• Saturday, July 27, 2024

ASIA

Indian-origin Tharman Shanmugaratnam sworn in as Singapore president

Indian-origin Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon administered the oath of office to president Tharman at a ceremony, the official residence of Singapore’s president.

Tharman Shanmugaratnam with his wife Jane Ittogi (Photo by ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP via Getty Images)

By: Shubham Ghosh

INDIAN-ORIGIN Singapore-born economist Tharman Shanmugaratnam was on Thursday (14) sworn in as the ninth president of the predominantly Chinese and economically prosperous city-state.

Indian-origin Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon administered the oath of office to president Tharman at a ceremony held at Istana, a 154-year-old palace in the heart of Singapore’s Shopping and Hotel Belt of Orchard Road.

The Istana is the official residence of the president of Singapore.

The ceremony was attended by prime minister Lee Hsien Loong, members of the cabinet, MPs, top civil servants and members of the diplomatic corps.

Tharman, 66, will serve a six-year term.

He succeeds Halimah Yacob, Singapore’s first woman president, whose tenure ended on Wednesday (13).

Tharman, who has served Singapore all his life in public service, was overwhelmingly endorsed by the city-state’s predominantly Chinese society. He surprised everyone by securing 70.4 per cent of the votes in the presidential election held on September 1, leaving behind Chinese-origin business executives Ng Kok Song with 15.72 per cent and Tan Kin Lian with 13.88 per cent votes out of about 2.2 million ballot paper casts.

Tharman is married to Jane Ittogi, a Singaporean lawyer of Japanese-Chinese heritage and the duo have a daughter and three sons. He attended the premier Anglo-Chinese School before graduating from the London School of Economics (LSE) with a Bachelor of Science degree in economics.

He subsequently went on to Wolfson College at the University of Cambridge, where he completed a Master of Philosophy degree in economics. He then became a student at the Harvard Kennedy School at Harvard University, where he completed a Master in Public Administration (MPA) degree and was a recipient of the Lucius N. Littauer Fellows Award, given to MPA students who demonstrate academic excellence and leadership.

Tharman was a student activist while studying in the UK during the 1970s. He originally held socialist beliefs, but his views on economics evolved over the course of his career.

Tharman, as the Tamilian is popularly called, is the people’s president, says Singapore Friday weekly Tabla! Tharman brings extensive experience to the presidential office as he has served for over two decades in Singapore’s economic development. He was senior minister, deputy prime minister (May 2011 to May 2019), and finance minister among other posts as well as served in leadership positions at major international organisations such as the International Monetary Fund, World Economic Forum, and United Nations Development Forum.

He resigned in July from public and political posts in the ruling People’s Action Party to contest the election for president. “Magic of Singapore’s multiracialism,” wrote Asad Latif, an editorial writer for The Straits Times — a mainstream daily. Chinese account for 74.3 per cent of the city-state of about 5.6 million population, Indians about 9 per cent and Malays close to 13.5 per cent with the rest others in a country that is an Asian financial and business hub, winning over the best talent from the world over.

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