The Star Malaysia

Another jeweller wants bling back

- By ROYCE TAN roycetan@thestar.com.my

PETALING JAYA: Another highend jeweller from the Middle East is seeking to retrieve jewellery worth more than US$5mil (RM20.69mil) that was allegedly delivered by hand to Datin Seri Rosmah Mansor earlier this year.

According to lawyer Ashok Kandiah, his client – Dubai-based Adi Hasan AlFardan Jewellery – has instructed him to send a letter to Bukit Aman Commercial Crime Investigat­ion Department (CCID) director Datuk Seri Comm Amar Singh to recover a necklace and another one with an earring set.

Ashok said the letter stated that Rosmah explained to the owner Adi AlFardan that the items had been seized by the CCID in raids on several premises linked to Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak.

The items were apparently not paid for and had been passed to the former prime minister’s wife in March.

“On June 20, our client travelled to Malaysia and met with Rosmah at her residence in Kuala Lumpur.

“At that meeting, Rosmah informed Adi that the three jewellery items were among those seized by the police and that she is in no position to make any payments towards the items.

“We have been instructed to assist our client in retrieving the items from the police, if they had been seized. If the items had not been seized, then our client would consider their legal options against Rosmah,” read the letter.

The letter requested that Comm Amar confirm the possession of the jewellery, adding it was prepared to cooperate with the police to recover the items for which no payment was made by Rosmah and the titles had not been passed to her.

The letter also stated that Adi AlFardan had often been able to bypass customs and immigratio­n checks during his four trips to Malaysia to hand the jewellery to Rosmah.

“On most of his arrivals in Kuala Lumpur, individual­s who identified themselves as officers from the Prime Minister’s Department met him at the arrival gate and escorted him through the Immigratio­n and Customs checkpoint­s,” it stated.

The items comprise a necklace with 56 heart-shaped “fancy yellow diamonds” – the largest one weighing 10.7 carats – and also 78 other smaller regular-coloured diamonds. This itself, with alteration­s allegedly requested by Rosmah, costs US$2.248mil (RM9.29mil).

The necklace and earrings set were also fitted with yellow diamonds where the necklace consisted of a string of cushion cut diamonds weighing 112.94 carats and the earrings, also consisting of the cushion cut stones, weighed 17.84 carats.

This set is worth US$3mil (RM12.40mil).

Ashok also told The Star that the law firm was in the process of taking out its client’s instructio­ns on further action or legal proceeding­s against Rosmah.

He also said that while the CCID had sent a response, it failed to address the concerns raised.

On its website, Adi Hasan AlFardan Jewellery said Adi AlFardan is a private jeweller who designs exquisite masterpiec­es and caters to the most exclusive, noble and royal clients in the Middle East.

It is the second firm known to be seeking the return of high-end jewellery from Rosmah.

On June 26, Lebanese-based jeweller Global Royalty Trading SAL filed a suit against Rosmah at the Kuala Lumpur High Court seeking a mandatory order for 44 pieces of jewellery amounting to US$14,787,770 (RM59,831,317.40), to be returned.

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