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Supporters
of the "Bersih" (Clean) electoral reform coalition shout slogans
during clashes with police in downtown Kuala Lumpur July 9, 2011. (Credit: REUTERS/Damir Sagolj) |
(Reuters) -
Malaysian police fired repeated rounds of tear gas and detained over 1,400
people in the capital on Saturday as thousands of activists evaded roadblocks
and barbed wire to hold a street protest against Prime Minister Najib Razak's
government.
At least a
dozen people were hurt in the demonstration for electoral reform in downtown
Kuala Lumpur. There were no reports of serious injuries but some analysts said
the police action was excessive and would dent Najib's image.
"We
are not criminals, we are just asking for free and fair elections,"
opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim's daughter, Nurul Izzah Anwar, told reporters
after her father was knocked down and hurt in a melee when he and his
supporters were tear gassed.
"Many
innocent people were injured. We condemn this act of cruelty by UMNO and
Barisan Nasional," she said, referring to Najib's party and the ruling
coalition.
Street
protests are rare in this Southeast Asian nation, but foreign investors are
worried that any groundswell of anti-government sentiment could delay economic
reforms seen as essential to draw investment.
If he is
put under popular pressure, Najib may reconsider plans for a snap election and
hold back on reforms such as cutting fuel subsidies or unwinding an affirmative
action program for the country's Malay majority.
Polls are
not due until 2013 but analysts have said Najib could seek an early mandate
after economic growth accelerated to a 10-year high in 2010.
"From
Najib's perspective, holding elections anytime soon would be a mistake because
of the damage that has been done today," said Bridget Welsh, Malaysia
specialist at Singapore Management University.
"The
fact that such a large crowd turned up despite a crackdown shows that voter
anger is deep and this is going to push a lot of people who are in the middle
toward the opposition."
Reuters
witnesses saw tear gas shells lobbed repeatedly at groups of protesters in
downtown Kuala Lumpur as the crowds chanted "Long Live the People"
and "Reformasi, reformasi," the Malay word for reform.
Several
people were seen bleeding after the tear gas was fired, but police gave no
details of any injuries. Crowds around the city's main bus station were also
sprayed with water cannon.
Malaysia's
inspector-general of police, Ismail Omar, said 1,401 people were taken into
custody, but many will be released after questioning. At least three senior
opposition leaders were among those detained, other officials said.
"We
have made our point that we want free and fair elections," said Chan Mei
Yin, a 32-year old accountant who joined the protest.
"The
police are just showing that they are brutal to Malaysians. I will not vote for
this government."
NOT
THAILAND
While
Malaysia is far from being divided by political strife like its northern
neighbor Thailand, the opposition has been steadily growing more vocal.
Tens of thousands
of demonstrators took to the streets at a November 2007 rally, which analysts
said galvanized support for the opposition ahead of record gains in a 2008
general election.
Analysts
said the turnout of protesters on Saturday was more than 10,000, around the
same as in 2007. Police, however, put the number at 5,000-6,000, while protest
organizers claimed 50,000 attended.
"Malaysian
civil society is showing the government that intimidation will not work,"
said Ooi Kee Beng, a political analyst at the Institute of Southeast Asian
Studies of Singapore.
"We're
seeing a lack of will on the part of the government to try to negotiate and to
defuse the situation. It's all going to look very bad outside Malaysia."
After
Malaysia's constitutional monarch tried to defuse the situation, the government
initially offered Bersih (Clean), the group that called the protest, the use of
a stadium to hold its demonstration.
But it
baulked at allowing the group to use the main stadium in downtown Kuala Lumpur,
at which point Bersih said it would defy the ban.
From
midnight, police locked down the central shopping district of the city of 1.6
million people, setting up roadblocks and barring taxis and buses from the
area. Suburban trains, however, continued to operate and other areas of the
city were not affected.
Bersih has
vowed to bring together tens of thousands of supporters to the protest but it
fell short. Still, some analysts said the government faced a problem.
"Just
looking at the crowd there were many 'first timers', young people from the
Facebook generation who just wanted to have a peaceful life," said Ibrahim
Suffian, director of the independent opinion polling outfit Merdeka Center.
"This
is trouble for Najib as it will polarize traditionally non-political segments
of society like the young even further away from him."
Najib took
power in 2009, and inherited a divided ruling coalition which had been weakened
by historic losses in the 2008 polls. He has promised to restructure government
and economy and introduced an inclusive brand of politics aimed at uniting the
country's different races.
Najib's
approval ratings have risen from 45 percent to 69 percent in February,
according to independent polling outfit Merdeka Center. But analysts said
recent ethnic and religious differences have undermined his popularity.
(Additional
reporting by Angie Teo and Damir Sagolj; Writing by Liau Y-Sing; Editing by
Raju Gopalakrishnan and Sugita Katyal)
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