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Malaysia summons China envoy over comments on planned pro-Malay rally

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Malaysia summons China envoy over comments on planned pro-Malay rally

PUBLISHED : Sunday, 27 September, 2015, 2:55pm
UPDATED : Sunday, 27 September, 2015, 2:56pm

Reuters in Kuala Lumpur

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Malaysia summoned China’s ambassador Huang Huikang to seek clarification of remarks he made during a visit to Petaling Street. File photo: AP

Malaysia has summoned China’s ambassador to clarify his remarks criticising extremism and racism ahead of a planned pro-Malay rally in the capital.

Local newspaper The Star said on Friday Ambassador Huang Huikang had warned that Beijing had no fear of speaking out against actions that threatened its interests and affected the rights of its people.

"The Chinese government opposes terrorism and any form of discrimination against races and any form of extremism," The Star quoted Huang saying.

Huang’s reported comments preceded a planned rally by a Malay-dominated, pro-government group that was reported to demand more Malay participation in Petaling Street, where most vendors are ethnic Chinese.

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Royal Malaysian Police on duty in Petaling Street, Kuala Lumpur. Photo: EPA

China’s Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Malaysia’s foreign ministry said it would meet Huang on Monday to clarify comments that "attracted attention and caused concern to the Malaysian public".

Huang made the comments during a visit to the popular Petaling Street market, known as Chinatown, on Friday.

Rally organizers said on Friday night they had cancelled the planned protest on advice from the police.

Mostly-Malay ’red shirts’ had taken the streets with 30,000 marchers in the middle of September to show support for Prime Minister Najib Razak, who is battling allegations of corruption and mismanagement at indebted state fund 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB).

But previous anti-government protests, critics said, led by a pro-democracy group called Bersih and which attracted many urban Chinese people, had insulted the country’s Malay leaders.


 
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