This morning, bulldozers had rumbled into Kampung Buah Pala. With their engines firing, the mechanical monsters were all set to devour the houses standing on a bitterly disputed piece of land.
Women and children had joined the menfolk to form a human barricade, to prevent the sledgehammer-armed workers from putting their tools to work.
It was alleged that several villagers were hurt during the commotion.
M Mahadevi, 51, was said to have been hit with batons, resulting in her sustaining injuries to her stomach. She was later taken in an ambulance to the Lam Wah Eee private hospital for treatment.
Another villager, S Kamini, 18, claimed that she and her 50-year-old mother were assaulted by the police personnel.
Villager M Salligan, 58, also alleged that he was 'beaten up' by police personnel. According to him, at least 10 villagers were hurt.
Kampung Buah Pala association assistant secretary C Tharmaraj accused the police of 'resorting to violence' to disperse the villagers.
Police chief: It's all rumours
Contacted later, George Town police chief Azam Abd Hamid denied that the police had assaulted the villagers and accused them of spreading rumours.He denied giving any orders to employ force and called on the villagers who claimed to have been assaulted to file police reports.
Earlier in the morning, some 50 demolition workers had attempted to enter the village through the back entrance, but were spotted by the villagers and driven away.
The police had also stopped the media from entering the village, but some journalists have managed to slip through.
At present, negotiations are underway between the developer and the villagers. Sources claimed that the demolition could be postponed until the end of the month.
Consumer Association of Penang (CAP) officer NV Subarrow told Malaysiakini that all DAP legislators had (allegedly) switched off their mobile phones.
In the morning, police escorted court bailiffs and developer Nusmetro Sdn Bhd director Gary Ho to paste a court demolition order at a house.
At about 12.45pm, the villagers' lawyer Darshan Singh Khaira arrived at the scene but was stopped by the police.
Using a loud hailer, the lawyer told villagers that the demolition would be the 'graveyard' for the DAP government in Penang.
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