Lim Yew Hock
{{Short description|Chief Minister of Singapore from 1956 to 1959}}
{{family name hatnote|Lim|lang=Chinese}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| honorific_prefix = Haji
Omar
| name = Lim Yew Hock
| honorific_suffix =
| native_name = {{nobold|林有福}}
| native_name_lang = zh-sg
| image = Lim Yew Hock, 1951 (3;4 crop).jpg
| imagesize = 200px
| order =
| office = Chief Minister of Singapore
| term_start = 8 June 1956
| term_end = 3 June 1959
| monarch = Elizabeth II
| governor = Robert Black
William Goode
| 1blankname = Deputy
| 1namedata = Abdul Hamid Jumat
| predecessor = David Marshall
| successor = Office Abolished
Lee Kuan Yew (Prime Minister of Singapore)
| office1 = 2nd Leader of the Opposition
| primeminister1 = Lee Kuan Yew
| term_start1 = 1 July 1959
| term_end1 = 3 September 1963
| predecessor1 = Lee Kuan Yew
| successor1 = Lim Huan Boon
| office3 = Chairman of the Singapore People's Alliance
| term_start3 = 10 November 1958
| term_end3 = 3 September 1963
| predecessor3 = Position established
| successor3 = Vacant
| office4 = Chairman of the Labour Front
| 1blankname4 = Secretary-General
| 1namedata4 = Francis Thomas
| term_start4 = March 1958
| term_end4 = November 1958
| predecessor4 = Chew Swee Kee
| successor4 = Vacant
| office5 = Chairman of the Labour Party
| 1blankname5 = General Secretary
| 1namedata5 = Peter Williams
| term_start5 = 1950
| term_end5 = 1952
| predecessor5 = Pat Johnson
| successor5 = S. Reddi
| birth_name = Lim Yew Hock
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=y|1914|10|15}}
| birth_place = Singapore, Straits Settlements
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|1984|11|30|1914|10|15}}
| death_place = Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
| death_cause =
| resting_place =
| resting_place_coordinates =
| nationality = Singaporean, later Malaysian
| other_names =
| citizenship = Singapore
(1957–1965)
Malaysia
(1963–1984)
| alma_mater = Raffles Institution
| years_active =
| era =
| employer =
| organization =
| party = Singapore People's Alliance
(1958–1963)
| otherparty = Progressive Party
(1947–1949)
Labour Party
(1949–1955)
Labour Front
(1955–1958)
| spouse = {{plainlist|
- {{marriage|Chia Kim Neo|12 January 1937|1968|end=div}}
- Puan Hajjah Hasnah Abdullah
}}
| children = 6; including Eulindra
| mother = Wee Lian Neo
| father = Lim Teck Locke
| profession = Politician - diplomat
| module = {{Infobox Chinese
|child = yes
|name=Lim Yew Hock
|c=林有福
|showflag=poj
|p=Lín Yǒufú
|j=
|poj=Lîm Iú-hok
}}
| caption = Lim in 1951
}}
Lim Yew Hock ({{lang-zh|c=林有福|p=Lín Yǒufú}}; 15 October 1914 – 30 November 1984) was a Singaporean-born Malaysian politician and diplomat who served as Chief Minister of Singapore from 1956 to 1959.{{cite web | url=https://thekopi.co/2019/08/15/lim-yew-hock-missing/ | title=The Mysterious Disappearance of Singapore's Chief Minister | date=14 August 2019 }} He was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Cairnhill between 1959 and 1963, and had earlier served as a member of the Legislative Council of Singapore and later the Legislative Assembly of Singapore from 1948 to 1959. Between 1959 and 1963, Lim was the de facto Leader of the Opposition in the Assembly. Following Singapore's separation from Malaysia in 1965, Lim became less involved in Singaporean politics and moved to Malaya.{{cite web | url=https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/infopedia/articles/SIP_822_2004-12-28.html | title=Lim Yew Hock | Infopedia }}{{cite news |url=https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/Digitised/Article/straitstimes19841201-1.2.25.4 |title=Man who thumped the Reds |publisher=Straits Times |date=1 December 1984 }}
Educated at Raffles Institution, Lim began his career as a clerk before entering politics after World War II. He joined the Progressive Party in 1947. In 1949, alongside David Marshall, he co-founded the Labour Front (LF). The implementation of the Rendel Constitution in 1955, spurred by growing demands for self-governance, led to the first Legislative Assembly election. The LF emerged victorious, with Marshall becoming Chief Minister. Lim was appointed Minister for Labour and Welfare and served as Deputy Chief Minister during Marshall's tenure.
After the failure of the 1956 Merdeka Talks in London to achieve self-governance, Marshall resigned, and Lim succeeded him as Chief Minister. Determined to gain the trust of the British authorities, Lim took a strong stance against communist and leftist movements, including crackdowns on students and teachers from Chinese-medium schools accused of communist sympathies. He led an all-party delegation to London and secured an agreement for a new constitution that granted Singapore internal self-government in 1959. However, his actions alienated the Chinese-educated population and eroded support for his administration, boosting the popularity of the opposition People's Action Party (PAP) led by Lee Kuan Yew.
In the 1959 Singaporean general election, Lim's newly formed Singapore People's Alliance (SPA) was defeated by the PAP, prompting his resignation as Chief Minister. He remained in the Assembly until 1963 but played a diminished role in politics. Afterward, he was appointed High Commissioner of Malaysia to Australia by Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman. Lim's legacy is marked by both political significance and quiet mystery. While he played a pivotal role in securing self-governance for Singapore, his political career ended abruptly following his disappearance from public view in 1966 during his diplomatic posting to Australia. He later resurfaced as a Muslim convert living quietly in Saudi Arabia, where he died in 1984, and his reclusive final years continue to add intrigue to his complex and controversial place in Singapore's history.
Life
=Early years=
Lim Yew Hock was born to Kinmen Hokkiens in Singapore of the Straits Settlements on 15 October 1914.Corfield (2011), pp. 159–160. He part of third generation of overseas Chinese in Singapore, and son of Lim Teck Locke.Lau (2004) Lim was the eldest son in his family and has a brother and two sisters. He attended English language schools; the Pearl's Hill School and Outram School from a young age. He obtained excellent results and received a four-year scholarship. He was admitted to the prestigious Raffles Institution and completed his secondary education in 1931.
Lim had planned to study law in the United Kingdom upon graduation, and was ready to sit for Cambridge entrance examinations. However, his father's sudden death made it impossible.Tan, Guan Heng (2007), p. 141. He was only 37 years old when he died, so the assets he left behind was put under supervision of Lim's uncle, while Lim was being mistreated. As the Great Depression greatly impacted Singapore's economy, he had to earn a living by provision of "private tuition" during his post- secondary education years to support his family, made up of his mother and younger siblings.
Soon, he was employed as a junior clerk of the Imperial Chemical Industries in 1934, he transferred to Cold Storage as a junior clerk, which enabled him to earn a stable income. He was promoted as stenographer because of his outstanding performance in shorthand. During World War II, Japan launched the Pacific War in December 1941, leading to the fall of Singapore in February 1942. Lim lived on selling charcoal, until the end of Japanese occupation and Singapore's revert to British rule in 1945, when he returned to Cold Storage as private secretary.
=Early political career=
{{see also|Legislative Council of Singapore|Singaporean general election, 1951}}
Lim became involved in trade union activities right after the war. He resigned from Cold Storage and worked as full-time Secretary-General of the Singapore Clerical and Administrative Workers' Union (SCAWU).Mukunthan (2004)"Lim Yew Hock dies in Jeddah" (1 December 1984) In March 1947, he became the first Singaporean to receive the British Council scholarship, to study local trade unions in Britain.Morais (1965), p. 234.
With his trade union background, Lim joined the newly formed Singaporean Progressive Party (PP) led by Tan Chye Cheng to start off his political career. In fact, there was a major change in politics of post-war Singapore. On the one hand, there were increasing calls for independence, and on the other hand, the Straits Settlements was dissolved in 1946 by the British Government, while the Legislative Council of the Straits Settlements was restructured in 1948 as the Legislative Council of Singapore. In March 1948, Singapore held its first Legislative Council election to elect its six out of the 22 Councillors; Three out of five PP candidates won in the election."{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20120711161852/http://www.singapore-elections.com/leco-1948-ge/ LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL GENERAL ELECTION 1948]}}", singapore-elections.com, retrieved on 12 January 2013. Lim did not participate in the election, but was appointed as an unofficial member in April, representing the trade union in the council.
Lim left the PP in July 1949 and joined the Singaporean Labour Party (LP), whom Lim shared a similar political stand with. Later in June 1950, he was elected LP's Chairman, and was chosen to serve as Chairman of the SCAWU in July of the same year. Under support of the union, he contested in the Keppel constituency during the Legislative Council election held in April 1951, and was elected as a Councillor. In this election, the number of elected seats increased from six to nine; The PP won six, LP won two, while the remaining seat was won by an independent candidate."{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20140714230930/http://www.singapore-elections.com/leco-1951-ge/ LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL GENERAL ELECTION 1951]}}", singapore-elections.com, retrieved on 12 January 2013. In May 1951, Lim founded the Singapore Trades Union Congress (STUC) and appointed himself as chairman. In the same year, he was funded by the United States Information Agency to study the labour movement in the America. However, LP's internal struggle among the different factions was growing weaker. The faction led by party's Secretary-General Peter M. Williams successfully coerced Lim to step down as chairman. He eventually left the party.
=Labour Front=
{{see also|Labour Front|David Marshall (Singaporean politician){{!}}David Marshall|Singaporean general election, 1955}}
Soon after leaving the party, Lim was appointed as a member of the Rendel Commission, chaired by British diplomat Sir George Rendel, which was formed in July 1953 by Singapore's colonial government to provide advice on constitutional development in Singapore. The Commission subsequently submitted a report in February 1954 for major changes in constitutional law of Singapore, heading towards self-rule. At the same time, Lim formed the Labour Front (LF) with Francis Thomas and well-known barrister David Marshall, with Marshall as president.
In February 1955, a new constitution, the Rendel Constitution, was implemented. Singapore would create its first Legislative Assembly with majority of the seats popularly elected, to replace the existing Council.Ng (2009) 25 out of 32 seats would be elected by the general populace, four seats would be allocated to Governor-appointed unofficial members, three seats taken by ex officio members, respectively the Chief Secretary, Attorney-General and Financial Secretary, while the remaining seat would be for the unofficial Speaker of the Assembly nominated by the Governor. Moreover, the post of the Chief Minister was added, which would be assumed by the leader of the majority party in the Assembly, sharing the responsibility with the Chief Secretary. The Chief Secretary continued to take control over areas such as external affairs, internal security, defence, broadcasting and public relations, whereas the power of policy-making for the people's welfare lied in the hands of the Chief Minister.Quah, p. 37.
The existing Executive Council was replaced by the newly formed Council of Ministers, chaired by the Governor, composed of the three ex officio members (Chief Secretary, Attorney General, Financial Secretary) and the remaining six unofficial members, inclusive of the Chief Minister and five other members from the Assembly. Although the Governor presided over the Council of Ministers, the Chief Minister could lead discussions, whereas the other Council members who was also Assemblymen would also take up different ministerial posts, similar to the Westminster and parliamentary system.Sutherland (2010)
File:Old Parliament House, Singapore, Jan 06.JPG, representing Havelock constituency, and was appointed Minister for Labour and Welfare. The photograph shows the former Legislative Assembly House of Singapore]]
In April 1955, in the subsequent Legislative Assembly election, the Marshall-led LF won in the election with 10 seats. The remaining seats were taken by the PP (four), Singapore Alliance (coalition of UMNO-MCA-SMU, three), People's Action Party (PAP, three), Democratic Party (two) and three independent candidates."[https://sg-elections.com/general-election/1955/ LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY GENERAL ELECTION 1955]", singapore-elections.com, retrieved on 12 January 2013."Singapore Legislative Assembly General Election - 1955" (2010) After the election, Marshall became Singapore's first Chief Minister, but as the LF did not obtain absolute majority, he formed a coalition government with the Singapore Alliance, and appointed two pro-LF unofficial nominated members into the Assembly under the help of Governor Sir John Nicoll.Wong (2002), p. 82. Lim was elected as Havelock constituency's Assemblyman. He was the only popularly elected Legislative Councillor who transited over to the Legislative Assembly.
After the election, Lim was appointed by Marshall as Minister for Labour and Welfare, while he resigned his chairmanship from the STUC."MARSHALL NAMES HIS MEN" (7 April 1955) Then, workers were on strikes one after another, often escalating into civil unrest incidents, so Lim, as Labour and Welfare Minister, had to meditate and assist in subsiding such strikes. He had handled the April–May 1955 Hock Lee bus strikes,Tan, Kevin (2008), pp. 269–270. May–July 1955 Singapore Harbour Board Staff Association strikes,"DOCKS BOSS SIGNS THE AGREEMENT" (7 July 1955) and also strikes from hotels, City Council of Singapore, Singapore Traction Company, etc."GOVT. ASK ILO AID ON LABOUR TROUBLES" (31 August 1955)"Hotel strike inquiry" (7 October 1955)"CITY COUNCIL WORKERS TO STRIKE" (15 August 1955)"STC strike: Mr. Lim has a plan" (28 December 1955) The Hock Lee bus strikes turned into a riot in May 1955, killing four and injuring many, including two police officers who died.Lee, Edwin (2008), p. 107.
Soon after, Marshall led an all-party delegation with Governor Sir Robert Black to London, UK in March 1956, to negotiate with the British for self-rule in Singapore. However, talks failed by May 1956, and in his return to Singapore, Marshall resigned as Chief Minister on 6 June. On 8 June 1956, Marshall's deputy, Lim, who was also Minister for Labour and Welfare, took over and became Singapore's second Chief Minister.Corfield (2011), p. xxv."THE NEW CABINET WITH SIR ROBERT" (9 June 1956)
Lim's Council of Minister was similar to that of Marshall's. Besides continuing to serve as Labour and Welfare Minister, while the other members include his deputy Abdul Hamid bin Haji Jumat (Minister for Local Government, Lands and Housing), J. M. Jumabhoy (Minister for Commerce and Industry), Francis Thomas (Minister for Communications and Works), Chew Swee Kee (Minister for Education), and A. J. Braga (Minister for Health). Marshall, former Chief Minister, later left the LF and founded the Worker's Party.Trocki (2008), p. 118. In March 1958, Lim was chosen as LF's president.
=Chief Minister=
==Chinese schools riots==
{{see also|Chinese middle schools riots|Internal Security Act (Singapore)}}
After Lim succeeded as Chief Minister, his top priority was to achieve full self-governance for Singapore from the British Government. The British had taken to account Singapore's future early during Marshall's tenure as Chief Minister. The British had agreed to Malaya's (Malaysia's predecessor) independence, and due to the strategic value of Singapore's geography, the British wanted to continue taking control over foreign and defence affairs of Singapore. Hence, the British are inclined to granting Singapore self-governance instead of independence.Lee, Kuan Yew (September 1998) Though Sir Robert Black, the then-Governor, had taken a more open and friendly approach to self-governance for Singapore, as compared to his predecessor Sir John Nicoll, he believed in gradual self-governance. If the handover of power were to be carried out too hastily, self-governing political leaders might not have sufficient experience in governing.Tan, Kevin (2008)
File:CHS Tower Block 2.jpg in October 1956 broke out at The Chinese High School]]
When Marshall led a delegation in March to May 1956 to negotiate talks with the British for self-rule, Black emphasised the priority of internal security issues, while anti-colonialist LF was ineffective in suppression of the series of riots incited by the communists. As a result, talks broke down and complete self-rule was refused.
To enhance the internal security, Lim arrested the leftist trade union members, teachers and students under the Preservation of Public Security Ordinance, in September to October 1956 and August 1957 upon taking office. Some of them were deported.Lee, Edwin (2008), p. 137. In addition, alleged pro-communist organisations such as the Singapore Women's Association, the Chinese Musical Gong Society and the Singapore Chinese Middle School Students Union were banned by the authorities."1956 - Student Riots" (1999) The series of raids prompted the teachers and students from Chinese schools in October 1956 to launch sit-in protests at Chung Cheng High School and The Chinese High School, eventually escalating into riots.
Under the support of Black, the riot police were dispatched by Lim to clear the school grounds. The Government also imposed a curfew from 26 October to 2 November, suppressing the riots effectively. However, the riots killed 13 and injured hundred more in the five days.Lee (2008), p. 138. Hundreds were arrested, including assemblymen Lim Chin Siong, Fong Swee Suan and Devan Nair, who were radicals from the opposition PAP. They were released when the PAP came to power in 1959.
==Negotiation for self-rule==
British Government was assured of Singapore's internal security due to Lim's tough stance against the communists. This allowed re-negotiations for self-rule from December 1956 to June 1958. Under Lim's leadership, a delegation of representatives from various political parties headed to London in March 1957 to commence talks with the British for self-rule.Lee (2008), p. 139. They reached a consensus in April, while Lim signed a new constitutional agreement with Secretary of State for the Colonies Alan Lennox-Boyd on behalf of Singapore."11 April 1957: Britain agrees to Singapore self-rule" (2005) Representatives from Singapore drafted a new constitution;Corfield (2011), p. xxvi. In August 1958, the British Parliament passed the State of Singapore Act, 1958. Based on the agreement, there would be a great increase in the number of Legislative Assembly seats to be contested in the 1959 election, where all seats would be popularly elected; Singapore would become a self-governing state, with the Chief Minister and the Council of Ministers being replaced respectively by the Prime Minister and the Cabinet of Singapore, in charge of all affairs except defence and diplomacy; The Yang di-Pertuan Negara would replace the existing Governor.
Meanwhile, Lim prompted the Assembly in October 1957 to pass the Singapore Citizenship Ordinance, 1957. The Ordinance defined Singapore citizens as those who were born in Singapore, who were born outside Singapore whose fathers were born in Singapore and did not hold foreign nationality, who were born in Malaya and had been living in Singapore for at least two years, who were citizens of the United Kingdom and Colonies living in Singapore for at least two years, and who were foreigners living in Singapore for at least ten years.Yeo (1973), pp. 152–153. In recognition of his performance, the University of Malaya conferred Lim the Honorary Doctor of Laws degree in September 1957, while he was presented the rank of Seri Maharaja Mangku Negara (S.M.N) in August 1958 by Malaysian King Tuanku Abdul Rahman, therefore being granted the title of Tun.
==Acknowledging Nanyang==
{{see also|Nanyang University|Tan Lark Sye}}
File:NTU former administrative building front.jpg was funded by the Government]]
Lim had taken a friendlier approach to the Nanyang University prior to the creation of a self-ruling state in June 1959, in order to gain the support of the Chinese majority.Wong (2000), p. 69. Nanyang was the first university with Chinese as its main medium of instruction, which was funded and set up by Tan Lark Sye and other Singaporean businessmen with Fujian ancestry in 1953.Nor-Afidah (2005)"戰後馬來亞地區閩南人與華文教育之發展" (26 November 2006)"南洋大學的歷史事略" (13 September 2012) However, Nanyang had been disfavoured by the Government due to the latter's English-first policies and the former's alleged CPM involvement. During Marshall's rule, the-then Minister for Education Chew Swee Kee said in May 1956 that degrees conferred by Nanyang would not be recognised by the Government.
Ever since Lim took over as Chief Minister, the Government had taken a positive attitude to Nanyang's development despite its policies of non-recognition to Nanyang's degrees. The building of Nanyang's campus was completed in March 1958 and Sir William Goode, the-then Governor was invited to host the institute's opening ceremony. In October 1958, Lim's government announced that it would provide financial assistance to Nanyang, where half of the $840,000 (Malaya and British Borneo dollar) would be used for Nanyang's expenditures while the other half would be used for student bursaries. This was the first time Nanyang received government funding. Lim had the Assembly pass the Nanyang University Ordinance in March 1959, officially granting Nanyang university status.
Lim also reassessed the possibility of full acknowledgment of Nanyang's university status. He appointed the Prescott Commission in January 1959, chaired by S. L. Prescott to evaluate the standard and recognisability of Nanyang's degree. Nevertheless, in the Prescott Report submitted to the Government in March the same year, the performance of Nanyang was bitterly criticised by the commission, which had reservations about granting full recognition to Nanyang's degrees by the Government. Lim, who did not want to lose support from the people and put his election campaign in danger, chose not to release the report immediately. The report was not made public until after the establishment of the State of Singapore in July 1959. By that time Lim had already stepped down as Chief Minister."'NO' TO NANYANG DEGREES" (23 June 1959)
==Loss of support==
Even though Lim had successfully achieved self-rule from the British, he lost the support of the Chinese majority due to his tough stance in the crackdown of teachers and students from Chinese schools. He had aroused negative public reaction in several other aspects; This includes the resale of Christmas Island to the Government of Australia at a low price, under the request of the British Government, and also the insistence of extending the validity of the Preservation of Public Security Ordinance.Trocki (2008), pp. 119–120. There was a rapid decline in support for the Lim's LF due to several other factors: His government was not able to crack down the rapid growth of secret societies, and gang fights occurred frequently, resulting in the deterioration of law and order;"Assembly Debates Bust-the-Gangs Bill" (14 August 1958) The lives of the people had not improved and there was no economic growth; The PAP exposed Chew Swee Kee, the then-Education Minister in early 1959 for being accused of accepting large sums of money.Lee, Kuan Yew (1944), p. 148.
Conversely, under the leadership of Chairman Toh Chin Chye and Secretary-General Lee Kuan Yew, the PAP, then opposition, won the support of the people by accusing the LF as being the puppet of the British Government. After a major restructure, the City Council held its first election in 1957; The PAP won 13 out of 32 seats while the LF won only four."{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20131019051434/http://singapore-elections.com/cc-1957-elec/ CITY COUNCIL ELECTION 1957]}}", singapore-elections.com, retrieved on 12 January 2013. In the following year, the LF was defeated once again by the PAP in the Kallang by-election held in July."{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20131019061937/http://singapore-elections.com/cc-1958-elec/ CITY COUNCIL BY-ELECTION 1958]}}", singapore-elections.com, retrieved on 12 January 2013. In November 1958, Lim founded the Singapore People's Alliance (SPA), with himself as chairman. However, he failed in his attempts to re-gain support from the people."The Peoples' Alliance" (12 November 1958)
Under the new constitution, the legislature was officially dissolved on 31 March 1959. An election was held on 30 May of the same year, where all 51 seats in the Assembly will be popularly elected. In this election, 43 out of 51 PAP candidates were elected; Lim-led SPA had only four out of 34 candidates elected; the United Malays National Organisation won three seats, while the remaining seat was won by an independent candidate. The Liberal Socialist Party (led by E. H. Holloway), the Workers' Party (led by David Marshall) and the LF (led by Francis Thomas) did not win any seats."[https://sg-elections.com/general-election/1959/ LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY GENERAL ELECTION 1959]", singapore-elections.com, retrieved on 12 January 2013.
On 3 June 1959, he officially stepped down as Chief Minister. The British officially proclaimed the establishment of the State of Singapore, marking the end of British colonial rule. PAP's Secretary-General Lee Kuan Yew was sworn in on 5 June as the first Prime Minister of Singapore, where Singapore came under full internal self-governance.
=Political involvement in the Federation=
Lim won the Cairnhill seat in the Legislative Assembly election of 1959 and despite serving as the Leader of the Opposition in the Assembly, his political influence unceasingly reduced. Lim started to lose interest in Singaporean politics; Back during his tenure as Chief Minister, he had already established friendly relations with Tunku Abdul Rahman, the Prime Minister of Malaya, and had expressed increased concern for politics in Malaya; He had also called for the merger of the State of Singapore with Malaya, so as to bring an end to British rule in Singapore.
Following a referendum held in Singapore, the Federation of Malaysia, which comprised Malaya, Singapore, Sarawak and North Borneo, was proclaimed in September 1963. The Legislative Assembly of Singapore held an election in the same month; the SPA had formed the Singapore Alliance Party together with some other members of the Opposition back in 1961, under the support of the ruling Alliance Party in Malaysia, with the attempts of challenging the PAP once again. However, Lim did not contest in the election, while the Alliance Party did not win any seats; Lim resigned his chairmanship from the SPA, fading out of Singaporean politics. In January 1964, the then-Malaysian Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman appointed Lim as Malaysian High Commissioner in Australia. When Singapore gained independence from Malaysia in August 1965, he acquired Malaysian citizenship and was issued a Malaysian passport. Remained in office as the High Commissioner, he described himself as a 'child of estranged parents', hoping for the reunification of the two states.
File:Aankomst van premier van Malakka Abdul Rahman, Bestanddeelnr 911-2803.jpg Tunku Abdul Rahman intervened in Lim's disappearance in Australia in 1966]]
During his term of office in Canberra, Australia, he was reported missing on 11 June 1966."The Diplomat & the Samaritan" (1966) A reporter in Sydney claimed to have seen Lim taking a domestic flight to Sydney, with the alias of 'Hawk'. There were also rumours that he patronised the Paradise Club in Kings Cross, New South Wales and Sandra Nelson, a 19-year-old stripper was his all-time favourite. However, Lim's exact whereabouts were unknown, and the police failed to get in touch with Nelson.
The Australian police conducted a large-scale search on Lim; the Malaysian Government deployed an envoy to Australia to find his whereabouts, while his wife and two of his daughters also flew there to aid in the search. In an interview by Australian televisions, Lim's wife, in tears, asked for her husband's early return. On the other hand, the envoy from the Malaysian Government said that Lim was probably "wounded from stumbling upon a stone, and might be currently under care from someone with unknown identity". While in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur, Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman spoke to the Australian reporters over the telephone, calling for Lim to show up; The Tunku said, "My friend, come back, I will welcome you, and am willing to let bygones be bygones."
After nine days of disappearance, Vincent Laus, a guesthouse operator drove Lim back to Canberra on 19 June 1966, where Lim was in a poor mental condition. Laus claimed that he met Lim in the Sydney streets and found him vomiting and in discomfort; he brought him back to his guesthouse to rest, only to realise several days later that he was whom the police was searching for. However, the media raised doubts about Laus' words, including why he had taken days to find out Lim's identity, and why he had not sought the police for help, instead of driving Lim personally back to Canberra. The Malaysian Government declined to comment further on his disappearance, while its envoy only described Laus as a 'Good Samaritan', filling the event with mystery.
Soon after, Lim returned to Kuala Lumpur in July 1966, under his family members' accompaniment. In Malaysia, Lim was alleged for having an extramarital affair with Nelson, but Lim denied this. Nelson also spoke to the reporters in Australia; she stressed that she and Lim were just ordinary friends and that she was totally unaware of his whereabouts during his disappearance."Sandra: I'm ready to send a bundle of photos" (24 August 1966) Malaysian Parliament opposition members even invited her to Malaysia to answer queries about her relationship with Lim, which she declined; but she said that she could send a pile of photographs of her to them if they wanted.
Before his disappearance, the Foreign Ministry had scheduled for him to serve as Malaysian Ambassador to Italy. However, after the incident, the Foreign Ministry arranged for him to work as Deputy Secretary (Special Duties) to the Ministry instead."TUN LIM: I HAVE QUIT FOREIGN MINISTRY" (7 November 1968)Morais (1966), p. 166. Lim resigned from the Foreign Ministry in August 1968, putting an end to his political career in Malaysia. Shortly after, the Government abruptly revoked his title as Tun in late November of the same year, making his disappearance in Australia a bewildering mystery."I knew it was coming says Yew Hock" (30 November 1968) According to his autobiography published after his death, he chose to go missing because his relationship with his wife had broken down and he was emotionally overwhelmed.
=Late years=
Lim met with a traffic accident and was badly injured in September 1961.”Tengku takes the pulse of Tun Lim Yew Hock" (27 September 1961) Despite having made a full recovery, he had occasional health problems. For instance, before his disappearance in June 1966, he had undergone two months of medical treatment earlier on. After resigning from the Malaysian Foreign Affairs Ministry, Lim initially settled in Malacca, until his marriage broke down. He then chose to convert to Islam and emigrated to Mecca, Saudi Arabia to start a new life and adopted an Islamic-sounding name, Haji Omar Lim Yew Hock.
In his late years, Lim moved to Jeddah. He joined the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation and worked as a special assistant to the President of the Islamic Development Bank.Lim (1986), p.125. He died on 30 November 1984 at his Jeddah home, at the age of 70, and was buried in Mecca that night. His autobiography, Reflections, was published after his death in Kuala Lumpur in 1986.
Legacy and reputation
Unlike Lee Kuan Yew, David Marshall, Toh Chin Chye and other Singaporean political leaders who emerged after World War II, who received their tertiary education in prestigious UK institutions, Lim had only received local education. Despite this, he started work as a clerk and later joined trade unions. He was elected to the Legislative Council, later the Legislative Assembly, and was eventually appointed as Chief Minister, becoming an influential politician in colonial Singapore.
Unlike his predecessor Marshall, Lim chose to cooperate with the British. He adopted a tough stance against leftist groups, students and teachers, gaining trust from the British, leading to re-negotiations for self-rule with the British."A Forgotten Past – The Curious Case of Lim Yew Hock" (2012)Tan, Guan Heng (2007), p. 142. Under his leadership, Singapore reached an agreement with Britain following a series of talks, granting full internal self-rule in 1959. However, he lost the support of the Chinese majority due to his crackdown of teachers and students in Chinese schools. Moreover, the British had gradually changed their position to support the opposition PAP and its leader Lee Kuan Yew throughout the successive self-rule talks in London, tipping Lee as the potential future leader of Singapore.
Despite having achieved full internal self-rule for Singapore, he lost the support of the people, handing over the post of Prime Minister to Lee. There have been views, showing that despite losing the support of the people, he had achieved full internal self-governance for Singapore and eliminated left-wing influence in the PAP, paving the way for Lee and his PAP to remain in power thereafter for a long period of time."林有福是李光耀的上馬石" (3 April 2008)
After he stepped down as Chief Minister, he gradually declined in Singaporean politics. His political career in Singapore came to an end when he chose not to contest in the Legislative Assembly election in 1963. Lim got involved in Malaysian politics the following year. However, it, too, came to an end after his disappearance in 1966 in Australia. He eventually chose to lead a low-profile life in Saudi Arabia and was no longer involved in Singaporean nor Malaysian politics. Lim made such an evaluation about himself in his autobiography published after his death:
{{blockquote|I have always been humble, irrespective of my position in life ... I have found that there is no true greatness in greatness itself, but there is truly greatness in humility. Lim Yew Hock was not great when he was Chief Minister in Singapore, but Chief Minister Lim Yew Hock was great, when he remained humble, in his relationship with his fellow men.}}
Personal life
Lim married Chia Kim Neo on 12 January 1937.{{Cite web|url=https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/Digitised/Article/maltribune19370112-1.2.38|title=MARRIAGE|website=eresources.nlb.gov.sg|access-date=2019-01-18|archive-date=19 January 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190119122128/http://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/Digitised/Article/maltribune19370112-1.2.38|url-status=live}} They had one son and four daughters. After having been through his disappearance in 1966 and resignation from the Malaysian Government in 1968, Lim's marriage with Chia broke down. When he converted to Islam and was living in Saudi Arabia in his late years, he remarried ethnic Chinese Hajjah Hasnah Abdullah, another Muslim convert. Both of them had a daughter with the name of Hayati.
Works
- Reflections. Kuala Lumpur: Pustaka Antara, 1986. {{ISBN|978-967-937-029-4}}
Honours
=Foreign honours=
- {{flag|Malaya}}:
- {{strikethrough|50px Honorary Grand Commander of the Order of the Defender of the Realm (SMN (K)) – Tun}} (conferred 31 August 1958,{{cite web|url=http://www.istiadat.gov.my/v8/images/stories/1958.pdf|title=Senarai Penuh Penerima Darjah Kebesaran, Bintang dan Pingat Persekutuan Tahun 1958.|access-date=15 June 2016|archive-date=23 December 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181223085618/http://www.istiadat.gov.my/v8/images/stories/1958.pdf|url-status=dead}} revoked 1968){{cite web|url=https://www.utusan.com.my/lipatan-sejarah/2021/11/gelaran-tun-pertama-kali-ditarik-balik/|title=Gelaran Tun pertama kali ditarik balik|date=29 November 2021 |access-date=23 June 2023}}
- {{flag|Brunei}}:
- 50px Commander of the Order of Seri Paduka Mahkota Brunei (1961)"[https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/42414/page/5280 Issue 42414] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140810163612/https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/42414/page/5280 |date=10 August 2014 }}", London Gazette, 18 July 1961, p.4.{{Cite news |date=1961-05-17 |title=D. Y. M. M. kurnia bintang kebesaran D. P. M. B. kapada Tun Lim Yew Hock |url=https://www.pelitabrunei.gov.bn/Arkib%20Dokumen/1961/17%20mei%201961.pdf |access-date=2025-02-10 |work=www.pelitabrunei.gov.bn |publisher=Pelita Brunei |pages=1 |language=ms}}
=Honorary degrees=
- Doctor of Laws
- University of Malaya (September 1957)
=Titles=
- Lim Yew Hock (15 October 1914 - August 1958)
- Tun Lim Yew Hock, SMN (August 1958 - November 1968)
- Lim Yew Hock (November 1968 – 1972)
- Haji Omar Lim Yew Hock (1972–30 November 1984)
Notes
{{Portal|Singapore|Politics|Biography}}
{{reflist}}
References
=English-language=
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- {{cite book|title=The Who's who in Malaysia|date=1965|edition=5|orig-year=first edition published in 1956|editor-first=J. Victor|editor-last=Morais|editor-link=John Victor Morais}}
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- "[https://web.archive.org/web/20071105061804/http://ourstory.asia1.com.sg/independence/ref/riot56.html 1956 - Student Riots]", Headlines, Lifelines, 1999.
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{{refend}}
=Chinese-language=
{{refbegin}}
- Lee, Kuan Yew, 李光耀40年政論選 [Lee Kuan Yew's Forty Years in Politics]. Taipei: Linking Publishing Company, 1994. {{ISBN|978-957-08-1182-7}}
- Lee, Kuan Yew, [https://web.archive.org/web/20150924101529/http://www.shuku.net:8080/novels/lgy/lgy.html 李光耀回憶錄—風雨獨立路 [Memoirs of Lee Kuan Yew: The Ups and Downs to Independence]]. Beijing: Foreign Language Press, September 1998. {{ISBN|978-7-119-02255-0}}
- "{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20140714133206/http://www.sginsight.com/xjp/index.php?id=208 戰後馬來亞地區閩南人與華文教育之發展 [Hokkiens and the Development of Chinese Education in Post-war Malaya]]}}", Xinjiapo Wenxian Guan (sginsight.com), 26 November 2006.
- "{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20140714230420/http://www.sginsight.com/xjp/index.php?id=190 林有福是李光耀的上馬石 [Lim Yew Hock, Source of Lee Kuan Yew's Rise in Power]]}}", Xinjiapo Wenxian Guan (sginsight.com), 3 April 2008.
- "[http://www.nandazhan.com/history.htm 南洋大學的歷史事略 [History of Nanyang University]] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130601042632/http://www.nandazhan.com/history.htm |date=1 June 2013 }}", Nanyang University Alumni Leisure Website (nandazhan.com), 13 September 2012.
{{refend}}
External links
{{Library resources box|onlinebooks=no|lcheading=Lim Yew Hock|by=yes}}
- {{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20140714230930/http://www.singapore-elections.com/leco-1951-ge/ Legislative Council election, 1951]}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20150326033642/http://www.eld.gov.sg/elections_past_parliamentary1955.html Legislative Assembly election, 1955]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20180701140217/http://www.eld.gov.sg/elections_past_parliamentary1959.html Legislative Assembly election, 1959]
{{s-start}}
{{s-off}}
{{succession box
|before=David Marshall
|title=2nd Chief Minister of Singapore
|years=June 1956 - June 1959
|after=Lee Kuan Yew
(as Prime Minister)
}}
{{s-end}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Use British English|date=July 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2014}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lim, Yew Hock}}
Category:Singaporean emigrants to Malaysia
Category:Singaporean people of Hokkien descent
Category:Members of the Parliament of Singapore
Category:Members of the Legislative Council of Singapore
Category:Malaysian politicians of Chinese descent
Category:Singapore People's Alliance politicians
Category:Labour Front politicians
Category:Raffles Institution alumni
Category:Ministers for education of Singapore
Category:Ministers for labour of Singapore
Category:Immigrants to Saudi Arabia
Category:High commissioners of Malaysia to Australia
Category:Progressive Party (Singapore) politicians
Category:Honorary grand commanders of the Order of the Defender of the Realm