Ten people dressed in ninja-style garb have been detained after they arrived at Malaysia's royal palace in a bizarre attempt to claim the throne, police said Tuesday.
The unarmed group, reported by local media to be suspected followers of a Malaysian Muslim figure claiming royal descent, were stopped by police guards in the confrontations early Monday morning at the palace in Kuala Lumpur.
A police official called the claim by the group's leader "unbelievable and out of the ordinary.”
"His claim doesn't make sense. (He) claimed to have a letter of appointment from the Philippines," Kuala Lumpur police official Ku Chin Wah told reporters.
Ku refused to identify the detainees or their leader from the northern state of Kedah, pending investigations.
He said they were being investigated under a statute that forbids challenging the king's authority, which can bring life imprisonment, and for illegal assembly.
The eight detained males and two females included a child aged 11, he said.
Ku was earlier quoted by Malaysian media as saying they were armed only with flags and documents purportedly laying out the royal claim.
The Star newspaper said one of the documents called for the formation of a three-million-strong army to prepare for the coming of the Mahdi, a prophesied redeemer of Islam.
Malaysia has a unique arrangement under which the Muslim Malay sultans of the country's nine states take turns occupying the national throne as king, rotating every five years.
The sultans trace their lineages back to Malay sultanates of the 15th century.
The current king is Sultan Abdul Halim Mu'adzam Shah, 85.
Despite a merely ceremonial role, the king commands great respect from the public, especially majority Malays.
Malaysia occasionally sees security scares from small Islamic sects or cults.
In one of the biggest, a martial-arts sect that taught members they were invulnerable to bullets disguised themselves as soldiers and stole more than 100 weapons from two military armories in 2000.
Three members were executed for planning a "holy war" while 16 others were given life sentences for treason.
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