Jamaica Gleaner

Malaysia 1MDB wealth fund sue to recover assets

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MALAYSIA’S FINANCE ministry said on Monday that sovereign wealth fund 1MDB and a former subsidiary have filed 22 lawsuits to recover assets worth over US$23 billion f rom various institutio­ns and individual­s.

1MDB was set up by former Prime Minister Najib Razak in 2009, but it accumulate­d billions in debts and sparked investigat­ions in the United States and several other countries. US investigat­ors allege that over US$4.5 billion was stolen from 1MDB and laundered by Najib’s associates.

Finance Minister Zafrul Abdul Aziz said the government’s recovery efforts are now focused on “pursuing other wrongdoers” who have caused losses to 1MDB and SRC Internatio­nal following successful settlement­s with US firm Goldman Sachs, Malaysia’s AmBank Group and Deloitte PLT.

1MDB earlier t his month filed six suits against nine entities, including two foreign financial institutio­ns and 25 people, for various violations, including breach of trust, fraud and negligence. SRC filed 22 lawsuits against 15 individual­s and eight entities over similar wrongdoing­s.

The two companies contend that those entities and people were “unjustly enriched by wrongfully receiving monies from 1MDB or SRC,” the ministry said in a statement that did not name any of the entities or individual­s.

“The government will not rest until all those involved are made fully accountabl­e for the wrongdoing­s caused to the country through their involvemen­t” in 1MDB and SRC, Zafrul said in a statement.

Malaysia received a 10.5-billion ringgit (US$2.5 billion) settlement from Goldman Sachs last August. The ministry said the government will also receive 2.83 billion ringgit (US$689 million) from the Ambank Group and 336 million ringgit (US$80 million) from Deloitte.

The 1MDB scandal sparked public anger that led to the defeat of Najib’s long-ruling coalition in 2018 elections. But it has regained power by joining an unelected alliance that took over last year.

Najib was found guilty last year and sentenced to 12 years in jail in the first of several corruption trials linked to the 1MDB scandal. He is appealing the sentence.

‘The government will not rest until all those involved are made fully accountabl­e for the wrongdoing­s caused to the country through their involvemen­t.’

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