From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Singaporean politician
Yaacob bin Ibrahim (Jawi: يعقوب بن إبراهيم; born 3 October 1955)[1] is a Singaporean former People's Action Party politician who served as minister-in-charge of Muslim affairs between 2002 and 2018, minister for community development, youth and sports between 2002 and 2004, minister for the environment and water resources between 2004 and 2011, minister for communications and information between 2011 and 2018, and minister-in-charge of cyber security between 2015 and 2018.[2][3][4] He was the Member of Parliament (MP) representing the Kolam Ayer division of Jalan Besar GRC between 1997 and 2020.
Education and early life[edit]Yaacob attended Tanjong Katong Technical Secondary School (now Tanjong Katong Secondary School).[5]
He served as a clerk in national service.[6]
He graduated from the University of Singapore (now National University of Singapore) with a bachelor's degree with honours in civil engineering in 1980. He subsequently went on to obtained a PhD at Stanford University in 1989.
Yaacob started his career as a postdoc at Cornell University. He returned to Singapore in 1990 and joined the National University of Singapore in 1991.
He received his department's teaching excellence award in 1994. He took leave of absence from the university as an associate professor to take up public office.
Yaacob made his political debut in the 1997 general election as part of the five-member PAP team contesting in Jalan Besar GRC and won. He was elected as the Member of Parliament representing the Kolam Ayer ward of Jalan Besar GRC between 1997 and 2011 and later Moulmein–Kallang GRC between 2011 and 2020.
In April 2001, he was appointed as the first mayor of Central Singapore District, a role he served until November 2001.[7]
Yaacob was parliamentary secretary for communications and information technology and later senior parliamentary secretary. He became minister of state for community development and sports in November 2001. In March 2002, Yaacob became the acting minister for community development and sports and minister-in-charge of Muslim affairs and was made a full Cabinet minister in May 2003.
He became minister of environment and water resources in 2004.[7] In 2009, after the Bukit Timah canal burst its banks after a downpour, resulting in parts of Bukit Timah being submerged, Yaacob remarked it was a freak event that "occurs once in 50 years".[8]
During the 2006 general election, Yaacob was part of the five-member PAP team contesting in Jalan Besar GRC and won 69.26% of the vote against the Singapore Democratic Alliance.
During the 2011 general election, Yaacob was part of the four-member PAP team contesting Moulmein–Kallang GRC and won 58.55% of the vote against the Workers' Party.
In May 2011, as part of a Cabinet reshuffle, Yaacob became minister for information, communication and the arts. He continued to serve as the minister-in-charge of Muslim affairs. Yaacob is also the vice-chairman of the party's Central Executive Committee (CEC).[7]
During the 2015 general election, Yaacob was part of the four-member PAP team contesting in Jalan Besar GRC and won 67.75% of the vote against the Workers' Party. In April 2015, Yaacob was appointed as minister-in-charge of cyber security and oversees the Cyber Security Agency (CSA), an agency formed under the Prime Minister's Office (PMO).
In 2017, Yaacob declined competing in the 2017 presidential election and preferred to do policy work.[9]
Yaacob stepped down from the cabinet on 30 April 2018.[10] After the 13th Parliament was dissolved on 23 June 2020, Yaacob retired from politics, ending his political career after 23 years of service.[3][4]
Post-political career[edit]Since retirement from politics, Yaacob has returned to academia. He is currently a professor in practice at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore, and also an advisor to the Office of the president of the Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT) and the founding director of the Community Leadership and Social Innovation Centre (CLASIC) at SIT.[11]
In October 2024, the Palestinian Scholarship Initiative was launched as a ground-up initiative to sponsor the undergraduate studies of Palestinians in Singapore universities, with Yaacob co-chairing the Scholarship Administration Committee.[12]
Yaacob has been active in community service since his school days and has been involved with the Association of Muslim Professionals, Jamiyah, Majlis Ugama Islam Singapura and the Nature Society. Initially a volunteer tutor, he became Chairman of the Council for the Development of Singapore Malay/Muslim Community (Yayasan Mendaki) in March 2002.
He is married with a son and a daughter.[13] Questions arose in regards to his son's citizenship and if he would serve National Service were raised when a leaked US diplomatic cable from WikiLeaks stated the minister's two children as US citizens.[14] In response, he clarified that his children have dual American and Singapore citizenship until the age of 18 because of the status of his wife as an American citizen. He confirms his son will serve national service.[15]
Yaacob has eight siblings.[16] His eldest brother Ismail Ibrahim was the first Malay recipient of the President's Scholarship.[17] His sister Zuraidah Ibrahim was a former Straits Times journalist now with South China Morning Post.[18][19] His younger brother Latiff Ibrahim is a lawyer.[20] His sister Hamidah Ibrahim was a district judge with the state courts.[21]
As himself
Member of multiple Parliaments of Singapore
Members ofthe
13th Parliament of Singapore (2015–2020) Speaker:
Halimah Yacob→
Tan, C J AljuniedWP Ang Mo KioPAP Bishan–Toa PayohPAP Chua Chu KangPAP East CoastPAP Holland–Bukit TimahPAP Jalan BesarPAP JurongPAP Marine ParadePAP Marsiling–Yew TeePAP Nee SoonPAP Pasir Ris–PunggolPAP SembawangPAP TampinesPAP Tanjong PagarPAP West CoastPAP Bukit BatokPAP Bukit PanjangPAP FengshanPAP Hong Kah NorthPAP HougangWP MacPhersonPAP MountbattenPAP PioneerPAP Potong PasirPAP Punggol EastPAP Radin MasPAP Sengkang WestPAP YuhuaPAPThe party affiliation of each member is indicated right after the constituency he or she represents.
PAP:
People's Action Party;
WP:
The Workers' Partydo not belong to any party. There were two terms of NMPs in this parliament, with nine NMPs in each term.
Speaker:
Halimah Yacob AljuniedWP Ang Mo KioPAP Bishan-Toa PayohPAP Chua Chu KangPAP East CoastPAP Holland-Bukit TimahPAP JurongPAP Marine ParadePAP Moulmein-KallangPAP Nee SoonPAP Pasir Ris-PunggolPAP SembawangPAP TampinesPAP Tanjong PagarPAP West CoastPAP Bukit PanjangPAP Hong Kah NorthPAP HougangWP Joo ChiatPAP MountbattenPAP PioneerPAP Potong PasirPAP Punggol EastPAP→WP Radin MasPAP Sengkang WestPAP WhampoaPAP YuhuaPAPThe party affiliation of each member is indicated right after the constituency he or she represents.
PAP:
People's Action Party;
SPP:
Singapore People's Party;
WP:
The Workers' PartyFor NCMPs, Gerald Giam and Yee Jenn Jong are from the WP, while Lina Loh is from the SPP. NMPs do not belong to any party. There were two terms of NMPs in this parliament, with nine NMPs in each term.
Members of the
11th Parliament of Singapore (2006–2011)Speaker:
Abdullah Tarmugi AljuniedPAP Ang Mo KioPAP Bishan–Toa PayohPAP East CoastPAP Holland–Bukit TimahPAP Hong KahPAP Jalan BesarPAP JurongPAP Marine ParadePAP Pasir Ris–PunggolPAP SembawangPAP TampinesPAP Tanjong PagarPAP West CoastPAP Bukit PanjangPAP Chua Chu KangPAP HougangWP Joo ChiatPAP MacPhersonPAP Nee Soon CentralPAP Nee Soon EastPAP Potong PasirSDA Yio Chu KangPAPThe party affiliation of each member is indicated right after the constituency he or she represents.
PAP:
People's Action Party;
SDA:
Singapore Democratic Alliance;
WP:
The Workers' Partydo not belong to any party. There were two terms of NMPs in this parliament, with nine NMPs in each term.
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.3