Malaysia police use water cannon at Anwar rally

Sat Nov 10, 2007 6:43 AM EST

By Jalil Hamid

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Police in the Malaysian capital used water cannon and 
fired tear gas on Saturday to disperse protesters in one of the nation's 
biggest anti-government rallies in nearly a decade.

Police arrested at least a dozen people as tens of thousands of protesters, led 
by opposition icon Anwar Ibrahim, marched in heavy rains to the King's palace 
to demand changes to the country's electoral system.

Hundreds of policemen, including riot police with shields and batons, guarded 
Kuala Lumpur's landmark Merdeka (Freedom) Square, the main mosque and the 
National Palace to foil the rally.

Police sprayed water cannon twice to disperse a crowd of about 500 protesters 
chanting slogans outside a historic domed mosque guarded by about 50 riot 
police, as helicopters hovered overhead.

Nearby, more than 2,000 protesters, chiefly teenagers wearing yellow T-shirts 
emblazoned with the slogan "Bersih," or "Clean" in Malay, marched in heavy rain 
towards the city's colonial-era railway station.

They chanted "Allahu akbar" (God is greatest) and "Reformasi," a reform demand 
that was the war chant of 1998 opposition protests, while waving banners 
reading "Save Malaysia" and "Election Commission, stop your tricks."

Groups of demonstrators later converged on the palace of Malaysia's king, where 
opposition leaders handed over a list of election reform demands.

The opposition said it would organize bigger rallies if its demands were not 
met.

Police minister Johari Baharum said the crowd numbered less than 10,000, but 
organizers put the figure at more than 30,000.

"I'm happy that the police managed to control the crowd. But they shouldn't do 
it again," Johari told Reuters. "We will come down hard on them."

Anwar said he was happy with the turnout despite the government's condemnation 
of the protest.

"I think this is a major success in the expression of public sentiment against 
fraudulent practices in the elections," Anwar told Reuters in a telephone 
interview.

"We will have to persist in this campaign to send a message to the government 
that people are tired of this kind of fraud."

Anwar was speaking after he and several opposition colleagues, including Hadi 
Awang of the hardline Islamist Parti Islam-se Malaysia and Lim Kit Siang of the 
Democratic Action Party, submitted their list to a representative of the ruler. 

"THE PEOPLE'S RIGHT"

Mohamadiah Sohod, 33, a government worker from southern Johor state, said he 
was upset because police had refused to issue a permit for the rally. "This is 
the people's right, to assemble and air their grievances," he added.

Police effectively shut down the city centre, throwing up barricades on main 
roads to halt cars and turn away protesters, although crowds dispersed 
peacefully after the protest ended.

Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said on Friday the government would not 
tolerate street demonstrations. "They are challenging the patience of the 
people who want the country to be peaceful and stable," he said.

Previous protests of similar scale were anti-government rallies led by Anwar in 
1998 before his arrest and jailing.

The rally was organized by Bersih, a loose coalition of 26 opposition parties 
and non-government groups that is pushing for reforms to an electoral process 
it says favors the ruling coalition.

Abdullah won a record victory in a 2004 election, and is widely expected to 
call snap polls in early 2008.

Two people were seriously injured in September when police opened fire to 
disperse rioters at a Bersih rally in the northeastern state of Terengganu.

(Additional reporting by Sayed Salahuddin and Jahabar Sadiq; Writing by 
Clarence Fernandez)

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