The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Financier Jho Low in cross-hairs after poll upset

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KUALA LUMPUR: Baby-faced playboy Jho Low, a financier at the centre of Malaysia’s 1MDB mega-scandal, may find his days of hobnobbing with celebritie­s and splurging on property and art are numbered as the new government pledges to bring him to justice.

Suspected of being a key figure in one of the world’s biggest frauds along with ousted leader Datuk Seri Najib Razak and his cronies, the chubby, bespectacl­ed businessma­n has become a lightning rod for public fury at the controvers­y.

He led a high-rolling lifestyle after allegedly stealing huge sums from 1MDB. He hung out with celebritie­s such as Leonardo DiCaprio, partied with Paris Hilton, and reportedly spent vast sums in New York’s hottest nightspots.

As investigat­ions into the controvers­y accelerate­d, the Malaysian took to a luxury yacht allegedly bought with stolen cash and sailed around Asia, until the vessel was seized off Bali recently as part of 1MDB-linked probes.

The Wall Street Journal reported that he was on the Thai holiday island of Phuket earlier this month awaiting the election results. His current whereabout­s are unclear.

But time could be running out for the flamboyant 36-yearold after Najib’s scandal-mired coalition suffered a shock defeat at the May 9 poll in large part due to public anger at 1MDB.

The new government, headed by Najib’s ex-mentor Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, has reopened probes into the sophistica­ted fraud and wants to haul Jho Low — whose full name is Low Taek Jho — back to Malaysia.

Datuk Abdul Razak Idris, a former senior officer from the antigraft agency which led probes into the scandal until they were shut down under Najib, said he believed Low was the mastermind.

“He must be arrested and brought back to Malaysia so that we can bring back all the money parked abroad,” he told AFP.

Low, who held no official positions at 1MDB but is believed to have exerted great influence over the fund, has previously denied any wrongdoing. He could not be contacted for this article.

In a first move aimed at pressuring him, Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng on Friday instructed tax authoritie­s to probe Low and his family — many of whom remain in Malaysia — over 1MDB.

Malaysian social media lit up with delight at the prospect that a man who allegedly plundered state coffers was now being aggressive­ly pursued.

“Jho Low is the key to all this 1MDB debacle,” read one post on Facebook. “Catching him is like catching the one ring that rules them all.”

Low’s current precarious position is a far cry from the image he once projected of an urbane, well-connected investment manager.

He was educated at elite British school Harrow, and during his time in England befriended Riza Aziz, Najib’s stepson, a friendship that helped him get close to Malaysia’s former ruling family.

He studied in the US and moved to New York, where reports of his profligate spending began to multiply.

The Department of Justice, which has launched lawsuits to seize assets allegedly bought with stolen 1MDB cash in the US, alleges US$400 million (RM1.6 billion) from the fund was sent to the US “for the personal gratificat­ion of Low and his associates”.

This is just one part of the vast fraud. The DoJ claims that some US$4.5 billion was stolen from the fund, which was set up in 2009 and overseen by Najib. Najib and 1MDB deny any wrongdoing.

As well as the yacht, Low is alleged to have used stolen cash to buy artworks by Monet and Van Gogh, high-end real estate and to give gifts to celebritie­s including DiCaprio and Australian model Miranda Kerr.

They have both turned the gifts over to US authoritie­s and are not accused of any wrongdoing.

In a rare media interview with Malaysia’s Star newspaper in 2010, Low complained of being depicted as someone who led “an excessive kind of lifestyle”.

“Ultimately, I am Malaysian,” he said. “I am one who does not forget my country and I think there is a lot we can do for Malaysia.” — AFP

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Jho Low

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