Lim Swee Aun

Tan Sri Dr. Lim Swee Aun (Chinese: 林瑞安; pinyin: Lín Ruì Ān; 1 September 1915 – 13 August 1977) was a Malaysian Chinese politician from the Malaysian Chinese Association, and a Cabinet member.

Yang Berbahagia Tan Sri Dr.

Lim Swee Aun
林瑞安
Lim Swee Aun (1966)
Vice-President of the Malaysian Chinese Association
In office
1959–1962
MajorityChinese
Malaysian Minister of Commerce & Industry
In office
10 October 1962  3 June 1969
Preceded byTan Sri Mohamed Khir Bin Johari
Malaysian Minister of Health
In office
1 August 1962  10 October 1962
Personal details
Born(1915-09-01)1 September 1915
Taiping, Perak
Died13 August 1977(1977-08-13) (aged 61)
London
Political partyMalayan Chinese Association (MCA)
Spouse(s)Puan Sri Quek Eng Lan (郭英兰)
RelationsSon of Lim Tee Hooi
Children2 daughters and 2 sons
ResidenceTaiping, Perak
Alma materKing Edward VII School (Taiping)
OccupationMedical Practitioner Malaysian Government Minister

Early life

The eldest son of Lim Tee Hooi and Foong Cheong Ngan, Swee Aun was born on 1 September 1915 in Taiping, Perak and educated at the King Edward VII School (Taiping). He was a keen Rugby player and played for the school in the 1930s.[1] Swee Aun with Yahayaudin, Sulaiman and Harun were the first to be awarded colours.

College years

In June 1932, Swee Aun joined the King Edward VII College of Medicine, in Singapore (subsequently merged with Raffles College to form the University of Malaya) at the age of 16 years. He was a brilliant scholar and gained Distinction in Anatomy in the 2nd Professional Examination, an honour he shared with his classmate Quek Eng Lan (whom he subsequently married on 22 August 1938). He was awarded a scholarship for this achievement. In the Final examination in 1938, Swee Aun obtained Distinction in Medicine and Materia Medica and was awarded the much coveted Lim Boon Keng Medal.

While in College, he was also a great sportsman. He was Captain of the Singapore All Blues Rugby Team in 1935 which won the Trophy for Pan-Malayan Interstate Rugby Matches.

Early working days

Lim Swee Aun completed his housemanship in Singapore General Hospital. In 1939 he was posted to the Sungai Buloh Leprosarium before moving to Ipoh General Hospital and to Taiping, Perak, his hometown in 1940.

The War Years

In December 1941, war came and Taiping experienced the 1st bomb on 8 December. The main attack from the Japanese Army came from the north. So Lim Swee Aun decided to evacuate his whole family to Rev. Quek Kheng Hoon's (his father-in-law) rambutan estate in Bukit Timah, Singapore.

Lim Swee Aun stayed on in Taiping Hospital and evacuated with the Medical Convoy by stages going southwards as the enemy came closer from the north. He finally arrived in Singapore and joined the Medical Team there. But soon the whole family had to abandon the Bukit Timah rambutan estate as the enemy approached. They moved to the Prinsep Street Presbyterian Church where they took refuge under the church pews, together with many others. Bombing and cannon fire continued all day and night from across the causeway. Singapore surrendered and the Japanese soldiers were everywhere. All non-Singaporeans were returned to Malaya. Lim Swee Aun and his family travelled in a cattle truck, taking 4 days and 3 nights to reach Taiping.

Japanese Occupation 1942-1945

Dr. Lim Swee Aun worked for Dr. Tan Chen Leng in Taiping. During the occupation period, Lim Swee Aun secretly supplied medicine to the Prisoners of War. Dr. Lim Swee Aun, Dr. Tan Cheng Leng and the Parsi Jal Manecksha also secretly helped the Indian Prisoners of War of the Motor Transport Unit No. 1 under the Command of Subedar Nurud Din. They contributed a sum of $15,000/- to Dr. Tarlok Singh to help them buy medicines and food for the sick Indian P.O.W.s. They had also been using a radio to listen to the Allied news, dismantling the radio and hiding it away after listening each time. They were part of the "inner circle of war news." He kept this secret, even from his wife. After the war, Lim Swee Aun was awarded a commendation Certificate for his deeds by the British Government through Malcolm McDonald.

British Military Administration (BMA)

After the Japanese surrender on 2 September 1945, Lim Swee Aun resigned from Dr. Tan Chen Leng's employment and started his own practice at 75 Kota Road, Taiping, Perak. He had to raise money to buy the premises by pawning whatever jewellery he could from his mother and wife. He worked hard, day and night attending to his sick patients and doing house calls even though the country was in a state of Malayan Emergency from the communist activities. He often treated his patients for free when they could not afford it.

Political career

He was a founder and Life member of the Malaysian Chinese Association in Taiping. In 1959 Lim Swee Aun became a member of Parliament when he won the seat of Larut Selatan. He was appointed Minister of Health in 1962 and later in the year he became Minister of Commerce and Industry.

Industrialisation

Lim Swee Aun's responsibility as minister was to industralise the country. He encouraged Foreign investments in Joint Ventures but stood firm on the 51% Malaysian participation. Industrial estates were established throughout the country from Perlis in the north to Johore in the south.

The seeds of what was to become a major industry in Malaysia were sown by the then Malaysian Minister of Commerce and Industry, Dr. Lim Swee Aun, in 1963. On his way to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade Conference (GATT) Geneva that year, Dr. Lim confirmed that his ministry had received many inquiries from foreign and local firms regarding the possibility of setting up vehicle manufacturing factories in the Federation. The bigger plan, he subsequently announced, was to establish a motor vehicle industry in Malaysia by stages - from basic assembly with local content, to chassis build and finally to a fully locally made car. It would be exactly 20 years later that Perusahaan Otomobile Nasional Berhad (Proton (carmaker)) was incorporated (7 May 1983), and Malaysia's first locally built car, the Proton Saga, was launched on 9 July 1985.[2]

Formation of Malaysia Agreement 1963

Lim Swee Aun was involved in the final rounds of negotiations on the Malaysia talks. A Malayan delegation departed for London on 25 June 1963 and was led by Tun Abdul Razak, Tan Siew Sin and Dr Lim Swee Aun (Minister for Commerce).[3] The function of Mr. Tan and Dr. Lim was in Sir Geofroy Tory's view, to restrain Tun Razak from making undue concessions. Agreement was reached on the main points of issue on 5 July and only then did Tunku himself leave for London.[4] Dr. Lim was one of the signatories of the Agreement Relating to Malaysia (1963). [5]

The Debate on Malaysian Solidarity 1965

Syed Jaafar Albar participated in verbal duels with the Singaporean Prime Minister, Lee Kuan Yew, over the issue of ketuanan Melayu (Malay sovereignty over Malaysia), accusing Lee and some other Chinese Malaysians—referring to them as kaum pendatang or immigrants—of being lodgers (orang tumpangan), abusing the hospitality of the Malays who were the "masters of the house".
This provoked a response from Cabinet member Swee Aun, who insisted "we are co-owners, not lodgers, not guests."[6][7]
Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew in his speech at the Malaysia Solidarity Convention on 6 June 1965 congratulated Lim Swee Aun for his courage in saying it.[8]

Timeline

  • 1915 Sep Born, Taiping, Perak, Malaya
  • 1938 Graduated Licentiate of Medicine & Surgery
  • 1948-1950 Nominated Taiping Town Council
  • 1949 Jan Justice of Peace, Perak
  • 1953-1955 Member Perak State legislative Council
  • 1959 Aug Elected Member of Parliament Larut Selatan
  • 1962 Aug Appointed Minister of Health
  • 1962 Oct Appointed Minister of Commerce & Industry
  • 1963 Mar Attended ECAFE Conference in Manila
  • 1963 Jun Took active part in Malaysia negotiations in London
  • 1963 Nov Charman, Commonwealth Parliamentary Association Conference, Kuala Lumpur
  • 1964 Nov Leader Malaysian delegation to Commonwealth Parliamentary Conference Trinidad, Jamaica
  • 1965 Mar Leader Malaysian delegation to ECAFE, New Zealand

Honour

Honour of Malaysia

gollark: As far as I know OLEDs are less efficient than LCD stuff on non-blackish things, too.
gollark: Guess what high-res high-refresh-rate displays do? Make battery life worse, because they draw more power.
gollark: Swappable batteries, screens and mainboards.
gollark: Well, to some extent.
gollark: I want my keyboards and actually decent battery life, not a mildly thinner one!

References

  1. C. K. Loh (2006) "The History of Rugby in King Edward VII School, Taiping". The Taiping Edwardians. 12 October 2006.
    http://www.edwardians.com.my/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=21&Itemid=20. Retrieved 2010-10-04.
  2. Eli Solomon (2005) "Six years to assembling cars in Peninsular 1963-1968". Asian Automotive Archives - A Malaysian Perspective.
    "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 24 May 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Retrieved 2010-10-04.
  3. A. J. Stockwell (2004) Malaysia, p. 510. The Stationery office. ISBN 0-11-290581-1.
  4. A. J. Stockwell (2004) Malaysia, p. 632. The Stationery office. ISBN 0-11-290581-1.
  5. File:Agreement Relating to Malaysia between UK, N. Borneo, Sarawak and Singapore.djvu.
  6. Lee, Kuan Yew (1998). The Singapore Story, p. 620. Marshall Cavendish Editions. ISBN 981-204-983-5.
  7. Keith, Patrick (2005). Ousted!, p. 115. Media Masters. ISBN 981-05-3865-0.
  8. Lee, Kuan Yew (1965). Speech at The Malaysian Soladirity Convention at the National Theatre on 6 June 1965. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 24 May 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Retrieved 4 October 2010
  9. "Semakan Penerima Darjah Kebesaran, Bintang dan Pingat".
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