Lee Kuan Yew’s 38 Oxley Road home officially declared Singapore ‘national monument’


Singapore’s government on Friday gazetted as a national monument the former home of founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew, a site long at the centre of a bitter family dispute among his children.
Lee’s oldest son, and former prime minister, Lee Hsien Loong, favoured preserving the property, which property agents in 2024 said had a prospective value of around S$30 million (US$23 million) in land-scarce Singapore.

But his two siblings – corporate executive Lee Hsien Yang and the late neurologist Lee Wei Ling – have pointed to language in their father’s will calling for its demolition.

Lee Hsien Yang, granted UK political asylum over alleged persecution in Singapore, is interviewed in London in October 2024. Photo: AP
Lee Hsien Yang, granted UK political asylum over alleged persecution in Singapore, is interviewed in London in October 2024. Photo: AP

The younger siblings accused their brother in 2017 of trying to exploit their father’s legacy for political gain, though the issue simmered down as Lee Wei Ling was still living on the property. She died last year.

On Friday, Acting Minister for Culture, Community and Youth David Neo issued a preservation order to gazette the site as a national monument, the ministry said in a statement.



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