Retiree running charity given first ST Singaporean of the Year international impact award

Retiree running charity given first ST Singaporean of the Year international impact award


SINGAPORE – As a former entrepreneur and wealthy retiree, Mr Robert Kee could easily choose to donate money to selected charities.

But he actually decided to run one.

Mr Kee has, over the years, cared for abandoned kids by setting up children’s homes, and built houses, toilets and water filtration systems in Cambodia and Nepal through his charity Operation Hope Foundation (OHF).

As its unpaid executive chairman, the 77-year-old does not take any money from the organisation, which has spent more than $8 million on projects to help thousands in these two countries over two decades.

He believes charity work is not about giving funds “(like) Santa Claus”, but identifying real needs and figuring out how to address them.

On March 19, Mr Kee won The Straits Times Singaporean of the Year (International Impact) award, which honours a Singaporean or local organisation that has made a positive impact outside of Singapore.

“We’ve just been plodding along year after year, solving problems one after another. We never think of all these things (like awards),” he said in an interview at his Holland Road home.

The accolade was one of two new ones introduced at the 2025 iteration of ST’s Singaporean of the Year. The original award, which is in its 11th year, recognises a Singaporean or group of citizens that has made a significant contribution to society.

Dr Chen Shiling, 44, founder of Happee Hearts Movement, which runs Singapore’s first clinic for people with intellectual disabilities and their caregivers, was crowned ST Singaporean of the Year.

Gymnast Amanda Yap, 16, won the other new accolade – ST Young Singaporean of the Year – which seeks to recognise a Singaporean under 18 who has shown courage, compassion, empathy, kindness or a spirit of service, and has made a positive impact among peers.

The awards are organised by ST and presented by UBS Singapore. The official airline partner is Singapore Airlines, and the global hotel partner is Millennium Hotels and Resorts.

Mr Kee, who received a trophy and a $20,000 cash prize at the award ceremony at Temasek Shophouse, founded computer networking company Radac in the 1980s.

He subsequently sold it for a sizeable sum before joining his wife Susan Ho’s company, Applied Digital System.

The father of three, who lives in a Balinese-style property with a swimming pool, could have settled comfortably into retirement in his late 40s. But he could not sit still.



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