Malaysian police arrest tribespeople protesting dam
(Bangkok Post) – Malaysian police on Thursday arrested eight tribespeople blocking access to a dam which they say will displace them from their lands, amid increasing protests on Borneo island.
Police arrested the eight Penans including two teenagers, took down banners and dismantled wooden barriers on the road to the remote $1.3 billion Murum dam in Sarawak state, said activist Raymond Abin.
Abin, an official with the NGO Save Sarawak’s Rivers Network, said some 100 other Penans remained at the site to continue the blockade.
“The authorities just find that this is the only way to deal with the people — refusing to deal with their demands,” Abin told AFP. “The easy way is to arrest them in order to intimidate and threaten them.”
A local police official confirmed eight were in custody but declined to comment further. Abin said the Penans were not told the reason for their arrest.
The Penans set up the blockade in September to demand 500,000 ringgit ($157,000) for the loss of their land, property and livelihood.
The dam is expected to flood 245 square kilometres (95 square miles) and cause 1,500 Penan and 80 Kenyah natives to lose their homes.
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