| Arrest of eight including five 
	lawyers for peaceful Human Rights Day march in Kuala Lumpur marred 
	celebration of Human Rights Day and blotted Malaysia’s international image 
	on human rights 
    ______________Media Conference
 by  Lim Kit Siang
 _________________
 
      
      (Ipoh ,
      Sunday):
       The high-handed 
		and arbitrary police arrests of eight people, including five lawyers, 
		for the peaceful march to mark the International Human Rights Day in 
		Kuala Lumpur this morning has marred the celebration of Human Rights Day 
		and blotted Malaysia’s international image on human rights.
 The arrest of the eight, including five lawyers, N Surendran, Latheefa 
		Koya, R Sivarasa, Eric Paulsen and Amer Hamzah, and human rights 
		activists Anthony Andu and Norazah Othman in totally unprovoked 
		circumstances is a great shame for the Abdullah premiership, as the some 
		100 people who had gathered at Sogo Department store in Kuala Lumpur to 
		march to the Central Market in the federal capital clearly posed no 
		threat to anyone, let alone national security, public order or peace.
 
 Why couldn’t the police leave the marchers alone, only taking action if 
		they pose a threat to national order or security, eschewing all forms of 
		police over-reaction which can only add to the list of adverse 
		international publicity which had been piling for Malaysia in recent 
		months.
 
 The police arrests of the eight on International Human Rights Day is 
		doubly ominous for it is a clear symbol that the Abdullah premiership, 
		which had started with the false promise of greater respect for human 
		rights, has finally taken off its velvet glove to show the iron fist 
		within to crush expressions of human rights in the country.
 
 It makes total nonsense of Royal Police Commission headed by former 
		Chief Justice, Tun Dzaiddin Abdullah which had identified upholding 
		human rights as one of the three core objectives of the Police force in 
		the 21st century – the other two being to keep crime low and to 
		eradicate corruption in the police service.
 
 Suhakam has also been calling for a revamp of police mentality on human 
		rights, to transform the police stance of innate hostility to human 
		rights to that of an agent and ally of change to promote and protect the 
		human rights of Malaysians. Clearly, Suhakam’s various proposals to 
		mainstream human rights in police mindset and strategy have fallen on 
		deaf ears.
 
 Abdullah has been Prime Minister for four years and is starting his 
		fifth year as Malaysian premier. The institutions, instruments and 
		mentality of repression of human rights have not been dismantled in the 
		past four years of Abdullah premiership, which means that there has been 
		no basic difference from the Mahathir premiership as the draconian laws 
		and powers can be dusted off any time to crack down on human rights and 
		democratic freedoms in Malaysia.
 
 The eight arrested today in connection with the Human Rights Day march 
		should be released forthwith and Abdullah should direct the police to 
		undertake a full review of its mindset and modus operandi to ensure that 
		the police are attuned to the Merdeka Constitution and Rukunegara 
		principles which give pride of place to democracy and human rights as 
		important national objectives.
 
 I will raise in Parliament tomorrow the high-handed and arbitrary police 
		arrests of the eight on international Human Rights Day and demand a 
		public apology by the police.
 
      
      (09/12/2007)
 
    * Lim 
    Kit Siang,
  Parliamentary 
    Opposition Leader, MP for Ipoh Timur & DAP Central Policy and Strategic 
    Planning Commission Chairman |