‘… I replaced what the PAP
ministers and members of parliament had said about the AHPETC with what can
also be said about the PAP’s management of our CPF. The hypocrisy of what
the PAP has said will then be revealed. (The
change of words are in italics.)
GIC and
Temasek Holding receive large sums of CPF monies from Singaporeans. These are all public
monies. As stewards of public funds, GIC
and Temasek Holdings must keep proper accounts and records,
and maintain adequate control over their assets. Who has paid and who has not?
How is the money spent? Is it properly used? Is anybody doing anything wrong?
… These and many other questions directly affect the interests and safety
of the Singaporeans.
They are not trivial technical issues raised merely to satisfy the accountants
or the auditors, or to meet financial regulations. Unfortunately, …(there are) serious questions
about the reliability and accuracy of their financial
and accounting systems.
There is always the
temptation, when the GIC and
Temasek Holdings are financially strapped, to postpone saving,
and say it will make up the shortfall later, or worse, to put its hand into the
cookie jar, to draw from the savings to satisfy immediate needs. Just spend,
use the savings first. Sounds appealing, but the GIC and Temasek Holdings will
then be simply running down the reserves
and mortgaging the future of Singaporeans away.
“GIC and Temasek Holdings did not adequately manage
the conflicts of interests of related parties arising from ownership interests
of their key
officers”.”….
The Chairman of GIC and CEO of Temasek Holdings are, by
the way, husband and wife….
“Taken in totality, the PAP government cannot possibly adequately
manage the conflicts of interest involved in related party transactions”. This
means that the
PAP government may not have obtained the best value for
the moneys paid to these related parties. Or worse, there could be
opportunities of wrong-doing or unethical practices which the PAP government may not
be able to detect or prevent.
Singaporeans and
taxpayers need to know that their monies are properly spent and they are
getting best value for money. When these contracts are awarded to parties
related to the PAP government,
the PAP government needs
to be upfront withSingaporeans as
well as with taxpayers at large, so that there is transparency and proper
scrutiny….
We do not know the exact
state of the GIC and Temasek
Holding’s financial position.
Something is seriously
wrong with the PAP government.
They paint a picture of financial mismanagement, incompetence and negligence in
corporate governance….
Unfortunately, throughout
this saga, we have found the PAP MPs
running the PAP government to
be evasive, unresponsive and misleading. In response to legitimate queries
from Singaporeans,
they stone-walled, deflected the queries, made false or dishonest claims,
raised irrelevant excuses and sought to confuse the public with a flurry of
red-herrings.
First, their lack of
transparency – they failed to disclose things on time; they failed to submit
reports they should be submitting. Every time we reminded them, again and
again, they came up with yet another excuse.
The
government need competent, honest people and proper systems
to serve Singaporeans well.
Good intentions and bland assurances alone are not sufficient. Elected MPs need
to supervise the work of the government, GIC and Temasek Holdings. While they enjoy wide
autonomy, they also have huge responsibility. And they are accountable to Singaporeans. They have statutory
duties but they are also subject to national laws….
What concerns me is that
the PAP government’s actions
are clearly unlawful….
The rhetoric from the PAP is always about helping the
poor man, the reality is that the PAP took CPF money from the man in the
street to give to their friends in the GIC
and Temasek Holdings.
The
PAP keep saying there’s been no loss (of CPF monies from the more than $100 billion
that the GIC and Temasek Holdings lost in 2008). Maybe there was no
one taking money through the back door in the dark of the night, there was no
need because the money was taken from the front door in broad daylight through
all this overcharging.
The second major
problem arising from the facts is lack of transparency, lack of disclosure.
First, the facts do not seem to have been fully disclosed to all Singaporeans. And second, there seems
to have been no proper discussion of the conflicts at all.
Active, persistent
non-disclosure. Obviously, deliberate. And the consequence of all of this? Of
the billions that
were paid tothe GIC and Temasek
Holdings, who knows how much was justifiable?
The PAP have
been quick to say that despite all the problems, no CPF monies have been lost. Can the PAP honestly say that
no CPF monies
have been lost? When the PAP
ministers and members of parliament act in breach of their
fiduciary duties; and pay the GIC
and Temasek Holdings billions of dollars? Overpayment to a
related party is not a loss?....
You can read the full
article in Roy’s blog. I assure you it is pretty long as normal of Roy’s
writing and with charts as well to show.