The Singapore LGBT encyclopaedia Wiki

Zainal Sapari, MP (Jawi: زاينل ساڤري; born November 30, 1965) is a Member of the 12th Parliament of Singapore for the Pasir Ris East Constituency which is part of the Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC. He is a politician from Singapore’s main governing political party, the People’s Action Party and is also currently serving in the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC) as the Assistant Secretary-General.[1] Zainal is a graduate of Nanyang Technological University with a Master of Arts in Educational Management,[2] through which he has served for 20 years in the education service before embarking on his political career.

Early life and career[]

Zainal came from a family of seven, with his father working as a rank-and-file employee and his mother providing domestic assistance to an expatriate family.[3]

Zainal was a St John’s cadet in Saint Andrew’s Secondary School where he was given positions of responsibility and developed his leadership skillsTemplate:Citation needed. While in Temasek Junior College, he actively participated in sports and represented in his schools’ annual sports meet. He was also the chief editor of an in-house Malay language publication of his junior collegeTemplate:Citation needed.

In 1986, Zainal was awarded the government’s Special Malay bursary where he became the first person in his family to pursue university education.[3] He continued his education in National University of Singapore to graduate with a Post-Graduate Diploma in Education (PGDE) which propelled him into his career in education serviceTemplate:Citation needed. Zainal further his education in Nanyang Technological University in 2007 to attain a Masters of Arts in Educational Management.[2]

Zainal became a teacher, and subsequently became a school principal and then a superintendent with the Ministry of Education, overseeing a cluster of 12 schools in the east area.

Career in labor movement and politics[]

Zainal started out union work with the Building Construction And Timber Industries Employees' Union (BATU) as a Director (Special Duty) of Industrial RelationsTemplate:Citation needed, which was aligned to his interest in aiding low-wage workers. He progressed on to become the Assistant Secretary-General of NTUC[1] and Director of NTUC Care and Share DepartmentTemplate:Citation needed which helps low-wage workers, and casual and contract workers.

In the 2011 General Elections, Zainal was voted into the parliament of Singapore as one of the 5 team members of the PAP led by Minister Teo Chee Hean . The team won the contest for Pasir Ris Punggol GRC over Singapore Democratic Alliance (SDA)led by Harminder Pal Singh with a victory of 64.79%.

In Parliament, Zainal lobbied for the Progressive Wage Model which was an improved form of minimum wage in Singapore, intent on helping low-wage workers. Zainal asked the ministry to commission a study on the living wage in Singapore before the implementation.[4] The Progressive Wage Model was implemented in the cleaning and security sector first, followed by other sectors in the coming years.

To further protect the wages of the low-wage workers, Zainal also urged the Government to lead the charge in best sourcing in order to end “cheap sourcing”, as it will take a toll on the wages of these workers. He clearly made his stand that cheap sourcing is a “gross injustice and slavery of the poor” that has to be put to a stop.[5]

Zainal worked very closely with the Ministry of Education, his previous employer, in implementing the Progressive Wage Model in schoolsTemplate:Citation needed as the school cleaners represent the biggest workforce of the cleaning sector in Singapore.

On top of the Progressive Wage Model, Zainal was also lobbying for mandatory payslips to be enforced in the Employment Act, in a bid to prevent salary related disputes, which especially affects the casual and contract workers, and also low-wage workers. The enforcement is still in process and it is projected to come into implementation within the next two years.[6]

Before the 2017 Singapore presidential elections (which was reserved for the Malay community), Zainal expressed a view that the various candidates were all "Malay" enough for the reserved election,[7] and that Speaker of Parliament Halimah Yacob should qualify to run in the reserved election.[8] He also shared an article which disagreed with Mendaki's "shallow and rigid definition of what is Malay".[9][10][11]

Besides his duties in Parliament and the NTUC, Zainal participates in grassroots activities. Zainal pushed for an extension of the assistance scheme Enhanced Purple Heart Programme in his constituency, where needy families in Pasir Ris East received food vouchers to supplement their monthly expenditures.[12] Zainal takes a hands-on approach to push his agenda for low-wage workers. He even became a cleaner for one morning in order to gain first-hand experience of the difficulties faced by cleaners.[13]

Philanthropic work[]

Zainal's main philanthropic work is focused on his areas of interest which is low waged workers and disadvantaged members of society. During his tenure in the Ministry of Education, Zainal volunteered at Darul Ihsan, a Muslim orphanage, where he served in the Education Sub-Committee from 2004–2006.[2] He is also a patron of HIRA society, a welfare organization aimed at mentoring and providing guidance to ex-drug offenders to help re-establish them back into societyTemplate:Citation needed.

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Template:Cite news
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Template:Cite web
  3. 3.0 3.1 Template:Cite web
  4. Template:Cite news
  5. Template:Cite news
  6. Template:Cite news
  7. Template:Cite web
  8. Template:Cite web
  9. Template:Cite web
  10. Template:Cite web
  11. Template:Cite web
  12. Template:Cite news
  13. Template:Cite news