Tag: Najib Razak

  • Wife of Malaysian’s former PM arrested by anti-graft agency

    Malaysia’s anti-graft agency on Wednesday said it has arrested former first lady Rosmah Mansor and expects to charge her in court on Thursday with money-laundering, among other infringements.

    The agency said that Rosmah, the wife of former Prime Minister Najib Razak, was detained after being questioned by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission.

    “Rosmah will face several charges.

    “The charges covered infringements of a law against money laundering and other unlawful activities,” the agency said in a statement.

    Her arrest follows three rounds of questioning by anti-graft agents over state fund Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), from which U.S. authorities say more than 4.5 billion dollars was misappropriated.

    Rosmah, 66, was questioned for nearly 13 hours on Sept. 26.

    She had arrived at the agency’s headquarters at around 0300 GMT on Wednesday, wearing traditional Malay clothing in lime green and

    The agency did not say if the charges against her related to 1MDB.

    Lawyers for Rosmah had earlier said she had been arrested and that she would face money laundering charges.

    Najib, 64, himself faced questioning on Wednesday by the anti-money laundering and anti-terror financing division of Malaysia’s police over a money laundering inquiry, media said.

    Najib, whose coalition suffered a stunning election defeat in May, faces 32 charges ranging from money laundering to abuse of power and criminal breach of trust in the effort to uncover how billions of dollars went missing from 1MDB.

    The couple’s world has been turned upside down since Najib lost the election to his one-time mentor Mahathir Mohamad, who swiftly reopened a probe into 1MDB.

    Corruption accusations have dogged Najib for years, and came to a head in 2015, when the Wall Street Journal reported that nearly 700 million dollars in 1MDB funds was diverted to his personal bank account.

    Rosmah has long been in the public eye over her penchant for handbags, jewelry and shopping sprees.

  • Malaysia sets election date for May 9

    Malaysia will go to the polls on May 9, the country’s election commission said on Tuesday, in a contest set to test Prime Minister, Najib Razak.

    Razak will run for re-election against his former mentor, 92-year-old Mahathir Mohamad, who governed Malaysia for more than two decades between 1981 and 2003.

    The prime minister is expected to win re-election in spite allegations of massive corruption linked to state fund 1MDB, which he denies.

    He recently moved to tighten his grip on power, with the opposition accusing him of trying to buy support with cash incentives from his powerbase, rural Malays.

    His government also passed a bill to combat “fake news’’ earlier this month, which critics say is an attempt to muzzle criticism, including on his alleged involvement in the 1MDB scandal.

    On April 5, authorities also ordered the temporary disbandment of Mahathir’s new coalition party, Bersatu, saying it had failed to present the correct paperwork for registration.

    “Najib is cheating in order to win elections by paralysing his opponents,’’ Mahathir said.

    NAN

  • Malaysia 2018 palm oil output to rise by 2.5%

    Malaysia 2018 palm oil output to rise by 2.5%

    Palm oil production in Malaysia, the world’s second largest producer, is expected to increase by 15.5 per cent this year and will grow by 2.5 per cent in 2018, the government said on Friday.

    Malaysian output is forecast to rise to 20 million tonnes this year and to 20.5 million tonnes in 2018 due to better yields and expansion into matured areas, according to forecasts given in the government’s annual economic report released ahead of Prime Minister Najib Razak’s announcement of the 2018 budget.

    In 2016, production was 17.3 million tonnes, the report said.

    Average prices for palm oil are also projected to rise because of higher demand.

    “Palm oil price (in 2018) is expected to increase to an average of 2,750 ringgit per tonne bolstered by higher demand, particularly from China, the (European Union) and India.”

    The government expects an average palm oil price of 2,700 ringgit ($638) per tonne this year.

    NAN

  • Justice department links Malaysia’s first lady to $30m stolen funds

    Justice department links Malaysia’s first lady to $30m stolen funds

    The U.S. Justice Department says nearly 30 million dollars of funds stolen from scandal-hit 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) was used to buy jewelry for the prime minister’s wife, including a rare 22-carat pink diamond set in a necklace.

    This is according to the latest filings by the U.S. Justice Department in a civil lawsuit lodged at the District Court in Los Angeles.

    It did not identify Prime Minister Najib Razak or his wife Rosmah Mansor by name, but said the jewelry purchases were for the wife of ‘Malaysian Official 1’.

    Malaysian and U.S. government sources have previously confirmed that ‘Malaysian Official 1’ refers to Najib.

    The diamond necklace set alone cost 27.3 million dollars, according to latest filings in a lawsuit that was launched in July 2016.

    The accusations will provide further ammunition for Najib’s political rivals, who often criticize his wife for

    lavish spending, and come at an awkward time for the Malaysian leader, as he had been expected to call a snap

    election later this year.

    Rosmah’s aide did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    The prime minister’s office, in a statement early on Friday, said it was “concerned by the unnecessary and gratuitous naming of certain matters and individuals that are only relevant to domestic political manipulation and interference.” Najib has consistently denied any wrongdoing.

    A total of 4.5 billion dollars have been misappropriated from 1MDB, the Justice Department said on Thursday. The fund was set up by Najib in 2009 to promote economic development.

    The department is seeking to seize a total of about 1.7 billion dollars in assets that were bought with misappropriated funds, including a Picasso painting that was given to actor Leonardo DiCaprio and the rights to two Hollywood films.

    “This money financed the lavish lifestyles of the alleged co-conspirators at the expense and detriment of the

    Malaysian people,” acting U.S. Assistant Attorney-General Kenneth Blanco said in a statement.

    The jewelry purchases were arranged by Malaysian financier Low Taek Jho, or Jho Low, who was also accused of

    gifting DiCaprio a 3.2 million dollars Picasso.

    A spokesman for DiCaprio on Thursday said that the actor had begun proceedings to transfer ownership of the

    Picasso to the U.S. government, having in July 2016 “initiated the return” of gifts he had received from

    financiers connected to the 1MDB case.

    Low, whose whereabouts are unknown, could not be reached for comment.

    In an emailed statement through a representative, Low said the Justice Department’s actions were “a further

    example of global overreach in pursuit of a deeply flawed case.”

    “The U.S. Department of Justice’s latest move continues its inappropriate efforts to seize assets despite not

    having proven that any improprieties have occurred,” the statement read.

    Rasky Partners, a public relations firm that emailed his statement, could not be immediately reached by phone.

    The lawsuits show the jewelry for Rosmah was bought with funds that passed through Najib’s account.

    According to findings, the jewelry, like the Picasso painting, was purchased with funds traceable to diverted proceeds from a 2013 bond offering by 1MDB.

    It also show that the diamond necklace was bought in 2013, just months after 680 million dollars was transferred to the private bank account of Najib in Kuala Lumpur.

    The Malaysian government says that money came from a member of the Saudi royal family.

    The necklace was purchased from New York jeweler Lorraine Schwartz, who has designed for Beyonce Knowles,

    Jennifer Lopez and other stars of the entertainment world.

    “Need a 18 carrot (carat) pink heart diamond vivid or slightly short of vivid. On diamond necklace urgent,” Low

    said in a text message to Schwartz in June 2013, the filings said.

    A month later Schwartz showed the necklace in Monaco to a group of people, including Rosmah, onboard Topaz, one

    of the largest private yachts in the world.

    Low had chartered the 147-meter yacht for seven days in early July 2013, according to the filings.

    Rosmah and Low met with Schwartz again at a hotel in New York in September that year, when Najib was in New York

    to attend the UN General Assembly.

    The necklace was eventually delivered to an unnamed friend of Rosmah’s in 2014 in Hong Kong, who then handed it

    over to Rosmah in Kuala Lumpur, the filings said.

    Low also arranged for the purchase of 27 pieces of jewelry – worth a total of 1.3 million dollar, for Rosmah in 2014.

    The lawsuits also describe how Low spent about nine million dollars in 2014 buying jewelry for Australian model Miranda Kerr.

  • Malaysia Airlines MH370:  Chinese families vent fury

    Malaysia Airlines MH370: Chinese families vent fury

    Angry relatives of passengers on board the missing Malaysia Airlines plane have clashed with police outside Malaysia’s embassy in the Chinese capital, Beijing.

    It came after Malaysian PM Najib Razak said a new analysis of satellite data showed the plane had ended its journey in remote seas south-west of Australia.

    China has asked to see the data on which Malaysia’s conclusion was based.

    The search for missing flight MH370 has been suspended because of bad weather.

    A multinational search effort has focused on seas some 2,500km (1,500 miles) to the south-west of the Australian city of Perth.

    Flight MH370 disappeared on 8 March as it flew from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. It was carrying a total of 239 people, including 153 Chinese nationals.

    In Beijing, relatives of passengers on board the plane released a statement accusing the Malaysian government of trying to “delay, distort and hide the truth”.

    Dozens of them then left their Beijing hotel on a protest bound for the Malaysian embassy, carrying banners asking Kuala Lumpur to be truthful with the relatives.

    Police stopped their buses from leaving, so they left the buses and walked there themselves, with scuffles then erupting outside the diplomatic mission.

    The protesters threw water bottles at the embassy and tried to storm the building, demanding to meet the ambassador.

    There was a heavy police presence at the embassy, and there was a brief scuffle between police and a group of relatives who tried to approach journalists, according to the Associated Press news agency.

    The families also appear to be becoming more critical of the Chinese authorities themselves, the BBC’s Celia Hatton reports from Beijing.

    While some defended the authorities, other relatives shouted slogans denouncing the Chinese government as “corrupt”, she reports.

    The protest in Beijing came a day after the Malaysian leader said it had to be concluded “with deep sadness and regret” that according to new data “flight MH370 ended in the southern Indian Ocean.”

    Mr Najib said the conclusion the plane was lost was based on new satellite analysis by British firm Inmarsat and information from the UK’s Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB).

    But Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister Xie Hangsheng issued a statement saying: “We demand the Malaysian side state the detailed evidence that leads them to this judgement, as well as supply all the relevant information and evidence about the satellite data analysis.

    “The search and rescue work cannot stop now. We demand the Malaysian side continue to finish all the work including search and rescue.”

     

    make arrangements to fly relatives of those on board MH370 to Australia.

    Australian Immigration Minister Scott Morrison said his department was working with the airline and Beijing to arrange visas.

    In a BBC interview, Malaysia Airlines chief executive Ahmad Jauhari Yahya defended his company against criticism from the families, saying the situation was far from a normal aircraft tragedy.

    “I think it’s unfair,” he said. “I think we’ve done all we can within our means to help them.”

    Planes from several nations, supported by an Australian warship, have been scouring waters far off Perth for signs of the missing plane, in a search co-ordinated by Australia.

    BBC asks airline boss Ahmad Jauhari Yahya if he feels “personally responsible”

    Hishammuddin Hussein: “All search efforts are now focused in the southern part of the southern corridor.”

    There have been several sightings of debris, but none has yet been confirmed as being linked to the plane.

    In a statement announcing the suspension of search operations on Tuesday, the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (Amsa) said it had undertaken a risk assessment “and determined that the current weather conditions would make any air and sea search activities hazardous and pose a risk to crew”.

    Australia’s Defence Minister David Johnston said search efforts were unlikely to start again for “at least another 24 hours”.

    He described the search as a “massive logistical exercise” in an “extremely remote” part of the world.

    Mark Binskin, vice-chief of the Australian Defence Force, said: “We’re not searching for a needle in a haystack. We’re still trying to define where the haystack is.”

    An Australian navy support vessel, Ocean Shield – equipped with US acoustic detection equipment in an attempt to detect the plane’s “black box” flight recorder – is expected to be deployed to the search zone next week.

    Six Chinese ships are also being deployed to the region to assist with search operations.