapore full autonomy, except in foreign and defence matters, in
exchange for Singapore giving up its seats in the Federal Parliament.
Singapore Prime Minister Lee was involved in a series of discussions
with the Malaysian leaders but "all these (negotiations) came to
nought", as noted by Dr Goh. Dr Goh recalled, during his interview with
Dr Melanie Chew in the book Leaders Of Singapore: "In the early days
there were a lot of discussions about changing the terms of Malaysia by
the Prime Minister, Rajaratnam and Toh Chin Chye. It got nowhere."
On June 6, 1965, there was the Malaysian Solidarity Convention at the
Singapore National Theatre, where Mr Lee advocated a "Malaysian
Malaysia". This upset certain Malaysian Umno leaders.
Around
July 13, Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister Tun Razak asked Dr Goh, who was
then Singapore's Minister for Finance, to visit him in his Kuala Lumpur
home. The then Malaysian Minister for Home Affairs Ismail Abdul Rahman
was also present at that meeting.
Ms Tan wrote that during this critical discussion, Tun Razak commented: "We can't go on like this."
LET'S CALL IT QUITS
Dr Goh said that when he and Mr Lee first proposed the merger, they did
not expect the situation with Malaysia to deteriorate to this level,
"so the best thing would be to call it quits; we should go our separate
ways". Dr Goh recalled: "I just want to get out. I could see no future
in it; the political cost was dreadful and the economic benefits, well,
didn't exist."
Dr Goh proposed: "Well, we leave Malaysia,
become an independent state, and you will be relieved of all these
troubles, and we would also be relieved of troubles from you. All these
tensions that have built up, communal tensions, will all be over. We are
on our own, you are on your own."
Tun Razak requested Dr Goh
to ask Mr Lee about his views on this matter. On July 20, 1965, there
was a second meeting in Tun Razak's office. Dr Goh met Tun Razak and Dr
Ismail. Dr Goh said Mr Lee was in favour of the secession of Singapore
to become independent. This was to be done no later than Aug 9 as
Parliament would reconvene that day and the Bill for the Independence of
Singapore would be introduced.
According to Dr Chew, Dr Goh
was recorded as saying: "Now on the 20th of July 1965, I met Tun Razak
and Dr Ismail. Now this is the 20th July 1965. I persuaded him that the
only way out was for Singapore to secede completely."
Dr Goh
stated: "You want to get Singapore out and it must be done very quickly.
And very quietly, and presented as fait accompli."
Dr Goh
commented that Tun Razak and Dr Ismail agreed with the separation. "In
fact, they themselves had come to the conclusion that Singapore must get
out. The question was how to get Singapore out," said Dr Goh.
In that oral history interview, Dr Chew remarked: "So the secession of
Singapore was well planned by you and Tun Razak! It was not foisted on
Singapore."
Dr Goh responded: "No, it was not."
Mr Lee
stated in his memoirs, The Singapore Story: "Keng Swee came back to
report that Razak wanted a total hiving-off. Razak had made two points:
first, he wanted Keng Swee to confirm I was in favour. Keng Swee said,
'Yes, provided it is done quickly before Lee's commitment and
involvement in the Solidarity Convention makes it impossible for him to
get out.' Ismail accepted this point. Razak appeared both relieved and
incredulous because, according to Keng Swee, he half-expected me to
reject the idea. Keng Swee said I was realistic enough to see that a
collision was imminent and that the consequences were incalculable."
Specific plans were made from July onwards. For the third meeting on
July 27, Dr Goh took along a letter of authorisation signed by Mr Lee
dated July 26. The letter stated: "I authorise Goh Keng Swee to discuss
with Tun Razak, Dato Ismail and such other federal ministers of
comparable authority concerned in these matters in Central Government
any proposal for any constitutional arrangements of Malaysia."
THE SECRET DRAFT
From July to August 1965, Mr Eddie Barker, the Singapore Minister for
Law, prepared the constitutional documents and agreements for
separation. In the oral history interview with the National Archives, Mr
Barker said: "Sometime in the middle of July 1965, I was summoned by
the Prime Minister to his office. He asked me whether I thought our
Attorney-General could be asked to draft an agreement for the separation
of Singapore from Malaysia, and if he did, whether we could keep it a
secret. I replied that the Attorney-General was the best man for the job
but I was afraid others would get to know about the proposal. The Prime
Minister then asked whether I could draft the agreement. I replied that
I would try."
Mr Lee recalled: "Eddie drafted the two documents, but I asked him to draw up a third, a proclamation of independence."
There was a fourth meeting on Aug 3, 1965, at Tun Razak's office, again
involving Dr Goh. Tun Razak confirmed that Malaysian Prime Minister
Tunku Abdul Rahman was in favour of the separation plan.
Dr Goh
also discussed with Tun Razak and Dr Ismail the defence proposals. Few
people in Singapore were aware of these plans for separation. The
British leaders were not aware of these separation plans until Aug 8.
On Aug 6, 1965, Dr Goh and Mr Barker had a final meeting with the
Malaysian leaders such as Tun Razak, Dr Ismail and Malaysian
Attorney-General Abdul Kadir Yusof to discuss the draft of the
Separation Agreement.
Dr Goh said: "My role as a negotiator was
to get the Malay leaders into a mood in which they will accept the
Separation Agreement with the minimum fuss and bother… And so far as the
drafting and discussions of the actual text of the Agreement, well, Mr
Eddie Barker had to do that."
Mr Lee recounted in an interview
with Fred Emery at the studios of Television Singapore: "On Friday (Aug
6), my Finance Minister, Dr Goh Keng Swee, rang me… He is now Minister
for Defence and Security… He said I have to come down (from Cameron
Highlands). It was very urgent. So that afternoon, I packed my bag and
came down alone, leaving my family up there. I came down that afternoon
and arrived at about dinner time… In Kuala Lumpur, he told me, 'This is
it'."
BLOODLESS COUP
The drafting of the agreement of
separation of Singapore from Malaysia was started in July 1965, at the
instruction of Mr Lee. The Independence of Singapore Agreement 1965 was
signed and dated Aug 7.
When Mr Barker handed the signed
documents to Mr Lee, Mr Lee recalled saying to him: "Thanks, Eddie, we
have pulled off a bloodless coup."
In his memoirs, Mr Lee
stated: "At very little notice, we had thought of a way to achieve what
the Tunku could not accomplish with his own staff because it had to be
carried out in great secrecy and the shortest possible time, including
three readings of a Bill in one session of Parliament on a certificate
of urgency, or it could never have succeeded."
Dr Ooi Kee Beng
from the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies stated a key point
regarding the separation in his biography of Dr Ismail.
In the
memoirs of Tun Dr Ismail, then Malaysian Home Affairs Minister who later
became Deputy Prime Minister, Dr Ismail noted as a first-hand witness
and participant of these historical developments that "in spite of what
was believed, the separation of Singapore from Malaysia was by mutual
agreement".
In Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong's eulogy speech
on March 29 this year, he recalled: "I remember the night the children
slept on the floor in my parents' bedroom at Temasek House in Kuala
Lumpur, because the house was full of ministers who had come up from
Singapore. Every so often, my father would get up from the bed to make a
note about something, before lying down to rest again. But obviously he
wasn't asleep. The date was 7 August 1965, two days before Separation."
It was indeed a very challenging time.
On the eve of Aug 9, 1965, Mr Lee Kuan Yew prepared the coded messages
that were to be sent to three Commonwealth prime ministers to inform
them of the separation. The first sentence of the message to the
Australian leader went thus: "By the time you have decoded this message
you will know that the Tunku has proclaimed and I have agreed and
simultaneously also proclaimed Singapore as a separate and sovereign
nation."
On Aug 9, 1965, at 10am, the Malaysian Parliament
reconvened and Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman explained the nature
and details of the Separation. There was a vote on the Constitution of
Malaysia (Singapore Amendment) Bill 1965 to allow Singapore to separate
from the Malaysian federation. It was unanimous, 126-0.
Singapore became an independent and sovereign state.
That morning, Mr Lee explained the reasons for separation to the
British, Australian, Indian and New Zealand High Commission
representatives.
In the afternoon of Aug 9, 1965, he announced on Caldecott Hill, in the television studio, the independence of Singapore.
In a subsequent television broadcast, Mr Lee stated in his determined
manner: "I have a few million people's lives to account for. Singapore
will survive."
The separation might appear as a surprise to
many. However, it was a mutual agreement between the top leaders of
Malaysia and Singapore, with the understanding and support of Singapore
Cabinet ministers such as Mr Lim Kim San and Mr Barker.
The
other ministers, such as Dr Toh Chin Chye and Mr S. Rajaratnam, were
also persuaded to accept this decision for separation. Amid the
diversity in the Singapore Cabinet, there was unity.
With the
dynamic leadership of Singapore's founding fathers and the strong
support of its people, this multiracial nation has survived and thrived,
against the odds.
Singaporeans can learn from our founding
fathers such as Mr Lee and Dr Goh. With the right will, proactive
attitude and purposeful plans, we can succeed, even in the midst of
great difficulty and challenges.
The determination to succeed
and the united perseverance to work for the benefit of our nation are
among the key factors which contributed to the nation's development.
The pioneer team of leaders was made up of talented, capable and
committed Singaporeans such as Mr Lee, Dr Goh, Dr Toh, Mr Rajaratnam, Mr
Lim, Mr Othman Wok, Mr Barker and Mr Hon Sui Sen. They collaborated and
complemented each other, as they contributed actively to the young
nation.
During the years after our independence, the evident
trust and teamwork among the leaders, together with the support of the
people, enabled the country and government to strengthen and grow.
In the final recorded words of Mr Lee at the Aug 9, 1965, press
conference at the Broadcasting House: "We unite regardless of race,
language, religion, culture."
As we Singaporeans remember our
history and celebrate our nation's 50th birthday, let us build on our
legacy, plan for the future and work together as one united people, "so
as to achieve happiness, prosperity and progress for our nation".
.
Edmund Lim
• The writer is a Singaporean pursuing his PhD at Nanyang Technological University.
Source: The Straits Times
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