13/11/2009
Q: “What does the first-ever visit of the Russian President to the Republic of Singapore mean for your state?”
Mr
Lee: “It is a very significant milestone for our relationship. We
have cultivated our relations with Russia over many years. There have
been many exchanges of visits at different levels, including ministers’
visits, but this is the first time that the President of Russia is
visiting Singapore. So, we are very much looking forward to it.”
Q: “The Russian Federation and the Republic of Singapore seem
to be very different in almost every aspect. One is the largest
country in the world and the other one is one of the smallest ones, one
is cold and snowy and the other one is hot and humid, etc. And yet,
relations between our two countries lately seem to be developing very
fast. Could it be because Russia and the Republic of Singapore are
mutually complementary to each other?”
Mr Lee: “I
think there are opportunities for us to work together. We may be very
different in scale and size and location, even in outlook on the world,
but there is opportunity to work together because we welcome Russia to
come to Asia, to our part of the world, to trade, to invest, to visit,
do business. We think that through Singapore Russian companies, Russian
tourists, Russian business people can gain an entry into the Asian
region because we are an environment which you will be comfortable to
operate in and you can use us as a base to operate throughout Asia.
“On
the other side, there are opportunities in Russia for Singaporean
companies: to invest, to do business with, to trade with. There are
infrastructure projects like airports, there are other projects like
special economic zones. There are also cooperation opportunities
outside of business, for example, research and development, for
example, cultural links, for example, links with your business schools,
like the Skolkovo School, which are our Minister Mentor is on the Board
of Advisers of. So, I think that being different does not mean we
cannot work together. In fact, it means there are more opportunities
where we can complement one another’s different characteristics.”
Q: “Can you give some examples of the latest developments in the mutually beneficent cooperation between our two countries?”
Mr
Lee: “We have a double-tax agreement which has been signed, I think it
has now been ratified. Recently, we had a Russian business forum in
Singapore which had several hundred Russian business people come here
and network with Singaporean business people as well as people from the
region - Vietnam, Taiwan, Malaysia, Indonesia and that was a great
success. As I said earlier, Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew has just
visited Moscow and he was at the Skolkovo School again and also, we
have relationships between Keppel and Sembawang, which are our oil rig
builders, supporting and supplying Russian oil exploration companies.
So, I think there is quite a broad-based relationship.”
Q:
“Can you give us more details, such as general trade, investment and
finance, tourists, transport and specifically, air transport, logistics
and infrastructure and science and technology?”
Mr
Lee: “We have items on all those areas. I think what we would like to
see is that Russia enhances its links, not just with Singapore, but
through Singapore, its links with Asean, and more broadly with the
Asia-Pacific region, but I think Asean is a good focus and Singapore is
a natural centre for that.”
Q: “Singapore is also
acting as a consultant for special economic zones for Russia. What can
your government teach us in this area?
Mr Lee: “Our
circumstances are very different. So, we would be hesitant to say we
can teach another country, but we have some experience building special
economic zones, building industrial infrastructure, industrial estates,
in fact, townships, not just the hardware of the city layout and the
services and utilities and the factory buildings, but also the
software, the governance of the industrial park, how you can attract
investments in, how you have to manage the investments so that they
will have a good experience and they will continue to invest and
continue to create jobs for your people in the country.
So, on
that basis, we have an MOU with Russia and I think under this MOU, we
have had quite a number of Russian officials come to Singapore for
exposure, for attachments to understand how we operate in these key
areas, investment promotion, estate management of the industrial park,
development of the industrial park and we hope that something of what
we do will be relevant in Russia’s very different circumstances.
But
it is up to the Russian officials and the Russian Government to decide
what you think is relevant and how perhaps what we have might be
adapted to your circumstances.”
Q: “What about political cooperation between our countries?”
Mr
Lee: “Political cooperation – we work together in Apec, of course, and
we have bilateral visits, our Minister Mentor has visited, Senior
Minister Goh Chok Tong has also visited Russia. Foreign Minister
George Yeo has also visited Russia, I think, just this year and on the
other side, your Foreign Minister has visited and your President is
coming. So, I think that there are exchanges and we should continue to
intensify and deepen them.”
Q: The head of the Russian Orthodox
Church has recently expressed his gratitude to Singapore authorities
for their help to a Russian Orthodox church in Singapore. Is there any
other religious cooperation between our countries?
Mr Lee:
“Well, I think the Russian Orthodox Church would very much like to
build a church in Singapore and we would like to welcome that because
it would be marvellous if in Singapore, in the middle of the tropics,
we have an Orthodox church with golden onion domes, like you have in St
Basil’s Cathedral and in the Red Square and all over the Russian
countryside. We have told the Russian Government we would like to be
helpful and we will do our best to see what we can do to make this
happen.”
Q: “One of the few instances where Russia and
Singapore are similar is that both countries are are multiethnic and
multicultural. So what about cultural cooperation between us?
Mr
Lee: “We have visits. I think we have got visits from your
orchestras, from your ballets, from your performing groups. It has
been a long time since a Russian circus has visited recently, but we
also would like to have cooperation between our institutes of higher
learning, our educational centres and in research and development and I
think that our institutions are in touch with yours and there are
certain projects which are already under way.”
Q: “Prime
Minister, you mentioned just now a recent visit of Minister Mentor to
Russia when he agreed to become a member or the trustees of the
Business School of Management at Skolkovo. But are there any Russians
currently studying in Singapore universities - and vice versa?”
Mr
Lee: “There are a few dozen students in the universities and a few
even in our schools. We hope that as the Russian population here
grows, the number of students who are here will also increase because
the families will grow. But we also hope that we will have more
exchange visitors, students who are coming to spend a semester or two
in our universities and our students can also spend a term or two in
your universities and we get to know each other and we enrich each
other’s educational experience.”
Q: “First of all maybe there is something you yourself would like to tell to Russian people?”
Mr
Lee: “Well, we would like Russia to pay an active interest in the
Asia-Pacific region and particularly in the Southeast Asian region. I
think your main population mass is in Europe. A lot of your
preoccupation is your relations with European countries, near abroad,
of course, but also with EU and NATO.
But in the Far East, there are many opportunities for trade, for visits for exchanges and the Far East is prospering. We used to have bananas and lemon trees.
We
still try and keep Singapore a clean and green and beautiful garden
city with waters and plants, but at the same time, it’s a vibrant
cosmopolitan city which has people from all over the world and which is
constantly transforming itself because the whole region is doing so and
so are we. And we would like Russians also to come and to visit. Right
now, we have maybe about 50,000 Russian visitors a year, but
considering your population, I think even ten times that number would
not be too many.”
By RIA Novosti's Mikhail Tsyganov in Istana (Singapore Presidential Palace)
No wonder i see alots of Russian gals hanging around my place, must have been given 3 month social visa.
The Taiwan 'hum' never fail to grab the opportunity to score another for the record.
Is there anything worthwhile out of your opinion piece but to redirect the thread to your flippant preference s?
What is your problem, uncle tubby, LHL said he wants Russians to be here, so it is not surprise to see many Russians hanging around. Anything wrong??
Originally posted by angel7030:What is your problem, uncle tubby, LHL said he wants Russians to be here, so it is not surprise to see many Russians hanging around. Anything wrong??
Just ignore. She or he to you is nothing more than a trollish self admitted piece of shit. Nothing to offer except....whitewashing shit! No need to take her/him seriously.
Originally posted by xtreyier:Just ignore. She or he to you is nothing more than a trollish self admitted piece of shit. Nothing to offer except....whitewashing shit! No need to take her/him seriously.
Can a X-rated Fraud - exposed as nothing more then a 'Running Dog' - has any ability to take anything seriously ?
It is not a surprise that with your intimate knowledge about "shit" that you will dedicate your intelligence to "whitewashing" - when even your PAPa has no interest in.
It is not a pity that your remarkable intelligence is used to develop your creativity in the art of plagiarizing PAP's "bull" and to mix it to your infatuation with "shit".
Should anyone be surprised that you will crave for the opportunities to make your grand standing performance with your "bullshit" about your ideas and that which you think is the PAP's ?
Obviously, you have continued to ignore History, and still have no clue about the essentials of Sun Tzu's 'Art of War' - when you cannot even decide the gender that you will want to debate with.
It had been a "him" for quite a few months until you got your ego deflated and to hit back with your wild assumption with "her"; and of late your egoistic credibility has been grounded so badly that you are not sure if you have become the confused piece of "whitewashed shit" - not knowing if your wits got trashed by a "her / him".
Pathetic.
Originally posted by angel7030:What is your problem, uncle tubby, LHL said he wants Russians to be here, so it is not surprise to see many Russians hanging around. Anything wrong??
Are you certain in what you are reading, or just making your own false assumption - simply to titilate your own sense of mischief by being irrerevent with your typical flippant replies ?
Did LHL want Russians to be in Singapore, or simply using Singapore as a Gateway to the wider region of Southeast Asia ?
If the article is to be read on its face value, the simple conclusion was that LKY and LHL would prefer Singaporean Businesses to be in Russia then for Russians to be in Singapore and pose a threat to ourselves ?
Do seriously believe that the "Alexias, Katarinas and Sashias" hanging around your Bar - are the type of Russians that LKY and LHL are interest in attracting to visit Singapore ?
What a sad individual. Cancer of the anus. Cursed despot for a father. Zombie for a mother. First wife killed herself. First son is a mongoloid. Now wondering how far the curses will fall on his other children from all the public money grabbing and gambling of the country's reserves by his Ho Jinxed of a wife.
No wonder he is trying so hard to boost his ego but can he wash away the curses on him. He is already so cursed and yet he sued Dr Chee Soon Juan.... bringing more curses on himself.
Poor thing what a sad individual running around so hard to boost his own ego.
rooskiy dye vachka?dye vooshka?which one?