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Stop Calling Him PRATAMAN!

Froggy

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Please all of you here, stop calling him PRATAMAN. He is a PLANTER MAN!


Nathan a tree planter who helped grow S'pore into a modern nation: PM Lee
Published on Jul 3, 2014 8:43 PM
By Nur Asyiqin Mohamad Salleh



Choo Eng Chuan (left) and former president SR Nathan at the EY's Entrepreneur of the Year 2013 Awards held at the Ritz Carlton Hotel on 14 November 2013. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong celebrated former president SR Nathan's 90th birthday on Thursday night, recounting the many contributions Mr Nathan had made in his "long and full life". -- PHOTO: EY2013


SINGAPORE - Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong celebrated former president SR Nathan's 90th birthday on Thursday night, recounting the many contributions Mr Nathan had made in his "long and full life".

From a tumultuous childhood fraught with difficulties, PM Lee said, Mr Nathan became the country's sixth and longest-serving president.

He wore many hats, from clerk to unionist, ambassador to President, but his most important role, said Mr Lee, was that of tree planter.

"Wherever he went, he nurtured young seedlings into mature trees," said Mr Lee in a speech at the Shangri-La Hotel, where he was among the more than 700 guests at the birthday celebration.

Mr Nathan, he explained, had grown young organisations like the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC) and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs into mature institutions.

He had also mentored promising officers, helping them reach their potential.

Singapore under his care grew into a modern, prosperous, stable nation, said Mr Lee.

Mr Nathan also literally planted trees, added PM Lee.

While he was Ambassador to the US, Mr Nathan planted a Japanese Maple in the embassy garden in Washington, DC.

The tree, said Mr Lee, who was in Washington, DC last week, was still lush and thriving.

"As are the many other trees that Mr Nathan planted in the organisations he led and the people he touched," he said.

Mr Nathan ran away from home in his younger years and lived through World War II and the Japanese Occupation, experiences that "steeled his character and shaped him for life", said Mr Lee.

He came from humble beginnings, juggling his job as a clerk in the Johor civil service with evening classes in typewriting and book-keeping. He later graduated from the University of Malaya with a social studies diploma, then entered the Singapore public service.

There he started off as a medical social worker, before heading to the unions to help seafarers - reflecting his "natural desire to help others".

Later he was seconded to the Labour Research Unit in the union movement, working alongside its then secretary-general, the late Devan Nair, to establish NTUC and keep Communists from taking over the movement.

"Without them on the ground countering the left-wing activists, showing how they could improve workers' lives, and winning over the workers, Singapore's history would have taken a very different turn," said Mr Lee.

After Singapore gained independence, Mr Nathan was posted to the newly-formed Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where "his combination of charm and toughness proved invaluable" in building up diplomatic networks.

And while in the Security and Intelligence Division, his "savviness, judgement and moral courage" were key. Mr Nathan, he recalled, had risked his life to accompany the hijackers to Kuwait in exchange for the safe released of the Singaporean hostages.

Later he embarked on his diplomatic career, first as High Commissioner to Malaysia, then Ambassador to the US, Singapore's "two most important foreign missions".

He retired from the civil service, but was in 1999, elected President.

"Singapore was lucky to have him as President for two terms. He represented the nation with grace, with dignity and with distinction," said Mr Lee.

Mr Nathan, he added, brought informality and warmth into the office, endearing himself to Singaporeans. But even as he showed heart, Mr Nathan was "more than capable" of difficult choices.

As the world was battered by a financial crisis in 2008 and 2009, he approved the Government's request to draw on the country's reserves for the $20 billion Resilience Package. This, said Mr Lee, averted what might have been the country's worst economic recession ever "so well that many Singaporeans did not even realise that they had gone through a grave crisis, and emerged unscathed".

And although Mr Nathan has carried the nation forward, he did not do it alone, noted Mr Lee. His wife has always been at his side, "a support and comfort for more than half a century".

She too made sacrifices whenever Mr Nathan stepped forward to serve the nation. "Singapore owes Mrs Nathan a debt of gratitude too," said Mr Lee to a loud round of applause.
 
LOL. Straits Time had put a paywall on even such a masturbatory article. :rolleyes:
 
Another article to insult sinkies' intelligence.
 
One People, One Nation, One Sinkapore.

One Egg Prata, One Kosong, One Kopi-O.
 
You can say what you like about this man but he certainly has good genes.
 
Every Singaporean is special, exceptionally special..........so no point singling out anyone of us.

We're all exceptionally special, everyone of us is an indyian chief.
 
Good genes--you know his offspring have done good?

I didn't say he passed on good genes. I said he has them. 90 years old, full head of hair, still lucid, still mobile without assistance. He doesn't even look 90. He could pass off for 75.
 
I didn't say he passed on good genes. I said he has them. 90 years old, full head of hair, still lucid, still mobile without assistance. He doesn't even look 90. He could pass off for 75.

if it is full of BLACK hair ( not just the skin), then i am impressed.
 
I had no idea NTUC was nurtured by prataman.

Soon they will say that the moon was not shinier till he came along...tsk!, tsk!.....mee siam mai hum did not mention that all the trees he planted many became 'dead wood' like himself....he was not a good 'botanist'...but another, kekleng tree planter!! employed by then, PWD..to plant trees...like those on the road side..;)
 
Please all of you here, stop calling him PRATAMAN. He is a PLANTER MAN!

With all due respect, I shall call him Kayu Man!:D

He is a man with no qualms about getting an atrocious high Presidential salary when his job description does not warrant such high
remuneration.

If he has a conscience, he should tell PM not to inflate the salary to make him look like a greedy president.

Anyway he has to pay for it ..For years the netizens are hurling insults and abuses on his high pay to show their indignation.

Now, this indignation has passed to PM LHL where he commands the world highest PM salary and not delivering.

Not he is so thick skinned that he chose to ignore the ground sentiments.

HE REALLY OUT TO GO..
 
not bad for a tree planter who is receiving millions dollar of salary.
PM Lee did not mention his contribution as a president of singapore?
 
painter man

<iframe width="420" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/2BhIwytZWbg" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
And while in the Security and Intelligence Division, his "savviness, judgement and moral courage" were key. Mr Nathan, he recalled, had risked his life to accompany the hijackers to Kuwait in exchange for the safe released of the Singaporean hostages.

How on earth did he 'risked' his life? The state propaganda is trying to make it sound as if he volunteered to offer himself as hostage held at gunpoint in exchange for the safety of other hostages. Fact was those terrorists were already disarmed before boarding their flight home. Prataman merely served as escort and at no point was his life at risk.


http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laju_incident
On the night of 7 February, the group was transferred from Laju to the Marine Police Headquarters and then to Paya Lebar Airport where the terrorists surrendered their weapons. After they freed the remaining three hostages, the four terrorists left Singapore on 8 February at 1:25 am, accompanied by Nathan’s team on a specially arranged Japan Airlines flight to Kuwait. After reaching Kuwait, the 13-men party flew back and reached Singapore on the following day.[2]
 
I had no idea NTUC was nurtured by prataman.

Masturbation is self stimulation. They are so hard up they have to bend down and perform fellatio on limp appendages. I am amazed people can hold their heads up in that place.
 
Please all of you here, stop calling him PRATAMAN. He is a PLANTER MAN!


Nathan a tree planter who helped grow S'pore into a modern nation: PM Lee
Published on Jul 3, 2014 8:43 PM
By Nur Asyiqin Mohamad Salleh



Choo Eng Chuan (left) and former president SR Nathan at the EY's Entrepreneur of the Year 2013 Awards held at the Ritz Carlton Hotel on 14 November 2013. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong celebrated former president SR Nathan's 90th birthday on Thursday night, recounting the many contributions Mr Nathan had made in his "long and full life". -- PHOTO: EY2013


SINGAPORE - Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong celebrated former president SR Nathan's 90th birthday on Thursday night, recounting the many contributions Mr Nathan had made in his "long and full life".

From a tumultuous childhood fraught with difficulties, PM Lee said, Mr Nathan became the country's sixth and longest-serving president.

He wore many hats, from clerk to unionist, ambassador to President, but his most important role, said Mr Lee, was that of tree planter.

"Wherever he went, he nurtured young seedlings into mature trees," said Mr Lee in a speech at the Shangri-La Hotel, where he was among the more than 700 guests at the birthday celebration.

Mr Nathan, he explained, had grown young organisations like the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC) and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs into mature institutions.

He had also mentored promising officers, helping them reach their potential.

Singapore under his care grew into a modern, prosperous, stable nation, said Mr Lee.

Mr Nathan also literally planted trees, added PM Lee.

While he was Ambassador to the US, Mr Nathan planted a Japanese Maple in the embassy garden in Washington, DC.

The tree, said Mr Lee, who was in Washington, DC last week, was still lush and thriving.

"As are the many other trees that Mr Nathan planted in the organisations he led and the people he touched," he said.

Mr Nathan ran away from home in his younger years and lived through World War II and the Japanese Occupation, experiences that "steeled his character and shaped him for life", said Mr Lee.

He came from humble beginnings, juggling his job as a clerk in the Johor civil service with evening classes in typewriting and book-keeping. He later graduated from the University of Malaya with a social studies diploma, then entered the Singapore public service.

There he started off as a medical social worker, before heading to the unions to help seafarers - reflecting his "natural desire to help others".

Later he was seconded to the Labour Research Unit in the union movement, working alongside its then secretary-general, the late Devan Nair, to establish NTUC and keep Communists from taking over the movement.

"Without them on the ground countering the left-wing activists, showing how they could improve workers' lives, and winning over the workers, Singapore's history would have taken a very different turn," said Mr Lee.

After Singapore gained independence, Mr Nathan was posted to the newly-formed Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where "his combination of charm and toughness proved invaluable" in building up diplomatic networks.

And while in the Security and Intelligence Division, his "savviness, judgement and moral courage" were key. Mr Nathan, he recalled, had risked his life to accompany the hijackers to Kuwait in exchange for the safe released of the Singaporean hostages.

Later he embarked on his diplomatic career, first as High Commissioner to Malaysia, then Ambassador to the US, Singapore's "two most important foreign missions".

He retired from the civil service, but was in 1999, elected President.

"Singapore was lucky to have him as President for two terms. He represented the nation with grace, with dignity and with distinction," said Mr Lee.

Mr Nathan, he added, brought informality and warmth into the office, endearing himself to Singaporeans. But even as he showed heart, Mr Nathan was "more than capable" of difficult choices.

As the world was battered by a financial crisis in 2008 and 2009, he approved the Government's request to draw on the country's reserves for the $20 billion Resilience Package. This, said Mr Lee, averted what might have been the country's worst economic recession ever "so well that many Singaporeans did not even realise that they had gone through a grave crisis, and emerged unscathed".

And although Mr Nathan has carried the nation forward, he did not do it alone, noted Mr Lee. His wife has always been at his side, "a support and comfort for more than half a century".

She too made sacrifices whenever Mr Nathan stepped forward to serve the nation. "Singapore owes Mrs Nathan a debt of gratitude too," said Mr Lee to a loud round of applause.

Well he is having the last laugh. This is testimony that if you make the right friends and serve them well you can do very well for yourself. Each morning Prataman wakes up and says FU to all of us .
 
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