April 26, 2012
KUALA
LUMPUR, April 26 — Dataran Merdeka will be closed off to the public for
the next 48 hours from 6am tomorrow as the authorities move to prevent
the Bersih 3.0 sit-in in the historic square this Saturday.
Kuala Lumpur City Hall (DBKL) issued the order after unconfirmed
reports said that police have obtained a court order today preventing
the use of Dataran Merdeka for a rally.
The move against the electoral reforms movement is seen as a sign
that the hawks in Putrajaya have won the day despite their confidence
that the rally has no traction.
KL mayor Tan Sri Ahmad Fuad Ismail said in a statement that the
restriction will be enforced based on Local Government (Dataran Merdeka)
(Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur) By-Laws 1992 and Section 65 of the
Local Government Act 1976.
He said the restriction will be lifted at 6am on Sunday morning.
DBKL has already barricaded the historic square in the capital city
but the electoral reforms group have said it will gather there this
Saturday as time was too short to consider other venues.
Putrajaya and DBKL have offered several stadiums, including Stadium
Merdeka which was ironically cordoned off during last July's Bersih 2.0
rally.
The police have taken a hands-off approach towards the latest rally
with DBKL taking the lead role as it runs the square. The city
authorities have just evicted a group of activists calling themselves
Occupy Dataran this week, two weeks after they set up a daily camp
there.
A similar order last July galvanised a larger turnout in the capital
city, with organisers saying nearly 50,000 gathered to walk past road
blocks and policemen who shut down the city. But police said only 6,000
took part in the rally and nearly 1,700 were arrested.
Another such order this weekend could push more support for Bersih,
which launched the protest as some of their demands were not met when a
parliamentary select committee (PSC) made 22 recommendations to reform
the electoral process.
The bipartisan panel was formed following the July 9, 2011 rally for
free and fair elections that saw tens of thousands flood into the
streets of the capital.
The Najib administration was widely condemned for a clampdown on the
demonstration in which police fired water cannons and tear gas into
crowds during chaotic scenes that resulted in over 1,500 arrested,
scores injured and the death of an ex-soldier.
Bersih’s eight demands are: a clean electoral roll, reform to postal
voting, the use of indelible ink, a minimum campaign period of 21 days,
fair access to the media, the strengthening public institutions, a stop
to corruption, and an end to dirty politics.
PR has pledged its full support for this Saturday’s rally, promising to mobilise thousands of supporters to attend the event.
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