Monday, April 30, 2012
By EILEEN NG
Associated Press
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — A massive street
rally demanding electoral reforms in Malaysia raised questions Sunday
about whether the long-ruling
coalition government will delay calling elections in the face of such a
strong show of force by the opposition.
Police used tear gas and
chemical-laced water Saturday against some 50,000 people and arrested
more than 450 at the demonstration. Officials said three demonstrators
and 20 police were injured, and all those arrested were released by
Sunday.
The rally was held to pressure
Prime Minister Najib Razak's ruling coalition — which has been in power for 55 years — to overhaul what
the opposition and civil groups call biased electoral policies before
the next polls are held.
Elections
do not need to be held until mid-2013, but speculation had previously
been rife that Najib may dissolve Parliament next month and seek a new
mandate in June.
However, the protests — the
second mass rally in 10 months — could rattle Najib's confidence and
prompt him to delay calling polls, especially since the last election
delivered the biggest opposition gains in Parliament ever.
"The rally is a way for many
Malaysians to show that they are no longer suppressed. It has whipped up
anti-government sentiment, and this could encourage Najib to call for
later elections," said Ooi Kee Beng of the Institute of Southeast Asian
Studies in Singapore.
The country's largest English
newspaper, The Star, said in an opinion piece Sunday that the more
likely time for polls would be in the first week of September.
While the rally had reinforced
anti-government vote in urban areas, it may not tip the scale in favor
of the opposition, said James Chin, political science lecturer with
Monash University in Malaysia. Najib's battleground will be in rural
areas, which account for about two-thirds of Parliamentary seats, he
said.
National police spokesman Ramli
Yoosuf said Sunday that 471 people were arrested but all have been
released. It was not immediately clear if they would be charged later
with any offense. Ramli also said the crowd size, earlier estimated at
25,000, doubled to near 50,000 at its peak.
Demonstrators wearing yellow
T-shirts, waving banners and chanting slogans poured into downtown Kuala
Lumpur, massing near a public square that police had sealed off with
barbed wire and barricades.
"A lot of things are not done
right and people are getting fed up. We have to take a stand and do
something for our future generation," businesswoman Kimberley Yang, a
mother of three, said before the crackdown.
Najib's popularity dipped after a
similar rally last July by some 20,000 people was dispersed by tear
gas.
He has since instituted a raft
of reforms intended to build support — including overhauling decades-old
security laws — and agreed to new electoral regulations that include
using indelible ink to cast ballot to curb multiple voting.
But activists said the measures
were inadequate, alleging that the Election Commission is biased and
that voter registration lists are tainted with fraudulent names. They
also sought longer election campaigning periods and changes to ensure
citizens living abroad can vote.
Saturday's demonstration
remained peaceful for several hours, until a small group appeared to
suddenly breach the police barriers. Authorities responded by firing
tear gas and water laced with stinging chemicals.
Home Minister Hishammuddin
Hussein said police acted "with utmost restraint," but opposition
leaders and rights groups said the excessive use of tear gas and
heavy-handed tactics were unjustified.
Malaysia's Bar Council, which
deployed 80 monitors during the rally, said police fired tear gas
directly at the crowd in a way that appeared to be designed to attack
them, rather than letting them disperse quickly.
It said its teams also witnessed
several acts of police brutality, such as assault of arrested persons.
Najib has accused opposition
activists of trying to create disorder to sully the government's image.
"They are not concerned about
fair and clean elections. It's all about politics and taking over (the
government), he was quoted as saying by national news agency Bernama.
The National Front, which has
governed Malaysia since independence from Britain in 1957, suffered its
worst performance in 2008 elections, when it lost more than a third of
Parliament's seats amid public complaints about corruption and racial
discrimination.
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