Bersih 2.0 chief Ambiga Sreenevasan has described police move to revoke
the permit for this morning's "Green Solidarity 109" rally as "bullying"
from Kuala Lumpur.
"What
that looked like to me was to bully and to intimidate," said Ambiga
during a post-rally press conference at a restaurant in Kuantan at noon.
The rally's permit was abruptly witihdrawn last night and local council
authorities moved in immediately to dismantle the rally's makeshift
tents and stage.
To the organisers' surprise, the exact same spot was replaced with new
tents in the morning for a purported government-sponsored event.
"Now, you be the judge. Why is this happening?" asked Ambiga in reference to the uncanny conincidence of the two events.
While
commending the police for being reasonable at the rally, she said that
it was still "unacceptable" for the authorities to deliberately create
inconveniences for a peaceful assembly.
Human rights group Suaram director Kua Kia Soong pointed out that Prime
Minister Najib Abdul Razak had once again contradicted his promise for
civil liberties reform with today's episode.
"If
you promise to amend Section 27 of the Police Act to allow freedom of
assembly, then what happened last night and today should not be
happening," Kua (right) said.
The rally this morning saw some 2,000-strong participants gather on the
beach of Taman Gelora, Kuantan, but the event - an assembly of
environmental and community organisations - was cut short when police
moved in to prevent its speakers from speaking.
Today's rally brought together several green groups whose local
communities are afflicted by threats to their immediate environment,
namely groups opposed to the Lynas rare earth refinery plant, the Rawang
high tension cable construction and Raub gold mining operations.
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