Sunday, January 27, 2008

Malaysian opposition condemns mass arrests at protest

Malaysia's opposition parties on Sunday condemnned the arrest of 56 people at a demonstration against rising prices, saying it was a sign of government paranoia ahead of general elections.

Hundreds of police surrounded Kuala Lumpur's iconic Petronas Twin Towers to prevent the protest from going ahead Sunday, and hauled away demonstrators in trucks.

As they were driven off some shouted "Reformasi" or "Reform", the catchcry of dissident former deputy premier Anwar Ibrahim who was sacked and jailed in 1998.

The rally -- the latest in an unprecedented series of street protests -- was aimed at highlighting public anger over rising food and fuel prices ahead of polls expected to be held in March.

"The brutal suppression of protestors... is a sign that the government is at a loss to resolve the fundamental problem of the sky-rocketing cost of living," Tian Chua, from Anwar's Keadilan party, said in a statement.

"It is an over-reaction when more than 1,000 police officers were mobilised to stop the demonstration that merely expresses the people's discontent on impending hikes in fuel prices and other essential goods and services," said Tian, who is one of those being held.

A journalist from news website Malaysiakini, one of the few independent media organisations in the country, was also caught up in the dragnet as he attempted to interview police.
"I'm definitely disturbed by this. It shows that police are not respecting the rights of journalists to do their job," said the website's editor in chief Steven Gan.

Organisers said that of the 56 people detained, 10 had been released, while police appeared to be seeking remand orders that could keep the rest in custody for up to two weeks. The Malaysiakini journalist was one of those still in police custody.

The fundamentalist Islamic opposition party PAS also had several of its senior members detained.

"It is an over-rection. They just want to get together and protest about the prices that people are facing, that's all," said PAS member Zulkifli Sulong.

"The price of food is an important issue in this coming general election. A lot of people are sufering because of price hikes. So they don't want to give a chance to let people expose their grievances about it."

Malaysia's government has been infuriated by the street rallies, which began breaking out in November, targeting issues including electoral reform and rights for the nation's ethnic Indians.

In December it detained five ethnic Indian activists under draconian internal security legislation that allows for indefinite detention without trial.

Agence France-Presse - 1/27/2008 10:17 AM

2 comments:

multidimid said...

It was a brutal crackdown, involving nearly 1,300 policemen, effectively quashed the planned protest aimed at “highlighting public anger over rising prices of food and fuel” - an issue that will figure prominently in the next GE. Tian Chua was complaining “'It's almost ridiculous, conducting mass arrests before we even converged” More details & updated pics & Video Clip (2min 15s) uploaded at
Go H E R E

multidimid said...

Apology, above comment has a faulty link -sbz htm instead of html
Repost again
It was a brutal crackdown, involving nearly 1,300 policemen, effectively quashed the planned protest aimed at “highlighting public anger over rising prices of food and fuel” - an issue that will figure prominently in the next GE. Tian Chua was complaining “'It's almost ridiculous, conducting mass arrests before we even converged” More details & updated pics & Video Clip (2min 15s) uploaded at
Go H E R E