Eight alleged victims of police brutality have lodged police reports at
the Petaling Jaya police headquarters yesterday, including one who
claimed that he was forced to run the gauntlet at last Saturday’s Bersih
3.0 rally.
The group, accompanied by activists from Lawyers for Liberty, Suaram and
KL Selangor Chinese Assembly Hall, demanded the Bukit Aman police
headquarters to set up an independent investigation body to probe the
incidents.
Engineer N Satish Kumar, 29, said he was punched and shoved around by
some 10 cops standing in two rows, akin to running the gauntlet, when he
was walking to a truck ferrying those arrested to the Police Training
Centre (Pulapol).
Satish, who was documenting the rally, was nabbed when he was trying to flee from the cops who were arresting protesters.
Satish said he was taking refuge in Masjid Jamek to avoid the crowd caught in the plumes of tear gas until about 5pm.
“When I came out, suddenly the remaining protesters at Jalan Tun Perak
near Masjid Jamek assembled and started shouting “Bersih, Bersih”, so I
recorded that,” he said.
“But I got caught, and about 10 police personnel started to hit and kick
me around,” said Satish, who was brought to the back of the Royal
Selangor Club together with the rest of the detainees.
Satish said the memory card in his camcorder was snatched.
Another complainant, 26-year-old Mohd Faizal Norhakim (left) was allegedly assaulted by the police at around 5.30pm at Jalan Tun Perak while he was walking towards Dataran Merdeka.
He claimed that the men in blue suddenly charged at the protesters, and two of them held him up and began to beat him.
“When they dragged me back to the police base at Dataran Merdeka, there
were a lot of police personnel along both sides of the road and they
stripped off my clothes, punched and splashed water on my face,” he
claimed.
Mohd Faizal sustained injuries on his back and is suffering from tremendous pain.
“I can barely move my shoulder,” he said.
He contended that the protesters did not provoke the police and only sang patriotic songs throughout their march.
‘Gas launched directly into the crowd’
Bersih supporter Lau Chee Sun had attended quite a number of street
protests before, but at the Bersih 3.0 rally he saw for the first time
tear gas being launched directly into the crowd.
The 41-year-old was at the intersection between Jalan Tun Perak and
Jalan Raja when his left shoulder was hit by a tear-gas canister.
“I saw two tear-gas canisters being shot from the LRT track above my
head, but I was sandwiched inside the sea of people so I could barely
move,” he said.
The
moment one of the canisters hit his shoulder and started releasing gas,
everyone panicked and started pushing each other, gasping for air, Lau (right) recounted.
He became unconscious briefly, and was only able to rise out of sheer determination after he recovered.
“My doctor said my shoulder has been injured and it will take time for it to recover,” he said.
He claimed that the police were the perpetrators of the violence as the
gas canisters came straight at them and was not the result of
deflection.
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