http://arabnews.com/world/article87990.ece

Malaysia increasingly intolerant of dissent - rights group
By REUTERS 



Published: Jul 22, 2010 00:24 Updated: Jul 22, 2010 00:24 

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia arrested nearly 1,000 anti-government protesters in 
2009, signaling "heightened intolerance," an influential and independent human 
rights group said on Wednesday.

Political tensions rose in this Southeast Asian country following record 2008 
polls losses by the government now led by Prime Minister Najib Razak.

Tensions are still high and could rise further with the sodomy trial of 
opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim resuming next month.

"Because the prime minister sought to regain his losses in 2008, 2009 saw a 
huge crackdown on dissent and the opposition," said John Liu, a coordinator 
with SUARAM or Voice of the Malaysian People group.

Najib took office in April last year pledging political and economic reforms to 
revive his coalition and woo foreign investments to the Southeast Asian country.

The rise in political tensions and increasing competition from faster reforming 
regional neighbors like Indonesia have weighed on investor sentiment toward 
Malaysia where investment has languished.

Since taking office, Najib has released most of the detainees held under the 
Internal Security Act (ISA) that allows for detention without trial which has 
been used against government critics in the past and promised more tolerance to 
criticism.

But SUARAM in its annual report released on Wednesday said that despite the 
pledge, 167 people were arrested in May last year for protesting a putsch that 
unseated the opposition from the northern state of Perak where it had ruled.

An August 2009 rally calling for the abolition of the ISA saw 589 people 
arrested.


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