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10 APRIL 2024

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Bersih chants ring out at Najib’s London speech


The prime minister was left red-faced when hecklers interrupted his speech with chants of 'Bersih'.
UPDATED
PETALING JAYA: Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak’s decision to hold a meet-and-greet session with Malaysians in London just two weeks after the Bersih 3.0 rally backfired on when Bersih supporters shouted him down during his opening speech.
Despite initially ignoring his hecklers, Najib was forced to abandon his speech after 25 seconds to ask that they stop their chants of “Bersih! Bersih!”
“Can you please stop it? Can you please stop it,” he said.
A member of the audience shouted back something inaudible, to which Najib replied, “I know, I know but can you stop it? You can meet with me later, ok. Please, can you stop it?”
As the chanting persisted, another participant shouted, “I want to vote…why you don’t allow me to vote?”
An unidentified invidiual had also taken the hecklers to task, asking them to “show some respect” for the prime minister.
The heckling finally ceased and Najib was able to continue with the rest of his speech.
The event, “An Evening With The Prime Minister”, was held at the prestigious indigO2 Arena in the Dome Peninsula, a venue that would feature as a key location for the Olympics in July.
Organised by the Malaysian High Commission in London, the free event offered food, drinks and cultural entertainment.
‘Free transport and provisions’
According to Sarawak Report, the high commission also arranged for free transport and provisions to attract students from all over the UK to the event.
The website obtained an insider email which revealed that the event targeted 1,000 Malaysians and that travel by coach to London was provided as well refreshments on board.
“Students from as far away as Edinburgh University up in Scotland have been urged to attend in a highly organised effort by diplomats.”
“The roundup is presumably designed to avoid too many empty front row seats that might otherwise be picked up by cameras beaming back pictures to the censored media in Malaysia.”
On April 28, close to 1,000 Malaysians and supporters had gathered in London for the Bersih 3.0 rally in support of clean and fair elections.
In Kuala Lumpur, on that same day, some 80,000 people took to the streets for a peaceful protest which later took a violent twist when police fired tear gas and water cannons.
The police and the government blamed the protesters for breaching the barricades at Dataran Merdeka but Bersih, the opposition and civil society groups accused the police of using unwarranted excessive force.
Scores, including policemen, were injured in the incident.
Bersih’s previous rally last July and the most recent one, had both tainted the image of Najib’s administration.
[video from YouTube]

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