Khaleej Times

Najib is arrested in multi-billion dollar graft case

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kuala lumpur — Former Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak was arrested by anti-corruption investigat­ors on Tuesday, officials said.

Najib, 64, will be charged today, a task force set up to probe wrongdoing at state fund 1MDB said, adding he was apprehende­d “at his home”. The US Justice Department, which wants to recover items allegedly bought with stolen 1MDB cash in America, estimates $4.5 billion was looted from 1MDB. —

kuala lumpur — Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak was arrested by anti-corruption investigat­ors on Tuesday, officials said, the latest dramatic developmen­t in a widening graft probe that has engulfed the ex-leader.

Najib, 64, will be charged on Wednesday, a taskforce set up to probe wrongdoing at state fund 1MDB said in a statement, adding he was apprehende­d “at his home”.

The arrest is the latest in a series of stunning moves by investigat­ors that suggest the legal noose is tightening around Najib, his family and many of his close political and business allies.

Allegation­s of massive corruption were a major factor behind the shock election loss in May of Najib’s long-ruling coalition to a reformist alliance headed by his former mentor Mahathir Mohamad.

Najib and his cronies were accused of plundering billions of dollars from the 1MDB sovereign wealth fund to buy everything from US real estate to artworks. Najib and the fund deny any wrongdoing.

Since the election loss Najib has been banned from leaving the country and has found himself at the centre of a widening graft probe.

Shortly after his ouster, a vast trove of valuables was seized in raids on properties linked Najib and his family, including cash, jewellery and luxury handbags, worth up to $273 million.

He and his luxury-loving wife Rosmah Mansor were questioned by investigat­ors, as were his stepson Riza Aziz, whose firm produced the hit 2013 movie

and his former

deputy Zahid Hamidi. A special government task force investigat­ing the 1MDB corruption scandal said it froze 408 bank accounts containing a total 1.1 billion ringgit ($272 million) last week.

Local media reports said some of the accounts belonged to Najib’s political party, the once-powerful United Malays National Organisati­on (UMNO). Until their shock defeat in May, Najib’s party and its coalition allies had run Malaysia for six decades.

A security source told reporters that agents from the Malaysian AntiCorrup­tion Commission (MACC) arrested Najib at his home, a sprawling mansion in a well-heeled suburb of Kuala Lumpur.

“They came in three to four unmarked

cars,” the source, a senior security official familiar with the arrest, said.

A spokeswoma­n for MACC said the former leader was brought to the commission’s headquarte­rs in the administra­tive capital Putrajaya outside Kuala Lumpur.

Najib will stay there overnight and will be brought to court on Wednesday, she added.

The task force said Najib was arrested in relation to allegation­s involving SRC Internatio­nal Sdn Bhd, an energy company that was originally a subsidiary of 1MDB.

According to an investigat­ion by the Wall Street Journal, $10.6 million originatin­g from SRC was transferre­d to Najib’s personal bank accounts, just one small part

of hundreds of millions of dollars from 1MDB that allegedly ended up in Najib’s accounts.

The US Justice Department, which is seeking to recover items allegedly bought with stolen 1MDB cash in America, estimates that $4.5 billion in total was looted from the fund.

Veteran legislator Lim Kit Siang, whose party is a member of the current ruling coalition, said Najib’s arrest had been expected.

“Najib has to answer the allegation­s. It is long delayed as the scandal has turned Malaysia into a global kleptocrac­y country,” he told reporters. Hamidi, Najib’s former deputy, said: “I respect the rule of law... Let the rule of law take place.”—

Najib has to answer the allegation­s. It is long delayed as the scandal has turned Malaysia into a global kleptocrac­y country

Lim Kit Siang, Veteran legislator

 ??  ?? ex-prime minister Najib Razak
ex-prime minister Najib Razak

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