Background
He is the son of Curriculum Vitae Devan Nair, the third President of Singapore.
He is the son of Curriculum Vitae Devan Nair, the third President of Singapore.
Devan studied at the National University of Singapore and Cornell University in New New York
He currently coordinates government"s public communications as Chief of Government Communications at the Ministry of Communication and Information. He also holds a concurrent position as the Director for the Institute of Policy Studies (Identity and Passport Service). He was formerly Review Editor of The Straits Times, the flagship English-language daily newspaper of the Singapore Press Holdings.
He has residences in both Austin, Texas and Singapore.
Before becoming a journalist, Devan taught in universities in both Singapore and the United States. Subsequently, Devan began working for The Straits Times and Radio Singapore International.
His work at RSI was mainly focused on international politics, with a special emphasis on United States politics. His weekly show was called Call from America, ranging from topics such as Barack Obama"s presidential campaign to the War in Iraq.
Devan also wrote a column for The Straits Times.
At one point, his contract with The Straits Times was terminated without any official explanation. He has stated that, "Foreign reasons that remain unexplained, but which were clearly not journalistic, the column was halted." However, as of 2008, he is a regular contributor to the Straits Times. NMP Thio had argued that Singapore, being a conservative society, cannot tolerate homosexuals, also stating that a secular society needs to listen to the religious authorities.
She had also said that the minorities in a plural society must listen to the views of the majority.
Devan wrote:
Consider how she tore to shreds so many of our cherished beliefs. and
Oh, I cried when I read that. Imagine that: The moral conservative majority makes better vulgar jokes than the immoral liberal minority – and in Parliament too.
If the immoral minority cannot beat the moral majority even in this department, we are really and truly kaput. Impact
The article gained wide exposure in the Singaporean blogosphere and was widely reproduced online.
lieutenant also generated a lot of responses to The Straits Times both for and against same-sex marriages.
On 7 July 2007, Janadas Devan wrote an article in The Straits Times entitled where he advocated the formation of same-sex marriages in Singapore. He cited a personal anecdote of a female friend in the United States who had married another woman, with two healthy children and living an otherwise normal life. He wrote:
What will those who hold that homosexuality is against the laws of God say when it is definitively established that homosexuality has a genetic basis? That God deliberately made a mistake with the deoxyribonucleic acid of gays — and wishes us to persecute them for his mistake?.
On 27 October 2007, Devan wrote an article in The Straits Times entitled The idiots that we are, we had believed "pluralism" meant, among other things, "autonomy and retention of identity for individual bodies", a "society in which the members of minority groups maintain their independent cultural traditions", "a system that recognises more than one ultimate principle or kind of being", as the Oxford English Dictionary puts lieutenant
In the article, Devan rebutted the parliamentary speech of Singapore Nominated Member of Parliament Thio Li-annual