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Tan Choo Leng

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Tan Choo Leng
陈子玲
Spouse of the Prime Minister of Singapore
In role
28 November 1990 – 12 August 2004
Prime MinisterGoh Chok Tong
Preceded byKwa Geok Choo
Succeeded byHo Ching
Personal details
Born
PartyPeople's Action Party
SpouseGoh Chok Tong (m. 1965)
EducationUniversity of Singapore (LLB)
ProfessionLawyer

Tan Choo Leng (simplified Chinese: 陈子玲; traditional Chinese: 陳子玲; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Tân Chú-lêng; pinyin: Chén Zǐlíng) is a Singaporean lawyer.

Choo is the spouse of the second Prime Minister, Goh Chok Tong.

Choo took the role of the spouse of the Prime Minister of Singapore between 1990 and 2004.

Early life and career

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Tan graduated from the University of Singapore (now the National University of Singapore) with Bachelor of Laws degree. She is currently an advocate and solicitor for WongPartnership LLP.

Controversy

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Tan has given her support to many charities, and was best known for being a patron of the National Kidney Foundation (NKF).

During the 2005 NKF scandal, she commented that the annual salary of S$600,000 drawn by NKF's chief executive officer T. T. Durai was considered "peanuts" as compared to the hundreds of millions of dollars managed by the NKF.[1][2] Her remark was subsequently met with negative reactions from many Singaporeans.

Blogs and online message boards were quickly flooded with angry comments, and a second online petition requesting Tan to apologise was started.[citation needed] Jokes on the issue were later circulated, in particular, local satirical website TalkingCock.com published a post featuring a parody 1 peanut bill with a value equivalent to S$600,000.[3]

On 16 July 2005, SM Goh said that Tan regretted the statement. He also said to have explained and shown her several e-mails and letters he had received after the remark was made. In what SM Goh claims to be a separate matter, Tan has also resigned as patron of the NKF,[4] despite an earlier announcement to remain on the board.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Patron: It Must", (archived) The New Paper, 14 July 2005
  2. ^ "Public anger over charity chief's salary", John Burton, Financial Times, 14 July 2005
  3. ^ "New Singapore Dollar Note Unveiled" Archived 17 March 2006 at the Wayback Machine, Anonymous, TalkingCock.com. Retrieved 23 December 2005
  4. ^ "Ex-NKF patron Mrs Goh Chok Tong regrets remarks about TT Durai's pay: SM Goh" Archived 31 March 2006 at the Wayback Machine, Wong Siew Ying, Channel NewsAsia, 16 July 2005