S. Dhanabalan Explained

S. Dhanabalan
Office:Minister for Trade and Industry
Term Start:7 December 1992
Term End:1 January 1994
Prime Minister:Goh Chok Tong
Predecessor:Lee Hsien Loong
Successor:Yeo Cheow Tong
Office2:Minister for National Development
Term Start2:1 January 1987
Term End2:31 August 1992
Primeminister2:Lee Kuan Yew
Goh Chok Tong
Predecessor2:Teh Cheang Wan
Successor2:Richard Hu
Office3:Leader of the House
Primeminister3:Lee Kuan Yew
Term Start3:2 January 1985
Term End3:24 February 1987
Predecessor3:Edmund W. Barker
Successor3:Wong Kan Seng
Office4:Minister for Foreign Affairs
Term Start4:1 June 1980
Term End4:12 September 1988
Primeminister4:Lee Kuan Yew
Predecessor4:S. Rajaratnam
Successor4:Wong Kan Seng
Constituency Mp5:Toa Payoh GRC
(Kuo Chuan)
Parliament5:Singapore
Term Start5:21 August 1991
Term End5:16 December 1996
Predecessor5:Wong Kan Seng
Successor5:Constituency abolished
Constituency Mp6:Kallang SMC
Parliament6:Singapore
Term Start6:23 December 1976
Term End6:14 August 1991
Predecessor6:Abdul Aziz bin Karim
Successor6:Constituency abolished
Birth Name:Dhanabalan Suppiah
Birth Date:1937 8, df=yes
Birth Place:Singapore, Straits Settlements, British Malaya
Party:People's Action Party
Spouse:Christine Tan[1]
Children:2[2]
Alma Mater:University of Malaya (BA)

Dhanabalan Suppiah (Tamil: சு. தனபாலன்; born 8 August 1937),[3] also known as S. Dhanabalan, is a Singaporean former politician who served as Minister for Foreign Affairs between 1980 and 1988. A member of the governing People's Action Party (PAP), he was the Member of Parliament (MP) representing Kallang SMC between 1976 and 1991, and the Kuo Chuan ward of Toa Payoh GRC between 1991 and 1996.

Dhanabalan was a prominent political leader in Singapore during the 1980s, where he served as Minister for Foreign Affairs between 1980 and 1988, Minister for National Development between 1987 and 1992, and Minister for Trade and Industry between 1992 and 1993 under Prime Ministers Lee Kuan Yew and Goh Chok Tong.

He had also served as Leader of the House between 1985 and 1987.

Early life

Dhanabalan was born in 1937 to Suppiah Arumugam, a clerk at a naval base and Gunaretnam Suppiah. He was the third child and the eldest son in a family of three girls and three boys.

Born in a Singaporean Indian family of Tamil descent, he was raised as a Hindu. Later in his life, he became a devout Christian (Brethren).

Education

He attended Victoria School before graduating from the University of Malaya with a Bachelor of Arts with second class honours degree in economics.

Early career

Dhanabalan joined the Ministry of Finance as an administrative officer between 1960 and 1968. During his tenure, he helped to established the Economic Development Board and DBS Bank.

He subsequently left the Civil Service and joined DBS as a vice-president between 1968 and 1970. He was later promoted to the position executive vice-president and continue to serve between 1970 and 1978.[4]

Political career

In the 1976 Singapore general election, Dhanabalan was elected as Member of Parliament for Kallang SMC, as a People's Action Party (PAP) candidate.

During the 1980 Singaporean general election's rallies, Dhanabalan disparaged opposition politician Chiam See Tong on his professional competence.[5] He was subsequently sued by Chiam for defamation and he issued a public apology over it.[5]

Dhanabalan was subsequently promoted to a Cabinet Minister and served in various portfolios, including Foreign Affairs, Culture, Community Development, National Development and Trade and Industry.

When Lee Kuan Yew was preparing for his successor, he identified a handful of ministers he considered suitable for the job, including Tony Tan, Ong Teng Cheong, Goh Chok Tong and Dhanabalan.

In his public account of why he chose them and what he felt were their strengths and weaknesses, Lee said his preferred successor was Tony Tan, who went on to become the 7th President of the Republic of Singapore. He felt that while the other three were all of prime ministerial calibre, each had a particular weakness: Goh was too stiff, lacking eloquence in public speaking, and Ong was too closely aligned with the Chinese-speaking masses, lacking appeal to other communities. In the case of Dhanabalan, Lee felt the 76% ethnic Chinese electorate was not yet ready for a prime minister of Indian ethnicity. Lee left the ultimate decision to the second generation ministers themselves, who went on to choose Goh.

Dhanabalan retired from Parliament in 1996.[6]

Timeline

Career after politics

Other contributions

Personal life

Dhanabalan is a devout Christian (Brethren) and attends a small church in Bukit Panjang – Bukit Panjang Gospel Chapel.[10] He is married to Christine Tan Khoon Hiap, a Chinese Singaporean of Hokkien ancestry and they have one son, Ramesh Dhanabalan, and one daughter, Shandini Dhanabalan.[7]

In an interview with The Straits Times in 1984 when he was the Culture Minister, he admits that he watched "very few TV programmes" despite having a TV in his bedroom and the only programme he watched regularly was the news. However, he also prefer to watch "relaxing comedy shows and serious documentaries".[11]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Up, up and up. 27 March 1999. The New Paper. 4.
  2. News: From village boy to bank chairman. The New Paper. 20. S. Doraisamy. 6 July 1999.
  3. Book: Corfield, Justin. Historical Dictionary of Singapore. 2 December 2010. Scarecrow Press. Google Books. 9780810873872.
  4. News: Dhanabalan's illustrious career . 23 July 2013 . Teo XuanWei . TODAY . Singapore . 2.
  5. Web site: Dhana apologises to SDP's Chiam. 2021-10-20. eresources.nlb.gov.sg. en-SG.
  6. Web site: S. Dhanabalan. Joanna HS. Tan. Singapore Infopedia. Singapore Government Agency. 5 April 2021.
  7. Web site: S. Dhanabalan - Infopedia. National Library Board. Singapore. eresources.nlb.gov.sg.
  8. Web site: Ho Ching to join Temasek Trust board, take over as chairman in April 2022 . 2023-11-04 . CNA . en.
  9. Web site: YMCA Annual Report 2018 . YMCA of Singapore.
  10. Web site: Graduates' Christian Fellowship via WaybackMachine . 24 July 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20041209083841/http://www.gcf.org.sg/resource2.htm#The%20Church%20in%20Singapore%E2%80%93%20Time%20to%20Distance%20from%20the%20West? . 9 December 2004 .
  11. News: Keeping an eye on those subtle messages . 13 December 2023 . The Straits Times . 15 February 1984.