Opposition activists held after Malaysia May Day protests, drawing criticism from rights groups
Leading opposition figures, including former Bar Council president, among those arrested in what government critics call an attempt to silence them

More than two dozen protesters including a leading human rights activist and opposition lawmakers have been detained in Malaysia in what one lawyer said on Saturday was an attempt to silence government critics.
The demonstrators were arrested late on Friday following a May Day rally that drew thousands to the streets of Kuala Lumpur, their lawyers said.
Among those arrested was Ambiga Sreenevasan, a widely respected human rights activist and former president of Malaysia’s Bar Council who campaigns for democratic and electoral reforms.
Her lawyer N Surendran said Ambiga was being detained for sedition and for unlawful assembly with an intention to overthrow the government.
“This is ridiculous,” he told reporters.
“These arrests are scare tactics by the police to deter people from opposing the government.”