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Pro-Najib rally raises ethnic tension fears
Malaysian riot police yesterday fired water cannon on ethnic Malay protesters staging a pro-government rally in the capital Kuala Lumpur that has raised racial tensions in the multi-ethnic country.
Police briefly sprayed demonstrators who chanted slogans denouncing Malaysia鈥檚 Chinese minority and demanding access to a tourist street lined with ethnic Chinese-run businesses.
At least several thousand members of the Muslim ethnic Malay majority marched through the heart of the capital to declare support for Prime Minister Najib Razak, a Malay who is facing calls to step down over a financial scandal.
Shadowed by heavy security, the demonstrators also claimed that long-held Malay dominance of the country was being challenged by the Chinese.
Large numbers of people were bussed in by rally organizers from the ruling United Malays National Organization from the party鈥檚 rural strongholds.
Many Kuala Lumpur businesses run by Chinese 鈥 who make up about a quarter of Malaysia鈥檚 population 鈥 were shuttered out of fear of disturbances.
A heavy security presence involving hundreds of police and riot personnel were deployed throughout the capital.
The rally has been criticized as racially provocative by leading figures in both UMNO and the opposition. Racial harmony remains a top national concern following deadly sectarian riots in 1969 that are still regularly cited as a cautionary tale.
The demonstration was staged in response to much larger street rallies last month that called for Najib鈥檚 resignation and deep reform of a government accused of repression, corruption and poll chicanery to stay in power.
Yesterday, crowds composed overwhelmingly of young Malay men wearing UMNO鈥檚 red colors, many blaring on plastic vuvuzelas, marched through the heart of the city toward a planned rally site, paralyzing normally bustling districts.
The demonstration, which seemed otherwise peaceful, was one of the clearest public displays yet of what many Malaysian moderates warn is a worrying trend toward racial intolerance among Malays.
UMNO has controlled Malaysia for 58 years, granting economic and other advantages for Muslim Malays, saying they were needed to prevent their dominance by the sizeable ethnic Chinese and Indian minorities. But following a string of poll setbacks for the government, party hardliners have increasingly catered to Malay voters by portraying the commercially dominant Chinese as a threat to the Malay privileges.
Najib, who was already under fire over huge sums of money missing from a state firm he launched, has been deeply tarnished by the revelation in July that Malaysian investigators had discovered nearly US$700 million in deposits into his personal bank accounts.
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