The News (New Glasgow)

Wife of ex-Malaysia PM questioned, new graft scandal unfolds

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Anti-corruption investigat­ors questioned the wife of former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak on Tuesday about alleged theft and money-laundering involving the 1MDB state investment fund, as officials announced a probe into other suspicious multibilli­on-dollar transactio­ns under Najib’s leadership.

The prosecutio­n of Najib and his wife Rosmah Mansor over the 1MDB scandal, which helped lead to Najib’s stunning ouster in May 9 national elections, could be sped up with the government’s appointmen­t Tuesday of a new attorney-general.

The appointee, distinguis­hed lawyer Tommy Thomas, is the first person from outside Malaysia’s Malay majority to hold the powerful position in more than half a century. His Najib-appointed predecesso­r had stifled investigat­ions.

Rosmah, accompanie­d by her daughter and son-in-law, didn’t speak to reporters as she was escorted into the Malaysian AntiCorrup­tion Commission office, where she was questioned for three hours. She was summoned nearly two weeks after Najib was questioned twice by the agency.

In another blow to the former first couple, their lawyer M. Puravelan told The Associated Press that he is no longer representi­ng Rosmah and Najib.

He said another prominent lawyer Yusof Zainal Abideen had also withdrawn. He said they didn’t quit because of disagreeme­nt over legal strategies for the 1MDB case but declined to elaborate.

Najib set up the 1MDB fund when he took power in 2009 but it accumulate­d billions in debts. U.S. investigat­ors say Najib’s associates stole and laundered US$4.5 billion from the fund from 2009 to 2014, some of which landed in Najib’s bank account. They say $27.3 million was used to buy a rare diamond necklace for Rosmah.

New Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad reopened investigat­ions into 1MDB that were suppressed under Najib’s rule. He has also banned the couple from leaving the country. The country’s new anti-graft chief has said Najib, who denies any wrongdoing, could soon face criminal charges.

On Tuesday, officials announced they had alerted the anti-graft commission to at least $2 billion worth of government­related transactio­ns that are “highly suspicious.”

The Finance Ministry said in a statement that a state company overseeing gas and petroleum pipeline projects that began in April last year had paid nearly all the $2 billion-plus project funds to the Chinese developer despite less than 15 per cent of the pipeline work being completed as of March.

The state company was set up by the “same people” who establishe­d a 1MDB subsidiary that Malaysian investigat­ors allege was used to funnel state funds to Najib’s bank account, according to the statement.

It said the state company’s president is also a director of a company tied to Low Taek Jho, a Najib associate who U.S. investigat­ors allege mastermind­ed the looting of 1MDB.

The statement said the contracts were negotiated by the prime minister’s department without involving treasury officials who would normally vet such transactio­ns.

The projects, which relied largely on Chinese loans backed by the Malaysian government’s repayment guarantee, proceeded despite numerous “red flags” raised in other parts of the government, it said.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Rosmah Mansor, the wife of former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, leaves the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission Office in Putrajaya, Malaysia yesterday.
AP PHOTO Rosmah Mansor, the wife of former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, leaves the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission Office in Putrajaya, Malaysia yesterday.

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