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- Newsgroups: soc.culture.filipino
- Subject: Lee Kwan Yew Urges Ramos to be Firm
- Message-ID: <-191192122423@microlab32.med.upenn.edu>
- Date: 19 Nov 92 17:23:07 GMT
- Followup-To: soc.culture.filipino
- Organization: University of Pennsylvania
- Lines: 34
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- MANILA, Philippines (UPI) -- Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore's former prime
- minister, said Wednesday Philippine President Fidel Ramos needed to
- exercise firm control because there was no proof American-style
- democracy would lead the country toward prosperity.
- Lee, addressing an international business conference, said Ramos must
- rule with a strong hand in order to make bold reforms needed to spur the
- country's dormant economy. Those reforms, according to Lee, included
- opening the economy to foreign investments, tearing down monopolies,
- restoring law and order and improving the country's infrastructure.
- The 69-year-old Lee, who was Singapore's prime minister for 31 years
- and is now a senior minister, criticized Philippine elections during the
- 20-year regime of ousted dictator Ferdinand Marcos as ``politics enjoyed
- for its own sake.''
- ``If the Ramos administration can make ordinary Filipinos understand
- that politics is not simply singing, fiestas and giveaways, but ...
- about their lives, jobs, wages, homes, schools and hospitals, then the
- situation can change dramatically,'' he said.
- ``There is absolutely no assurance that the American-style
- Constitution will produce wealth for the Philippines as it has for
- America,'' he added. ``Filipinos have no empty, wealthy continent to
- make them rich. They have a densely populated archipelago with little
- oil, gas or other valuable natural resources.''
- Lee said the separation of powers among the executive, legislative
- and judicial branches has often paralyzed government decision-making.
- He added Singapore and the industrialized nations of South Korea,
- Taiwan and Hong Kong could not have achieved progress under a political
- system ``where gridlock on every major issue is a way of life.''
- Lee, who is credited with master-minding the island-nation's economic
- revival, said the Philippine Congress must give way to the president on
- hard economic decisions.
- He warned that if Ramos wasted the next six years of his
- administration, the Philippines could be overtaken by Vietnam's
- expanding economy.
-