Singapore Unravelling the secret files of Separation: Declassified

Channelnewsasia.com It is an image etched in the minds of generations – the black-and-white footage of Lee Kuan Yew blinking back tears on Aug 9, 1965.  But what else lay behind that seminal moment and the familiar story of Singapore’s separation from Malaysia? Over five months, we sifted through hundreds of declassified files in the archives of Singapore, the United Kingdom and Australia. These were telegrams marked “top secret” – unvarnished correspondence between British officials; private and frank memos between leaders; and raw, very personal letters perhaps never meant for public eyes. Some of what we found in the archives was jaw-dropping.
A letter from the night before separation by the British High Commissioner, described how he raced to find the Tunku, pleading for a postponement of the announcement. There were reports about threats to arrest Lee,  and later, a communist plot to assassinate him. We found a letter in which an Indonesian diplomat expressed “glee” at the separation, mocking Malaysia with an “I told you so”. And perhaps even more shocking to us, the revelation that the British had secretly stored nuclear weapons at Tengah Air Base as part of its Cold War strategy.
The challenge wasn’t finding material but narrowing it down. We focused on the 100 days surrounding independence. Our litmus test for a “must-include” point? If it made us text each other with a “OMG, read this”. But at the heart of the series is the people behind the letters and behind the history-making decisions – their anxieties, their doubts, their feelings of humiliation and betrayal. And decades on, the poignancy of their children and grandchildren reading the words they had written. We hope Separation: Declassified lets you see a familiar story anew – not as a chapter in a textbook, but as lived, human history. Yuxin Peh and Clarisse Goh Producers, Separation: Declassified