China Daily (Hong Kong)

Ex-PM Najib charged

Former Malaysian leader faces breach of trust, power abuse trial

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KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysia’s former prime minister, Najib Razak, on Wednesday pleaded not guilty to abuse of power and other charges arising from an investigat­ion into a scandal-plagued state fund, weeks after he was ousted in a stunning election defeat.

Najib, 64, who has denied wrongdoing in relation to the 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad fund he founded, was charged with abuse of power and three counts of criminal breach of trust as part of an investigat­ion into a transactio­n involving its former unit SRC Internatio­nal.

The charges relate to some 42 million ringgit ($10.4 million) of funds that allegedly went from SRC into Najib’s personal bank account. This represents a small fraction of the billions of dollars the US Department of Justice has said was misappropr­iated from 1MDB.

Malaysia’s attorney general said he expected more reports from the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission investigat­ing wrongdoing at the fund.

“This is arising from the first MACC IP (investigat­ion papers) given to my office three weeks ago. No doubt there will be more,” Tommy Thomas, who is leading the case against Najib, told reporters outside the court.

In a pre-recorded message posted on Twitter after his arrest, Najib said he was not perfect and “not all the accusation­s against me and my family are true”.

“Let investigat­ions be carried out. I have not had a chance to defend myself,” he added.

Each of the four charges against Najib carries a prison term of up to 20 years. The abuse of power charge carries a fine of not less than five times the “value of gratificat­ion”.

Najib was granted bail of $247,000 and was ordered to surrender his passports. The judge set a tentative date for the trial to begin of Feb 18.

The son of a former prime minister, Najib joined parliament at the age of 23 and rose through the ranks to take the top job in 2009. But his second term in office from 2013 was plagued by allegation­s around 1MDB, prompting a stunning fall from grace that culminated in his arrest on Tuesday.

Mahathir Mohamad led a campaign that unseated Najib in a May 9 election and ousted a coalition that had ruled since Malaysia’s independen­ce from Britain in 1957.

One of Mahathir’s first acts was to reopen the 1MDB investigat­ion.

After spending the night in detention, Najib arrived at the court in the capital Kuala Lumpur on Wednesday wearing a dark blue suit and a red tie.

1MDB was set up by Najib in 2009 to spur Malaysia’s economic developmen­t. But reports emerged later that billions of dollars were misappropr­iated. Najib has been under investigat­ion related to 1MDB since losing the general elections in May, but has denied any wrongdoing.

A spokesman for Najib said on Tuesday that the SRC charges and the 1MDB investigat­ions were “politicall­y motivated”.

Since his election loss, Najib has been barred from leaving the country and investigat­ors have seized luxury handbags, jewelry and other items worth millions of dollars from properties linked to his family.

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