- Sellapan Ramanathan
Infobox President
name = Sellapan Ramanathan
செல்லப்பன் ராமநாதன்
order =President of Singapore
primeminister =Goh Chok Tong Lee Hsien Loong
vicepresident =
term_start = 1 September 1999
term_end =
predecessor =Ong Teng Cheong
successor =
birth_date = birth date and age|1924|07|03|df=y
birth_place =Singapore
death_date =
death_place =
spouse = Umila Umi Nandey
profession = Civil servant
religion = HinduSellapan Ramanathan (Tamil: செல்லப்பன் ராமநாதன்; born 3 July 1924) is the sixth and current President of the Republic of Singapore. Often referred to as S. R. Nathan, he was first sworn in on 1 September 1999.
Biography
Early life
Nathan is a Singaporean of
India n Tamil descent; his childhood was spent with his three older sisters and parents, V. Sellapan and Apiram, inMuar ,Johor , in a house overlooking the sea. His father had been posted to the Malayan town as a lawyer's clerk for a firm that serviced rubber plantations, but the rubber slump of the 1930s sent the family's fortunes crashing. Nathan's father accrued debts, and eventually lost his job.By then the young Nathan had returned to his birthplace,
Singapore , to live, and received his early education in several Anglo-Chinese Schools, such as the Rangoon Road Afternoon School, and laterVictoria School . He started working before completing his studies. During theJapanese Occupation of Singapore , Nathan worked for theJapan ese civilian police as atranslator . [cite news | url = http://sam11.moe.gov.sg/racialharmony/SecondarySchool/stories_ranaway.html | format = reprint atMinistry of Education, Singapore | publisher =The Straits Times | title = He ran away from home when he was 16 | author = Zuraidah Ibrahim and Lydia Lim | date = 22 Aug 1999] After the war, whilst working, he completed his secondary education through self-study, and entered theUniversity of Malaya (then in Singapore) where he graduated in 1954 with a Diploma in Social Studies (Distinction).Civil service career
Nathan began his career in the
Singapore Civil Service as a medical social worker in 1955. He was appointed Seamen's Welfare Officer the following year. In 1962, he was seconded to the Labour Research Unit of the Labour Movement, first as Assistant Director and later Director of the Labour Research Unit until January 1966. He continued as a Member of its Board of Trustees until April 1988.In February 1966 he was transferred to the Foreign Ministry. He served as Assistant Secretary and rose to be Deputy Secretary before being appointed Acting Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Home Affairs in January 1971. In August of the same year, Nathan moved to the Ministry of Defence where he was Director of the
Security and Intelligence Division (SID), with the rank of Permanent Secretary. He was involved in theLaju incident on 31 January 1974, when members of the terroristJapanese Red Army (JRA) bombed petroleum tanks onPulau Bukom off the coast of Singapore. Nathan, was among a group of government officers who volunteered to be held hostage by the JRA to secure the release of civilian hostages.In February 1979, he returned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and became its First Permanent Secretary until February 1982 when he left to become the Executive Chairman of the Straits Times Press (1975) Ltd, the Singapore newspaper company. At various times from 1982 to 1988, Nathan also held directorship of several other companies including the Singapore Mint Pte Ltd, The Straits Times Press (London) Ltd, Singapore Press Holdings Ltd and Marshall Cavendish Ltd. He held a directorship in the Singapore International Media Pte Ltd between September 1996 and August 1999. He was Chairman of Mitsubishi Singapore Heavy Industries — a ship-repairing and engineering joint-venture with the Mitsubishi Group of Japan, from 1973 to 1986.
From 1983 to April 1988, Nathan was Chairman of the Hindu Endowments Board. He was a founding member of SINDA – the
Singapore Indian Development Association – and its Term Trustee until August 1999.In April 1988, Nathan was appointed Singapore's High Commissioner to
Malaysia and in July 1990, became Ambassador to the United States of America where he served until June 1996.On his return, Nathan was made Ambassador-at-Large and was concurrently Director of the
Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies at theNanyang Technological University . He resigned as Ambassador-at-Large and Director of the Institute on 17 August 1999, and was appointed, as the only eligible candidate and thus unopposed, President of the Republic of Singapore on 18 August 1999.Nathan was conferred with the Public Service Star in 1964, the Public Administration Medal (Silver) in 1967, and the Meritorious Service Medal in 1974.
Becoming President
Although a
Straits Times survey showed that nearly 80 percent of Singaporeans hoped for a contest, Nathan nonetheless took up office unopposed as President on 18 August 1999. His nomination was strongly supported byMinister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew (then holding the post ofSenior Minister ). He succeeded the 5thPresident of Singapore Ong Teng Cheong and was sworn in on 1 September 1999.On 12 July 2005 Nathan announced that he was seeking re-election as President. He submitted an eligibility application to the
Presidential Elections Committee ; by 6 August 2005 three more people had also submitted forms, but on 13 August the Committee announced that the other three applicants had been rejected as ineligible. Nathan returned unopposed on nomination day, 17 August. He was sworn-in for a second term of office on 1 September 2005.Personal life
Nathan, a Hindu, is married to Urmila (Umi) Nandey and has a daughter, a son, and three grandchildren.
Notes and references
*'President's tip on Ageing: Don't Think About It.' "Straits Times". 19 October 2007.
External links
* [http://www.istana.gov.sg/ Office of the President of the Republic of Singapore]
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