Arab Times

Najib charged with corruption

Former PM pleads not guilty

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KUALA LUMPUR, July 4, (Agencies): Just eight weeks after losing an election, former Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak was charged on Wednesday with abuse of power and criminal breach of trust in an investigat­ion of how billions of dollars went missing from a state fund.

Najib, who had been detained on Tuesday, pleaded not guilty, but the charges and his court appearance were the culminatio­n of a swift and stunning downfall for a premier who led the country for nearly a decade.

“I believe in my innocence and this is the best chance to clear my name,” Najib told reporters outside the courtroom after being released on bail of 1 million ringgit ($247,000).

Crowds of journalist­s and onlookers jostled for a glance of Najib, and some backers of his UMNO party chanted and held up placards in support of a man whose father, Malaysia’s second prime minister, is held in high regard.

National television networks broadcast live images of Najib’s convoy moving through morning rush-hour traffic to the court in the capital, Kuala Lumpur, an extraordin­ary spectacle few could have imagined before the May 9 election upset.

Najib thwarted corruption allegation­s for three years after revelation­s in 2015 that hundreds of millions of dollars from troubled state fund 1MDB were diverted to his personal accounts.

But his life has unravelled since the election defeat by his one-time mentor and the country’s most seasoned politician, Mahathir Mohamad, who returned to the prime minister’s office he occupied from 1981 to 2003.

Mahathir reopened an investigat­ion into the fund, 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB), and barred Najib from leaving the country. Wednesday’s charges fulfilled an election promise to prosecute Najib, whom he

1.6 million every hour.

It was unclear what the options were to get the “Wild Boar” team out of the Tham Luang caves in Chiang Rai province and how they would be steered through tight, fluid conditions called a “thief” during the campaign.

Besides the abuse of power, Najib has been charged with three counts of criminal breach of trust, which carry prison sentences of up to 20 years. The abuse of power charge carries a fine of five times the “value of gratificat­ion”.

He was ordered to surrender his passports and the judge set the trial for Feb. 18 next year.

Wednesday’s charges relate to funds of about 42 million ringgit ($10.4 million) that allegedly went from SRC Internatio­nal, a former 1MDB unit, into Najib’s personal bank account.

This represents a small fraction of the $4.5 billion the US Department of Justice has said was misappropr­iated from 1MDB, which is being investigat­ed in at least six countries on suspicion of money laundering.

Charges

Malaysia’s attorney general indicated there could be more charges in the case as the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission continues its investigat­ions.

SRC has been the initial focus of Malaysian investigat­ors as all the suspicious transactio­ns involving it went through Malaysian entities, unlike other 1MDB-related transactio­ns that went through foreign banks and companies.

The judge imposed a temporary gag order to stop public discussion beyond the merits of the case. Najib’s lawyers have said their client has been dragged through a trial by the media.

Najib joined parliament at the age of 23 and attained the top job in 2009, setting up 1MDB shortly after, but his second term in office from 2013 was plagued by allegation­s about it.

Mahathir, who helped Najib’s political ascent before turning on him as the accusation­s surfaced, led a campaign to unseat him, appealing to voters’

and uncertain weather.

Experts say divers have required three hours to reach the boys, located about 4 km (2.5 miles) from the mouth of the cave.

A group of about 30 divers in wetsuits was

In this July 3 image taken from video provided by the Royal Thai Navy Facebook Page, Thai boys smile as Thai Navy SEAL medic help injured children inside a

cave in Mae Sai, northern Thailand. (AP)

disgust with a government apparently mired in corruption.

Mahathir told Reuters last month that embezzleme­nt and bribery using government money were among the charges being considered against Najib, adding that his former protege was fully responsibl­e for the 1MDB scandal.

Since Najib’s election loss, investigat­ors have seized luxury handbags, jewellery and other items worth millions of dollars from properties linked to his family.

Najib must be held accountabl­e, said Anwar Ibrahim, the prime-minister-inwaiting and former opposition leader.

“Because of the allegation­s against him regarding 1MDB, he must be held accountabl­e in court,” Anwar told reporters in neighbouri­ng Indonesia.

In a pre-recorded message posted on Twitter after his arrest on Tuesday, Najib said he was not perfect and “not all the accusation­s against me and my family are true.”

US investigat­ors say $4.5 billion was stolen and laundered from 1MDB by Najib’s associates, including some $700 million that landed in Najib’s bank account. While in power, Najib said the $700 million was a donation from the Saudi royal family.

Najib’s laywer Muhammad asked for the case to be expedited.

Najib “is anxious to clear his name,” he told the High Court. “We are pretty confident about this case.”

Bridget Welsh, a Southeast Asia expert at John Cabot University in Rome, said Najib’s arrest was the “inevitable outcome” after he lost power.

“It shows the resolve of the new government to address previous abuses of power. It has been done judiciousl­y so far and speaks to a needed reckoning for Malaysia and a key step toward a cleaner governance,” she said in an email.

seen preparing kit and heading for the caves on Wednesday, accompanie­d by military personnel and a foreign cave expert.

A video released by the SEALS showed two rescuers seated on an elevated part of the cave beside boys wrapped in emergency foil blankets who appeared to be in good spirits, occasional­ly laughing. (RTRS)

Nauru slammed over broadcaste­r ban:

Nauru has been accused of restrictin­g press freedom by banning an Australian stateowned broadcaste­r from attending an internatio­nal forum that the tiny Pacific atoll-nation will host in September.

Australian­s have a particular interest in Nauru because their government pays the impoverish­ed nation of fewer than 10,000 people to house asylum seekers who attempt to reach Australia by boat. The United Nations and human rights groups have criticized the arrangemen­t as well as the conditions that asylum seekers endure there.

Australia’s Federal Parliament­ary Press Gallery, Canberra’s equivalent of the White House press corps, on Wednesday threatened to boycott the Pacific Islands Forum leaders’ summit on Nauru unless Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp. was allowed to attend. (AP)

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