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February 16, 2009

Oath taking at ICA

After submitting all the necessary documents to the Malaysian High Commission, you will be issued a temporary Certificate of Renunciation within 10 working days. The actual certificate (Form K) will be issued 2 years later.

Your appointment with ICA to take the Oath of Renunciation, Allegiance and Loyalty is stated in the Singapore citizenship application letter of approval. If you cannot make it on the given date, you may change it online provided you have attended the National Education Experience (NEE).

When you attend the NEE, you must be dressed appropriately - no jeans, shorts, t-shirt, slippers etc - instructions are given clearly in the letter of approval. Reason for proper attire - you will enter the Parliament building & dressing appropriate is a sign of respect.

On the day of your appointment at ICA, go to 6th floor with:
  • Singapore citizenship application letter of approval
  • Temporary Form K
  • Singapore pledge card obtained at NEE
  • Singapore blue IC
  • Passport photo x 4
  • Deed poll (if necessary)
After taking the oath in front of a Commissioner of Oath, you will be given a temporary Singapore IC. You may apply for a Singapore passport the very same day. The passport will be ready within 4 working days. Your pink IC will be issued with 3-6 months. You will receive a letter to notify you about the date & venue.

Read the letter from ICA carefully and the process at ICA will, relatively, be a breeze.

February 3, 2009

Renunciation of Malaysian Citizenship

Disclaimer: This post does not have any pictures. Read on only if you want to get a rough idea of what to expect when you decide to renounce your Malaysian citizenship to take up Singapore citizenship. Procedures in the civil service change. Therefore, what is applicable today may not be applicable tomorrow.

Firstly, send in your application for Singapore citizenship. It took ICA 6 months to send me a letter of approval. Bring this letter of approval to the Malaysian High Commission - Consular Section - to obtain:
  • Borang (Form) K
  • Appointment date to submit the Borang K
You don't need to bring any photos, passports, birth certificate yet. I went to obtain the Borang K in mid-December and my appointment date to submit it was in late April 2009. You could try to negotiate for an earlier date but you would have to convince the officer. I have observed people trying. Some were successful, others not.

Documents to be submitted together with Borang K on your appointment day:
  • Malaysian IC - original and 2 photocopies
  • Malaysian BC - original (must be laminated) and 2 photocopies
  • Malaysian PP - including expired copies.
  • Lost of passport police report - If you did not keep all your passports from your very first one to the present one you are using, go to any police post in Singapore to make a police report. You must submit the original police report.
  • Parents' IC - 2 photocopies for each parent. Originals are not needed
    If any of your parent is deceased, you have to provide 2 photocopies of the death certificate (this is what I overheard).
  • 3 passport photos - with blue background.
  • Deed poll - only if your name in the BC is different from Singapore IC etc. If you changed your name but don't have a deed poll, I can't help you. You better consult a lawyer.
If you need help, any kind of help, pay Louis Lee a visit at:

WTLEE Services
Block 77, #01-499
Indus Road
Singapore 161077
HP: 97933633

Speak to him, explain your situation and ask for his help. This is a business, therefore do expect to pay a fee. His motto is "Malaysia Boleh".

I have read other reports about consular officers being rude. This is far from true. They are friendly and helpful, you just need to be nice to them. Put yourself in their shoes, having to deal with so many people with so many demands day in day out. What goes around comes around.

I observed one young female (young enough to be internet savvy and research the procedure on the internet) who wanted a different appointment date than the one given. The officer tried to accommodate and gave the female 3 dates, all of which were rejected by the latter for various reasons like "I have to take leave", "I have to go overseas to work" or "I won't be in Singapore". She was just holding up the queue. Actually, I felt she behaved like a brat. Personally, I feel the people who are rude are the Apro security guards, and the occasional Malaysian applicant.

Wishing you all the best in renouncing your Malaysian citizenship.

January 25, 2009

The (extra) sensory perceptions of Chinese New Year

Auspicious Chinese Words greeting the New Year of the Golden Ox

Every year I greet Chinese New Year with mixed feelings. Over and above the busy hum of Singapore life, there are extra stimuli that assault the senses. Some pleasant and welcome, some otherwise. Let me see - to smell, to hear, to see, to taste, to touch.

On the pleasant olfactory front, my condo is filled with smells of festive food preparation. Breezes through the atrium bring wonderfuls smells from kitchens hard at work - oh.. they must be making stewed pork... mmm.. smells like garlic and ginger browning in a wok... wow, this smells like fish maw soup - yummy! Oooo... is that candied walnuts?Candied Walnuts

When the lifts open onto different floors en-route to my own apartment - I get tempting smells of kueh bangkit.. charcoal braziers and kueh kapit (love letters). Soon my own kitchen will be filled with the mouth watering aroma of sio bak (chinese roast pork).
Chinese Roast Pork (sio bak)

Sometimes, floating tendrils of incense smoke from a flat downstairs will make its way up to mine. It reminds me of my paternal grandmother's house. A smell that I sort of miss is the smell of fireworks - I remember as a child shrieking with delight as I tossed little red ones that explode with a sharp POP! and covering my ears as the thunderous explosions of huge chains of "proper" firecrackers are set off in front of the mansions of the well-to-do and Chinese businesses.

Glutinous Rice - a savoury treat!

Teasing the taste buds are sneaked samples of pineapple tart (every year I eat a few to try and understand the Singaporean obsession with pineapple tarts.. I'm not a fan of pineapple tarts.. melting moments with kueh bangkit, the welcome savoury relief of bak kwa (BBQ pork slices). I love the sticky salty-sweet-smoky-scumptious (I've run out of "s" adjectives now) of this chewy bit of meat. I look forward to the once a year treat of utterly sinful kueh lapis (a multi-layered, buttery, spicy cake) and the chewy morsel or two of nian gao (new year cake). My mother's delicious lor bak gao or chinese turnip cake has always represented chinese new year for me and I hope to cook one as tasty as hers. Chinese New Year must have a myriad delicious memories - many with auspicious names attached - exotic heady taste of braised dried oysters with black moss - otherwise known as hoe see fatt choy, utterly sinful treasures that are unearthed from the huge claypot of poon choy. This wonderful one pot meal is stuffed chockful of decadent seasonal goodies such as baby abalone, fish maw, braised shitake mushrooms, melt-in-your-mouth belly pork, goose web....

Poon Choy - an earthen pot full of treasures

The bin centre of my condo and indeed many housing estates are overflowing - owing to the Chinese (Singaporean?) obsession with all things new for the new year. Such waste. Spring cleaning is fine.. but many of the items thrown out are in perfectly good working order and can be re-used or donated to charity. Thankfully, some do donate and the Salvation Army centre receives truckloads everyday. The sight of these piles of clothes, boxes of (what's inside?) even plasma TVs remind me of what a consumer society we have become. Of course, the eye sees red everywhere. In this instance, an auspicious and happy red. Chinese will decorate the house with red banners with auspicious words and couplets, give ang pows (red packets / envelopes filled with money), dress in red coloured clothes (black would be a traditional no-no).

Roast Duck

Venturing into the shopping centres is quite an expedition. One has to battle crowds eager (desperate?) to stock up on seasonal goodies, clothes. (is there a recession? is the food free?) The ears are assaulted with raucous sounds of new year songs blasting out of speakers at full volume. Added to the din is the background hum of housewives admonishing children not to run too far away, husbands trying desperately to hurry their wives up so they can get to play golf or escape the mayhem, kids laughing as they run in and out and around boxes of mandarin oranges, cookies, pineapple tarts...
Mandarin Oranges (a pile of gold!)

Last but not least... touch - the more formal handshake for distant relatives, the warmth of a bear hug for family and close friends.. sticky hands from F&N Orange and Nian Gao, (sticky sweet glutinous rice flour cake) trying to fish out ang pows from bag to give to young ones.

Nian Gao

Ah. Maybe I do like this season after all, but I'm glad it comes only once a year! Gong Xi Fa Cai everyone!!