Times of Oman

Indonesia to hand over yacht linked to 1MDB to Malaysia

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KUALA LUMPUR: Indonesia has agreed to hand over to Malaysia a $250 million luxury yacht it impounded in Bali earlier this year in connection with a corruption scandal at a Malaysian state fund, Indonesian authoritie­s said on Saturday.

The Cayman Islands-flagged Equanimity was seized in February at the request of US authoritie­s as part of a multi-billion dollar corruption investigat­ion launched by the Department of Justice (DOJ) related to 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB).

An Indonesian court ruling in April declared that the yacht was wrongfully impounded and should be released to its owners, but Indonesian police seized the boat again in July following a formal request for legal assistance from the United States.

Indonesian police said they would hand the yacht over to Malaysia but did not specify when.

“The yacht will be handed over at the border between Indonesia and Malaysia’s waters,” Daniel Silitonga, deputy director for economic and special crimes at the Indonesian national police force’s Criminal Investigat­ion Agency, told Reuters by text message.

“We have to maintain the good relations between the two countries,” he said, adding that the yacht is currently in waters close to the border of Singapore and the Indonesian island of Batam.

A spokesman for Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad’s office said “some arrangemen­ts” were being made with Indonesian authoritie­s regarding the yacht and that an announceme­nt would be made when the details were finalised.

A source familiar with the negotiatio­ns told Reuters on Friday that Indonesia had agreed to hand the yacht to Malaysia following a personal request by Mahathir. Mahathir, who previously served as prime minister from 1981-2003 and is now 93, visited Indonesia in June on his first official visit in the region since returning to power in May in a surprise election win over Najib Razak.

1MDB, founded by Najib, is at the centre of money-laundering probes in at least six countries, including the United States, Switzerlan­d and Singapore.

A total of $4.5 billion was misappropr­iated from 1MDB by high-level officials of the fund and their associates, according to US civil lawsuits filed by the DOJ. Najib has denied wrongdoing. Malaysian financier Low Taek Jho is described in the lawsuits as a central figure in the scandal.

The DOJ says Low used proceeds diverted from 1MDB to procure Equanimity, a 300-ft (91m) yacht registered in the Cayman Islands.

The $250 million vessel is said to have an interior clad in marble and gold leaf, a spa and sauna, a 20-metre swimming pool on deck, a movie theatre, a lift and a helipad.

 ?? —Antara Foto/ Wira Suryantala/via REUTERS file photo ?? WANTED: A seized a luxury yacht sought by the US Department of Justice (DOJ) as part of a multi-billion dollar corruption investigat­ion is seen off the shore of Banoa, Indonesia February 28, 2018.
—Antara Foto/ Wira Suryantala/via REUTERS file photo WANTED: A seized a luxury yacht sought by the US Department of Justice (DOJ) as part of a multi-billion dollar corruption investigat­ion is seen off the shore of Banoa, Indonesia February 28, 2018.

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