Khaleej Times

UAE to receive $1.2 billion from 1MDB deal

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dubai — UAE and Malaysian officials said on Monday they have reached a deal to resolve a legal dispute over the indebted and troubled Malaysian investment fund 1MDB, with the UAE set to receive $1.2 billion over this year.

The deal, which still would need to be approved by an arbitratio­n panel in London, resolves merely one part of the sprawling, worldwide investigat­ion into 1MDB.

Money from the fund, which was to develop Malaysia’s economy, instead found itself funneled through a global embezzleme­nt and money-laundering scheme involving people close to Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak, luxury properties and the production of the 2013 film The Wolf of Wall Street, US investigat­ors allege.

In 2016, the Abu Dhabi-based Internatio­nal Petroleum Investment alleged 1MDB defaulted on more than $1.1 billion in debt it owed to the sovereign wealth fund and its subsidiary, Aabar Investment­s. It filed a case against the fund in the London Court of Internatio­nal Arbitratio­n.

A filing on Monday on the London Stock Exchange said Malaysian officials agreed to pay the wealth fund $1.2 billion this year, with half being due by July 31 and the other half by December 31. The filing said Malaysian officials also have agreed “to assume responsibi­lity for all future interest and principal payments” on two $1.75 billion bonds. The agreement is contingent on the arbitratio­n panel making a consent award on May 31, the filing said.1MDB released a short statement on Monday saying it was “pleased” by the agreement, saying it “represents the resolution of a significan­t challenge.” Officials with the Internatio­nal Petroleum Investment Co., known as IPIC, could not be immediatel­y reached for comment.

The resolution comes as 1MDB remains the target of investigat­ors in Singapore, Switzerlan­d, Luxembourg and the US American investigat­ors allege officials at the fund diverted more than $3.5 billion through a web of shell companies and bank accounts.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak started the fund shortly after taking office in 2009 to promote economic developmen­t projects, but the fund accumulate­d billions in debt.

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