Lee Kuan Yew says he'll
    stay in politics for now

 
  Associated Press
January 24, 2006
SINGAPORE



LEE Kuan Yew, the founder of modern Singapore, was reported Tuesday, Jan 24, to have said he plans to run for re-election in the city state's next parliamentary polls, but that they will be his last.

Lee, a former prime minister, now holds the Cabinet title of minister mentor and represents Singapore's Tanjong Pagar electoral district. He said he would be too "decrepit" to run in the parliamentary election after this one.

"I'm not as active as before; but enough to fight an election," the 82-year-old told local media during a trip to the Middle East.

Lee led Singapore in a split from Malaysia in 1965 and built the tiny territory into an affluent economic hub with a tightly controlled political system dominated by the People's Action Party.

During a visit to Qatar on Tuesday, Lee told television news station Channel NewsAsia that he had no intention of leaving the political scene anytime soon.

"You're keen to see me pack off and go? In that case I'm going to disappoint you," he joked. "I eat less than I should, or I stop eating when I want to eat more; I exercise every day; I work hard every day and I sleep well every day."

Lee's son, Lee Hsien Loong, became prime minister in 2004 and must hold parliamentary elections by mid-2007. Some political analysts have said they expect the next election to be held sooner so the government can benefit from Singapore's current economic health.

An escalation of election-related comments by members of the PAP has raised speculation that an announcement will be made soon after the prime minister presents the annual budget in Parliament on Feb. 17.

The ruling party has won every election since independence, and the upcoming poll is almost certain to be less a contest with the fragmented opposition than a measure of its winning margin. At the last election in 2001, the PAP won 75 percent of the vote for contested seats.

Currently, only two of 84 contested seats are opposition-held. Some opposition leaders cannot run for public office because of defamation lawsuits filed by top government figures who say the suits were necessary to protect their reputations.


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