The Borneo Post

Dr Mahathir to appoint adviser to recover 1MDB funds

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KUALA LUMPUR: Newlyelect­ed Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad plans to appoint a finance ministry adviser who will oversee efforts to recover billions of dollars al legedly stolen from state fund 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad ( 1MDB), two sources told Reuters.

The adviser would be appointed to ‘ restart the 1MDB probe and bring back the money’, said one of the sources, who worked closely with Dr Mahathir’s campaign team.

The second source, a lawmaker, said the announceme­nt could come as soon as today when Dr Mahathir is expected to name members of his new cabinet. The sources declined to be identified as the talks are private.

At least six countries, including the USA, are investigat­ing the alleged misappropr­iation of over US$ 4.5 billion from 1MDB, founded by former premier Datuk Seri Najib Razak.

Najib’s coalition was defeated by Dr Mahathir’s opposition alliance in a stunning election upset on Wednesday.

The US Department of Justice has launched a criminal probe and filed civil lawsuits seeking to recover about US$ 1.7 billion in assets said to have been bought with stolen 1MDB funds.

Malaysia will reach out to US authoritie­s investigat­ing the case, the lawmaker said.

“You can be reassured that we will go after 1MDB,” the lawmaker said.

The scandal has dogged Najib since 2015 after reports that about US $ 70 0 mi l lion in misappropr­iated 1MDB funds f lowed into his personal account.

Najib has denied wrongdoing and Malaysia’ s attorney-general has cleared him of any offence, saying the funds were a legitimate donation from the Saudi royal family.

Dr Mahathir had vowed to investigat­e the scandal if elected and bring missing funds back to Malaysia. On Thursday, he said that if Najib had done anything wrong he would ‘ face the consequenc­es’.

Malaysian markets were closed on Thursday and yesterday for public holidays announced by Dr Mahathir after the election, but overseas investors were nervous about Najib’s ouster after a decade in office and the ringgit lost four per cent in offshore trading before stabilisin­g yesterday.

The lawmaker said a key reason for declaring the public holidays was so that Dr Mahathir could announce key ministeria­l positions and name the new adviser before trading started on Monday in an effort to reassure global investors that his government was off to a solid start.

Dr Mahathir is expected to name cabinet members to head 10 key ministries, including finance, foreign affairs, defence and home affairs, today.

 ??  ?? Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad
Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad

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